Peace

henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 12:31 pm
What's the acceptable price for peace?

Please, interpret 'peace', 'acceptable', and 'price' as you like.
classicman • Sep 25, 2009 12:33 pm
for whom?
lumberjim • Sep 25, 2009 12:36 pm
$100 for a half and half?
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 12:42 pm
I leave you to define that.

#

"$100 for a half and half?"

HA!
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 12:46 pm
lumberjim;597148 wrote:
$100 for a half and half?


Sounds a bit cheap, but hey...

:rasta:
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 12:47 pm
HA!
classicman • Sep 25, 2009 12:56 pm
Is there a price for peace?
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 12:58 pm
That depend entirely on how you interpret 'price' and 'peace'.
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 1:00 pm
Two dollar - fifty.
classicman • Sep 25, 2009 1:00 pm
fitty cent
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 1:01 pm
Peace is being able to walk around without fear of being raped or murdered or caught in a bank robbery or a school shooting or being hit by a drunk driver or some punk-ass kid with a road vendetta who just broke up with his skank girlfriend or getting hit by drugwar crossfire or or or...

The price is the annihilation of the human race.
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 1:05 pm
One nice, practical, definition for 'peace'...thanks.


But surely you mean, 'the annihilation of the human race' is the price for NOT having peace, yes?
classicman • Sep 25, 2009 1:06 pm
it may well be the cost of having peace also
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 1:07 pm
There will never be peace as long as there are pesky humans running around, and the complete lack of peace would result in the annihilation of the human race.

Therefore, peace is not possible except in the absence of humans. Sure, there might be a mutual chihuahua-mauling or something, but I don't expect animals with their instincts to have any understanding or influence on (my concept of) "peace."
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 1:08 pm
;)
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 1:09 pm
No, you didn't. :lol:
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 1:11 pm
HA!
Spexxvet • Sep 25, 2009 1:13 pm
Would you take UG, classicman, merc, radar, and tw? That'll give us some peace around here. :stickpoke JUST KIDDING!
TGRR • Sep 25, 2009 1:14 pm
henry quirk;597144 wrote:
What's the acceptable price for peace?

Please, interpret 'peace', 'acceptable', and 'price' as you like.


Peace cannot be purchased, at any price. Peace is not a normal state of affairs for monkeys, and if you attempt to purchase peace, all it means is that one side acts peaceful and the other side doesn't (Neville Chamberlain, may you rot in hell).

Monkeys are what monkeys are, and war is a part of all that. Who knows what the future holds for our species? Not I, but I DO know that whatever that future is, there will be war.
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 1:14 pm
Would you take UG, classicman, merc, radar, and tw? That'll give us some peace around here. JUST KIDDING!

pssst...at least he didn't say Shawnee!
TGRR • Sep 25, 2009 1:15 pm
Shawnee123;597162 wrote:
Peace is being able to walk around without fear of being raped or murdered or caught in a bank robbery or a school shooting or being hit by a drunk driver or some punk-ass kid with a road vendetta who just broke up with his skank girlfriend or getting hit by drugwar crossfire or or or...

The price is the annihilation of the human race.


This is the correct answer, and stated far more effectively than my attempt.
TGRR • Sep 25, 2009 1:17 pm
henry quirk;597163 wrote:
One nice, practical, definition for 'peace'...thanks.


But surely you mean, 'the annihilation of the human race' is the price for NOT having peace, yes?


Assumes facts contrary to existing evidence.

Humans have had the capacity to destroy themselves for 64 years, and have not had a year's peace in that time, yet they continue to infest the entire habitable world and Canada (apologies to HL Mencken).
piercehawkeye45 • Sep 25, 2009 2:00 pm
Peace will only occur when we lose the need to get what we desire.

So never.
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 2:02 pm
Wait. How about next week?
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 3:55 pm
No. That was one answer, based on an interpretation of the terms involved.
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 3:57 pm
Ok, how about the week after next?
dar512 • Sep 25, 2009 4:17 pm
acceptable = going rate
price = US dollars
peace = eggs

The answer is ~ $2.00 a dozen.

If you don't define the inputs, the outputs mean nothing. The current discussion is analogous to arguments over how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 4:23 pm
No. It's just the beginning of a goddamned conversation wherein folks are encouraged to offer interpretations. The hope: a lengthy enough thread will evolve away from the opening question and self-sustain based on the give and take of the participants.

However: you, and others, should feel free to shit within the thread as you like… ;)
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 4:42 pm
Ok, next month and that is my final offer. Or when ever the Israeli's bomb Iran. Which ever comes first.
dar512 • Sep 25, 2009 4:59 pm
henry quirk;597221 wrote:
No. It's just the beginning of a goddamned conversation wherein folks are encouraged to offer interpretations. The hope: a lengthy enough thread will evolve away from the opening question and self-sustain based on the give and take of the participants.

However: you, and others, should feel free to shit within the thread as you like… ;)

Poor henry, so misunderstood and abused.

Concepts like peace and price are difficult enough to discuss when you are trying to be as precise as possible. When you ask everyone to provide their own definitions, you have pretty much barred any productive discussion from occurring.

However, if that's your goal - have at it.

I was sorely tempted to use the turd smiley here as it was so explicitly called for, but managed to restrain myself.
Cloud • Sep 25, 2009 5:00 pm
No. Peace. :gray:
Idemosaka • Sep 25, 2009 5:43 pm
Why can't we give love one more chance?
TGRR • Sep 25, 2009 5:48 pm
Idemosaka;597234 wrote:
Why can't we give love one more chance?


Because it sticks to your face.
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 6:13 pm
"Poor henry, so misunderstood and abused."

pffftt!

#

"Concepts like peace and price are difficult enough to discuss when you are trying to be as precise as possible. When you ask everyone to provide their own definitions, you have pretty much barred any productive discussion from occurring."

I disagree.

#

"I was sorely tempted to use the turd smiley here as it was so explicitly called for, but managed to restrain myself."

Please: don't repress yourself...let it all hang out.
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 6:19 pm
Seems to me that happens often here, not because opening questions or comments are too vague, but, because jackass-ry is the dominant disease.

*shrug*
TGRR • Sep 25, 2009 6:40 pm
henry quirk;597240 wrote:
Seems to me that happens often here, not because opening questions or comments are too vague, but, because jackass-ry is the dominant disease.

*shrug*


Don't let The Man get you down, Henry.
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 6:42 pm
"Don't let The Man get you down, Henry"

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 6:43 pm
henry quirk;597240 wrote:
Seems to me that happens often here, not because opening questions or comments are too vague, but, because jackass-ry is the dominant disease.

*shrug*
I think it is more a matter of vague questions get vague responses. You are trying to have an opened question discussion that really belongs in the philosophy thread. :2cents:
henry quirk • Sep 25, 2009 6:48 pm
"You are trying to have an opened question discussion that really belongs in the philosophy thread"

You're probably right. Would some power that is, please, move this thread to the philosophy sub-forum?
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 8:36 pm
Send a pm to bruce or UT.
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 8:39 pm
The philosophy forum doesn't have a shield to guard against assholism.

I appreciate the topic. Maybe someone could have expounded on the comment I made about what peace would mean to ME? You know...what does it mean to YOU?

Anyone?

Guess we need a flowchart. Again.
TheMercenary • Sep 25, 2009 8:44 pm
Ok, how about this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mOEU87SBTU
Shawnee123 • Sep 25, 2009 8:47 pm
That, to me, is actually a nice contribution. Remember when everyone was stoned and thought humanly peace was possible? :) Silly gooses.
Undertoad • Sep 25, 2009 8:54 pm
it is done
glatt • Sep 25, 2009 10:24 pm
Undertoad;597265 wrote:
it is done


There's your peace, Henry.
xoxoxoBruce • Sep 26, 2009 2:13 am
When Russia's Doomsday Bomb goes off.:unsure:
classicman • Sep 26, 2009 8:21 am
As described in 1993 issue of New York Times:

"The dead-hand system he [Dr. Blair] describes today takes this defensive trend to its logical, if chilling, conclusion. The automated system in theory would allow Moscow to respond to a Western attack even if top military commanders had been killed and the capitol incinerated.

The heart of the system is said to lie in deep underground bunkers south of Moscow and at backup locations. In a crisis, military officials would send a coded message to the bunkers, switching on the dead hand. If nearby ground-level sensors detected a nuclear attack on Moscow, and if a break was detected in communications links with top military commanders, the system would send low-frequency signals over underground antennas to special rockets.

Flying high over missile fields and other military sites, these rockets in turn would broadcast attack orders to missiles, bombers and, via radio relays, submarines at sea. Contrary to some Western beliefs, Dr. Blair says, many of Russia's nuclear-armed missiles in underground silos and on mobile launchers can be fired automatically."
regular.joe • Sep 26, 2009 1:43 pm
Peace like everything else in the universe comes in pockets and incongrous bunches. There will never be a time when peace is spread throughout the earth, nor will there be a time when war consumes everything. Both will take up large swaths of space and time. It's the way of things.

my .02 cents.
Shawnee123 • Sep 26, 2009 1:49 pm
But that's only, like, 1/50 of a cent.
regular.joe • Sep 26, 2009 2:15 pm
What kind of exchange rate is that??????
Griff • Sep 26, 2009 2:19 pm
.02 dollars = 2 cents
Clodfobble • Sep 26, 2009 3:09 pm
Man, this one never gets old:

[youtube]lCJ3Oz5JVKs[/youtube]

"Well, I mean it's obviously a difference of opinion..."
Idemosaka • Sep 27, 2009 8:16 pm
STOP! IN THE NAME OF LOVE
monster • Sep 27, 2009 9:23 pm
Peace sounds boring. Imagine a world where everybody agreed wih everyone else...... I could live without the violence though. The rape, the war, the robbery..... but I can't imagine those happening unless everybody agreed with everyone else. I can put no price on peace because it's all or nothing and I don't want all and I don't want nothing....
xoxoxoBruce • Sep 27, 2009 11:56 pm
Peace is lack of war, not lack of contention, nor lack of disagreement.
Shawnee123 • Sep 28, 2009 10:24 am
@ Clod: I am so utterly astounded every time I see that clip. Seriously, it's simple freaking math. I can't imagine how frustrated that guy must have been trying to explain it to TWO different people from verizon.

regjoe? Do you see the difference now?
regular.joe • Sep 28, 2009 11:15 am
I'm just sayin that my .02 Cents is worth $.02. I will admit that I did have a typo there to begin with. It was stoopid.
Shawnee123 • Sep 28, 2009 11:18 am
No, your .02 cents is worth $.0002.

Jebus, now I'm confused...is that even right?

edit: it wasn't. fixed.
Spexxvet • Sep 28, 2009 11:20 am
Cloud;597227 wrote:
No. Peace. :gray:


No Justice!
Pie • Sep 28, 2009 1:52 pm
'Peace' is not a concept limited to humanity. [SIZE=1](last link pdf)[/SIZE]

What will lead to peace:
[COLOR=White]. . . . [/COLOR]The eventual heat death of the universe.
skysidhe • Sep 28, 2009 2:52 pm
regular.joe;597369 wrote:
Peace like everything else in the universe comes in pockets and incongruous bunches. There will never be a time when peace is spread throughout the earth, nor will there be a time when war consumes everything. Both will take up large swaths of space and time. It's the way of things.

my .02 cents.


It's kind of poetic, less than majestic and too big to put on a bumper sticker.

I like it!
Shawnee123 • Sep 28, 2009 2:54 pm
It's easy to fit 1/50 of a cent on a bumper sticker.
henry quirk • Sep 28, 2009 3:54 pm
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Griff • Sep 28, 2009 7:23 pm
regular.joe;597757 wrote:
I'm just sayin that my .02 Cents is worth $.02. I will admit that I did have a typo there to begin with. It was stoopid.


What was stooopit was me calling anybody on a math error. I have no skills.
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 11:00 am
“'Peace' is not a concept limited to humanity.”


Of course it is, insofar as we know: as concept (something rooted in *language) 'peace' is uniquely human.

Certainly whales and orangutans may have something analogous to the concept, but this is only a guess.

We, however, 'know' humans truck in peace...this whole thread is an example of it.


*Language is one of the tools the human individual uses in apprehending the world. As signifier, the individual names the world, in some fashion making the world his own by giving it, the world, significance. This is true not only for the objective world, but also the esoteric one, that is, ideas and concepts (fictions) having no independent realness.

Peace, as construct, idea, fiction, is one such 'named' and signified thing.
Pie • Sep 29, 2009 11:47 am
My dog may not have a "construct, idea, fiction, is one such 'named' and signified thing" for 'love', but she sure as hell understands it.
:rolleyes:
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 12:07 pm
Actually, as 'we' use and understand love, no, your dog doesn't.

If you want to generalize love to the point where it encompasses familiarity coupled with good feeling coupled with physical pleasure, then okay.

But, as we -- you and me -- think on love, such a generalized definition falls short of what we feel when we love.

Why?

Because when I love, when you love, we love the person for who she is. We understand her not only for the 'object' she is or the concreteness she provides, but also for the idiosyncratic 'subject' she is.

Your dog 'loves' you for 'what' you are. It can never know 'you', only what you serve as the source of.

The dog has no sense of self. No 'I'ness dominates it. Love, as complete, is the transaction between a 'you and me', not 'me and it'.

Now: you may love your dog, but your dog does not, cannot, love you in the same way. This makes for a one-way street... ;)
Pie • Sep 29, 2009 12:10 pm
You must live a very lonely existance, Henry.

Enjoy your 7' x 3' x 2' world.
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 12:28 pm
I was thinkin' the same of you, pie.

When a body anthropomorphizes an animal, and attributes to it uniquely human qualities, my view is such a person suffers from a lack of human contact.

#

"Enjoy your 7' x 3' x 2' world."

We -- you and me -- live in the same world. We, however, have vastly different perspectives. I prefer to love and be loved by those who I can talk to.

You believe a wet nose pressed to yours 'means' something.

*shrug*

As you like...as you will... ;)
Pie • Sep 29, 2009 1:02 pm
Yep, I'm pretty sure your dog doesn't love you! :lol2:
dar512 • Sep 29, 2009 2:20 pm
henry quirk;598080 wrote:

When a body anthropomorphizes an animal, and attributes to it uniquely human qualities, my view is such a person suffers from a lack of human contact.

A truly evil person would link to this post at a number of dog and cat forums. I am a nice guy, however, so I just thought about it.

Oh, and both my dog and I disagree with you. :D
classicman • Sep 29, 2009 2:59 pm
There have been many examples of animals willing to die for their "owners" What would you call that, if not love, Henry?
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 3:02 pm
I don't need a dog: I have family and friends... ;)

#

"A truly evil person would link to this post at a number of dog and cat forums."


Hey: call in as many as you like, Beastmaster!

A thousand voices promoting insanity are still insane.

#

"Oh, and both my dog and I disagree with you."


I'm sure 'you' do, but did you ask the dog? ;)

#

I wrote: 'I prefer to love and be loved by those who I can talk to.'

That should read, 'I prefer to love and be loved by those who I can talk with.'

and

I wrote: 'You believe a wet nose pressed to yours 'means' something.'

That should read: 'You believe a wet, dog, nose pressed to yours is equivalent to a human lover's or toddler's.'

Imprecision: the bane of lucid communication.
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 3:06 pm
"There have been many examples of animals willing to die for their "owners" What would you call that, if not love, Henry?"


Can you cite sources for this claim?

If you can: I'd love to read about these animals.

As of now: we have an unsupported claim which I chalk up to urban myth and misinterpretation of circumstance.

But: I could be wrong. Before I admit that I need the evidence.
lumberjim • Sep 29, 2009 3:29 pm
[LIST]
[*]13-Pound Pooch Takes Hero Pet of the Year – VIDEO
[*]Little Dog Becomes Big Hero
[*]Hero Dog Saves Family From Fire – VIDEO
[*]Devoted Dog Struggles to Save Drowned Owner
[*]Hero Dog Takes Snake Bites Protecting Owner
[*]Dog Finds Abandoned Infant – VIDEO
[/LIST]
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 3:45 pm
All of Jim's citations come from 'For the Love of the Dog Blog'.

Not exactly the kind of unbiased source I was thinking of.

In all the stories cited: 'misinterpretation of circumstance', along with the unjustified attribution of human qualities to an animal, explains everything.

Please understand: these are some wonderful animals, but in not a single case did these animals do what they did out of 'love', unless, as I said up-thread, you want to generalize love to include 'familiarity coupled with good feeling coupled with physical pleasure'.
Shawnee123 • Sep 29, 2009 3:46 pm
The difference is: humans have no instincts, animals do.

:bolt:

nothing to see here...
Pie • Sep 29, 2009 3:51 pm
I would argue that humans have no love either, except as extensions of our biological underpinnings -- that we share in common with many other mammals. Love your mate. Your parents. Your social group. Your offspring. All motivated by basic evolutionary pressures.

Only bloviators like Henry here think you need high-falutin' language to qualify for love. Ask classic how much language is really necessary.
classicman • Sep 29, 2009 3:52 pm
What sources do you have to back up your opinion? Truly, I do not think it can be "proven" either way, but I believe they do.
classicman • Sep 29, 2009 4:04 pm
Hmmm, thanks Pie. I do think I have come to acquire a rather unique interpretation of this thing we call "love." Additionally, my past experience with training dogs and having them for so many years leads me to my opinion on the subject.

Henry wrote:
Actually, as 'we' use and understand love, no, your dog doesn't.

ok, prove it.
dar512 • Sep 29, 2009 4:31 pm
henry quirk;598123 wrote:

Imprecision: the bane of lucid communication.

Interesting. Isn't this the same henry that started a thread about 'peace' without defining what he meant by 'peace'?
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 4:41 pm
"The difference is: humans have no instincts, animals do."


We have instincts. Unlike dogs, however, we can choose to ignore them at least part of the time.

#

"I would argue that humans have no love either, except as extensions of our biological underpinnings -- that we share in common with many other mammals. Love your mate. Your parents. Your social group. Your offspring. All motivated by basic evolutionary pressures."


Only the human individual can love someone outside of parents, social group, offspring. You could argue the individual can do so only because he or she adopts the loved one into one of those groups, which kinda supports my point. Only a human individual can choose to adopt someone as parent, or into a social group, or as offspring. Only the distinctive 'I' that, insofar as we know, is unique to the human individual can love in that way.

#

"Only bloviators like Henry here think you need high-falutin' language to qualify for love."


Muddled thinking doesn't look any prettier when topped with useless insult, pie.

Shame on you.

#

"What sources do you have to back up your opinion?"


The same, best, source you have in determining the unique nature of love and how love is the action of the human individual and no other: myself, yourself, pie's self, Jim's self.

I can talk with you about love...we can dicker about its nature.

Find me the dog, the platypus, the cat, the chimp, the garden slug that can do the same.

You can't.

Why?

Because in all those cases, the animals haven't sufficient complexity, or complexity of a very specific kind, to, first, be 'self' aware and, second, to feel in the self-reflective way required to love.

Again: if you wanna generalize love to include 'familiarity coupled with good feeling coupled with physical pleasure' then be my guest.

Hell: I’ll even concede ''familiarity coupled with good feeling coupled with physical pleasure' is a kind of love, but a poor love as compared to what human individuals can feel and choose for one another.

#

"Truly, I do not think it can be "proven" either way"


And: you may be right. However: conversations, particularly those labeled’ philosophy', tend not to go anywhere if everyone just agrees to disagree.

For myself: I think I'm on firm footing with my analysis.

#

"but I believe they do."


As you should, Classic!

#

"Only bloviators like Henry here think you need high-falutin' language to qualify for love"


Actually: what I'm arguing is that to love, one needs to be an 'I'. Along with 'I'ness comes language as tool for naming the world and making it one's own. Language is the esoteric version of the hand. The hand allows (demands!) manipulation of the world; so does language.

#

Pie, you ought to take this, 'The fun thing about evolution (and science in general) is that it happens whether you believe in it or not.', out of your signature line. It’s obvious you don't believe a word of it. An appeal to the authority of anecdote is not science.

#

I wrote: 'Actually, as 'we' use and understand love, no, your dog doesn't.'

Classic responded: 'ok, prove it'


Two things:

1-I made no claim, Pie did. The burden is on her, or her proxy, to provide evidence for her claim that her "dog…sure as hell understands it."

2-How is am I to prove the existence of what is absent?

I can point to the absence of evidence for God and still this doesn't prove deity's absence.

I can point to the seemingly unique nature of the human individual ('I'ness), and how that nature expresses in that most unique action, love. I can point to the apparent lack of 'I'ness in virtually all other life, and how this lack precludes love in a dog.

I can point to the human individual: the self-referencing, esoteric-seeking, instinct-denying, agent, and ask, are dogs like us?

And still: this won't prove to your satisfaction that only the human individual loves.

#

"my past experience with training dogs and having them for so many years leads me to my opinion on the subject."


This could mean one of two things: you are far better schooled on the possibility of dog love than me, or, you're far too close to, and have far too much affection for, dogs to be objective.

Who's to know which? ;)
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 4:47 pm
"Interesting. Isn't this the same henry that started a thread about 'peace' without defining what he meant by 'peace'?"

Nice try, Beastmaster, but, you know as well as I the difference between uinintended imprecision in statement and an intended 'terms open to interpretation' question. ;)
dar512 • Sep 29, 2009 5:11 pm
henry quirk;598162 wrote:
"Interesting. Isn't this the same henry that started a thread about 'peace' without defining what he meant by 'peace'?"

Nice try, Beastmaster, but, you know as well as I the difference between uinintended imprecision in statement and an intended 'terms open to interpretation' question. ;)

One is unintended. One is intended. Both result in imprecision.
Pie • Sep 29, 2009 5:32 pm
henry quirk;598159 wrote:

"Only bloviators like Henry here think you need high-falutin' language to qualify for love."

Muddled thinking doesn't look any prettier when topped with useless insult, pie.

Shame on you.

I believe I used the term correctly.
To bloviate means "to speak pompously and excessively" or "to expound ridiculously". A colloquial verb coined in the United States, it is commonly used with contempt to describe the behavior of politicians, academics, pundits or media "experts," sometimes called bloviators, who hold forth on subjects in an arrogant, tiresome way.
henry quirk • Sep 29, 2009 5:55 pm
This, of course, means the two aren’t synonymous. ;)

As I said up-thread: 'It's just the beginning of a goddamned conversation wherein folks are encouraged to offer interpretations. The hope: a lengthy enough thread will evolve away from the opening question and self-sustain based on the give and take of the participants.'

And: I do believe I have exactly what I wanted.

Now: go play with Kodo and Podo like a good boy, or, trundle down to the Unitarian Fellowship and hob-nob with the other lukewarms… ;)

#

"I believe I used the term correctly."


Then: I leave you with your subjective assessment since subjective assessment is all it is.

One woman's 'arrogant, tiresome way' is one man's plain speech.

Sorry if you're not up to keeping up.

And: for the record, using the right (as you see it) word doesn't negate insult, which was your intent.

Can't you at least be honest enough to admit you were levying an insult, or haven't you the clarity to see even that?

#

Now: I head home and feed my brother's unloving bio-automata (his cats) and spend the evening with a delightful bundle of loving 'I'ness (my nephew).

If you can't tell the difference between the two, then, you have my sympathies... ;)
skysidhe • Sep 29, 2009 10:41 pm
I agree Henry. Love is a very powerful subjective force.

I had originally intended to offer support to henry (you) but I am too much of an animal lover and even if someone proved to me I was projecting my feelings onto an animal I still would not be able to stop.
Life is what we make it and sometimes we feel dogs are our enjoyable best buds and sometimes that's enough.

so...

This thread reminded me of an article I once saw in a National Geographic magazine. It was about how dogs might be smarter than science at first thought.


I found this article instead and it is very interesting.

It's called," How Did Dogs Become Adept at Playing to Humans"

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/02/0206_020206_lovedogs_2.html


Here's a snippet.

Miklósi summarized in Current Biology. "Since looking behavior has an important function in initializing and maintaining communicative interaction in human communication systems, we suppose that by positive feedback processes (both evolutionary and ontogenetically) the readiness of dogs to look at the human face has led to complex forms of dog-human communication that cannot be achieved in wolves even after extended socialization."



Here is another snippet of the article.

Could cognition be a breeding by-product like these physical changes?

Dog lovers know that man's best friend has an uncanny ability to understand and react to human actions. Clues to how dogs came to develop this ability lie somewhere in their evolutionary past, and learning the answer could shine light on our own development as humans.


"Based on these observations, we suggest that the key difference between dog and wolf behavior is the dogs' ability to look at the human's face," Miklósi summarized in
Current Biology. "Since looking behavior has an important function in initializing and maintaining communicative interaction in human communication systems, we suppose that by positive feedback processes (both evolutionary and ontogenetically) the readiness of dogs to look at the human face has led to complex forms of dog-human communication that cannot be achieved in wolves even after extended socialization."

and


"Many anthropologists think that as humans evolved we became smart because it's good to be smart," he said. "But maybe it was selection on what scientists and breeders call temperament. "Maybe nice people eventually became smarter, rather than smart people becoming nice."

I am not agreeing with that statement. If all the smart people were nice ...
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 9:00 am
henry quirk;598159 wrote:
Because in all those cases, the animals haven't sufficient complexity, or complexity of a very specific kind, to, first, be 'self' aware and, second, to feel in the self-reflective way required to love.

I call MAJOR Bullshit on that. Every being is to some degree self aware. Dogs, and cats for that, matter are extremely self aware.
Undertoad • Sep 30, 2009 9:22 am
If the dogs have evolved behaviors that appear to be a approximation of human intimacy for their own benefit, then they offer the exact same type of love as my first wife.
skysidhe • Sep 30, 2009 9:31 am
I don't believe it's for their own benefit.

I thought the article was stating the dogs were bred for temperament originally yet developed a startling capacity to emotionally interact with humans via the development of intelligence.

I can't speak for your ex-wife. :P

story on a dogs act of love
http://www.moderndogmagazine.com/articles/can-dogs-love-true-story/132



A study published in the U.K.'s New Scientist reveals dogs exhibit "left gaze bias," which suggests dogs can detect human emotions by looking at the face.[LEFT][COLOR=#000000]
Read more: http://petcare.suite101.com/article.cfm/study_says_dogs_detect_emotions_on_human_faces#ixzz0Sb5BgYNV
[/COLOR][/LEFT]


To be able to detect an emotion would mean the animal must also recognize the same emotion in itself. This would include love.
Pico and ME • Sep 30, 2009 10:20 am
I dont totally buy it. They have evolved a highly sensitive ability to detect our emotions because our emotions have a huge impact on their well-being, not because they recognize the emotions in themselves.
dar512 • Sep 30, 2009 10:29 am
henry quirk;598170 wrote:

And: I do believe I have exactly what I wanted.

So you started a thread on peace so that you could get a thread on dog and cat sapience?

You're good.

henry quirk;598170 wrote:

Now: go play with Kodo and Podo like a good boy, or, trundle down to the Unitarian Fellowship and hob-nob with the other lukewarms… ;)

Um. What?

No. Really. What?
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 10:36 am
"I am too much of an animal lover and even if someone proved to me I was projecting my feelings onto an animal I still would not be able to stop."


And you shouldn't stop loving your animal(s). Your love for it is not in question.

My only point is the dog doesn't, can't, by its very nature, love you back at all. Or, at the least, it can't love you in that unique way reserved to the human individual.

#

"Life is what we make it"


Largely: yeah.

#

"sometimes we feel dogs are our enjoyable best buds and sometimes that's enough."


Agreed. I have no problem with your or Classic’s or Pie's love of your respective animals. If I gave that impression: I apologize.

#

"How Did Dogs Become Adept at Playing to Humans"


Nice piece: something to think about...

#

"Every being is to some degree self aware."


Maybe: but it's difficult to gauge, isn't it? You and me, we can recognize the 'I' in each other by way of our unambiguous communication. We can sit across from one another, have coffee, and talk and argue and debate and there is no question, for either of us, that our coffee companion is another 'I'.

We haven't the same certainty with a dog. Is it simply reacting to me as formal and informal training (and its biology) allows for, or, is there some dim, fragment of 'I' behind those eyes?

I don't think there is; you do think there is.

Till science can explain consciousness (and 'self') we're left with anecdote, intuition, emotion, and guesswork.

*shrug*

#

"If the dogs have evolved behaviors that appear to be a approximation of human intimacy for their own benefit, then they offer the exact same type of love as my first wife."


HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

#

"To be able to detect an emotion would mean the animal must also recognize the same emotion in itself."


Possibly. Or it may mean the animal is adept at recognizing physical precursors to the behavior of its master. That is: the dog sees a scowl or frown and through association recognizes that master is about to make loud noises and maybe whack him on the head then push his nose into his own poo. A smile, grin, or twinkling eye may, through association, indicate to the dog that treats, dinner, a run in the park, or play session on the carpet, are just around the corner.

A tailored dog evolution, which the articles hint at, is more likely to lead to more complex survival skills, not necessarily increased intelligence or 'I'ness.
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 10:40 am
"So you started a thread on peace so that you could get a thread on dog and cat sapience?"

I don't much care what direction the conversation goes in...that's what makes a good conversation 'good'.

#

"They have evolved a highly sensitive ability to detect our emotions because our emotions have a huge impact on their well-being, not because they recognize the emotions in themselves."

Agreed.
Spexxvet • Sep 30, 2009 10:48 am
classicman;598138 wrote:
What sources do you have to back up your opinion? Truly, I do not think it can be "proven" either way, but I believe they do.


Jon Katz , noted dog author, feels differently.

"Over 15,000 years of domestication, [dogs] learned to trick us into thinking that they love us so we'll feed and care for them," he said.

Or, as he puts it in his new book, dogs are "adept social parasites."
...
Katz has written numerous books and articles on dogs, and he bases his conclusions on research conducted by unsentimental scientists trying to unlock the mysteries of animal behavior.

Then three words on Page 68 of "Soul of a Dog," brought me up short. Katz is discussing Lenore, a Labrador retriever and one of three dogs he keeps on his farm, and notes, "Lenore loves me."

"Busted!" I wrote in the margin.

"I use that term several times in the book," Katz admitted during lunch. "And what I mean is that my dogs love me in the ways that dogs love. There's no question that their instincts cause them to form and show powerful attachments."

He added, "What people were reading in your column was the suggestion that dogs are indifferent to their owners, which obviously isn't the case. But at the same time, dogs don't recognize people as unique individuals. It's just a romantic idea that a dog is a self-aware creature that makes a conscious choice to love a person because it appreciates his special qualities."

This leads, naturally, into the question of how much of the love humans feel for each other is based on instinct and need as opposed to objective, rational assessments. And to the implicit question in the title of the book and many of the anecdotes and mediations within -- do dogs have "souls"?

"My answer is that no, dogs don't have souls," Katz said. "At least not in the way that humans have souls. But they have souls of their own that we define by their impact on us."

They have an essence, in other words. A spirit, one that inspires and comforts and, occasionally amazes. We cheapen and distort that essence when we pretend it's just like our own.

Perhaps an otherwise divided nation can agree on Katz's simple plea: "Let dogs be dogs."

skysidhe • Sep 30, 2009 11:01 am
Thanks for the thoughtful response Henry.


I do get where your coming from. There is much scientific controversy over this.

There is no way I could prove love by my animals.

My belief that animals have emotions like love is more than a case of 'believing something is true makes it so'.


We can sit across from one another, have coffee, and talk and argue and debate and there is no question, for either of us, that our coffee companion is another 'I'.

Well I would look funny talking to a dog in a coffee shop :P

Seriously, I think anyone sitting with with you debating and having coffee would be very happy to do so.. You seem to be a very interesting person even without a wagging tail.:)
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 11:12 am
HA!

I wouldn't have thought to put it that way, but, yeah, exactly.

#

"Thanks for the thoughtful response Henry."


You're welcome!

#

"I can see you would be in your element to meet and debate and I think anyone sitting with with you debating and having coffee would be very happy to do so.. You seem to be a very interesting person even without a wagging tail."


Gosh...I think I'll just toe the ground and be shy and embarrassed for a bit... :)
xoxoxoBruce • Sep 30, 2009 11:13 am
skysidhe;598327 wrote:
You seem to be a very interesting person even without a wagging tail.:)
Assumption. ;)
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 11:17 am
;)
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 12:46 pm
henry quirk;598312 wrote:
Maybe: but it's difficult to gauge, isn't it? You and me, we can recognize the 'I' in each other by way of our unambiguous communication.


You are treading dangerous territory for me personally here. What about humans who are incapable of communicating? Do they not love just because they cannot talk with you?
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 3:15 pm
Classic, we're talking about two vastly different kinds of creatures here.

My expectations of one are not translatable to the other.

On one hand: we have the human individual for who it is natural to speak.

On the other: we have the dog for which it is natural not to speak.

As to the damaged human individual who cannot speak, whether or not such a person is capable of love depends entirely on the nature of the damage.

If I am stricken with throat cancer and lose my voice: I can still love.

If I were born with a damaged brain that limited my ability to speak as one aspect of the damage, then, it's entirely possible I would be unable to love.

Your question is awfully broad. Care to narrow it a bit?

Again: what makes human love unique is that it is 'done' within an 'I'. There is deliberation and reflection. That we communicate ourselves, transmit ourselves, through speech is the tool of the 'I', but not the definer of 'I'.
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 3:28 pm
henry quirk;598407 wrote:
we have the dog for which it is natural not to speak.

False - Just because YOU do not understand the communication, doesn't mean it isn't speaking.

henry quirk;598407 wrote:
If I am stricken with throat cancer and lose my voice: I can still love.

If I were born with a damaged brain that limited my ability to speak as one aspect of the damage, then, it's entirely possible I would be unable to love.

What? Love requires the ability to speak? WTH are you talking about now?


henry quirk;598407 wrote:
Your question is awfully broad. Care to narrow it a bit?


HA HA HA - Especially coming from the guy who wouldn't define "peace" in his own thread and continues to discuss the every increasingly redundant "I" without any concrete definition.

henry quirk;598407 wrote:
Again: what makes human love unique is that it is 'done' within an 'I'. There is deliberation and reflection. That we communicate ourselves, transmit ourselves, through speech is the tool of the 'I', but not the definer of 'I'.
The first sentence is still opinion and has been challenged repeatedly. The latter is pure conjecture - we still have no definition of "I" but we now have a "tool" of this ever elusive "I". Ahhh progress.
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 4:00 pm
"Just because YOU do not understand the communication, doesn't mean it isn't speaking."


Dogs do not speak to convey information beyond: let's fight, fuck, eat. They haven't the complexity of brain/body to do anything more than that.

Go have coffee with one and, later, tell me about the nuanced conversation. ;)

#

"Love requires the ability to speak?"


I didn't say that. I said this: 'If I were born with a damaged brain that limited my ability to speak as one aspect of the damage, then, it's entirely possible I would be unable to love.'

'as one aspect' means my lack of speech is possibly one of many things wrong with me. I may have severe retardation. I may be missing huge portions of my brain.

That's part of the reason I asked if you would narrow the question down a bit. "humans who are incapable of communicating" covers a lot of ground.

Get it?

#

"the guy who wouldn't define "peace" in his own thread"


I explained my reason for that to Beastmaster. Go back and read that explanation. Or not.

*shrug*

#

"every increasingly redundant "I" without any concrete definition"


I've hinted at that definition, and nothing more, simply because I took it that you, as 'I', could suss out what I mean. If you wanna know what the 'I' is: self-examine, self-interrogate.

I'm not teaching a class here. I expect I'm talking with reasonably intelligent folks who can do a little thinking for themselves. If I have to explain the apparent to you or others then maybe you or others ought to retire from the conversation. Better yet, since I prefer you stay, why not go back and read the thread from the start?

#

"The first sentence is still opinion and has been challenged repeatedly."


A challenge made with anecdote is useless. To date: you haven't offered a shred of evidence beyond anecdote to support (1) dogs love as humans do, and, (2) dogs understand love.

I on the other hand offer up the evidence available to anyone: my 'self', your 'self', his 'self', her 'self', and our demonstrated individual capacities for love.

#

"we still have no definition of "I" but we now have a "tool" of this ever elusive "I". "


There's nothing elusive about *'I'. Go look in the mirror: who's looking back at you? A real, concrete, organic, autonomous, individual.

Now: go prop your pooch in front of a mirror and ask him who or what it sees?

It can't answer: not with speech, sign language, or telepathy. And it sees nothing but another dog, or, a confusing image.

As for **tools: we each are our own, best, property. I am my flesh and my flesh is the way I interact with, apprehend, manipulate the world (walking on legs, grasping with hands, speaking with mouth, thinking with brain, etc.). Tool, as metaphor, seems apt.



*see post 82

**see posts # 65 and 82
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 4:13 pm
It is becoming increasingly apparent that "I", as you put it, "ought to retire from the conversation." This moving target crap is getting real old real quick. Perhaps I'll let another "dog" chase your elusive bone for a bit.

FWIW - I have been reading AND participating in this thread since the first post. Enjoy!
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 4:19 pm
"It is becoming increasingly apparent that "I", as you put it, "ought to retire from the conversation.""


Fine by me.

#

"This moving target crap is getting real old real quick."


And still no evidence offered in support of your position.

Not surprising in the least.

#

"Perhaps I'll let another "dog" chase your elusive bone for a bit."


I'd prefer another person.

#

"FWIW - I have been reading AND participating in this thread since the first post."


Indeed. Pity your participation was picayune; your comprehension poor.
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 4:22 pm
Perhaps you hadn't noticed that everyone else already stopped participating with you. I WAS trying to be nice. Perhaps you should consider that next time. mmmkay?
Shawnee123 • Sep 30, 2009 4:28 pm
classicman;598426 wrote:
Perhaps you hadn't noticed that everyone else already stopped participating with you. I WAS trying to be nice. Perhaps you should consider that next time. mmmkay?


ORLY? I'm counting 5 other people who have participated today. :headshake

And I haven't even added my .0000002 cents.
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 4:34 pm
How many have replied to HQ since 11:00 this morning?
And I wasn't talkin to you miss strawberry festival co-queen. :thankyou:
Shawnee123 • Sep 30, 2009 4:37 pm
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh, I forgot to look at the time. :cool:
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 4:43 pm
No problem - Gotcha covered ;)
Pico and ME • Sep 30, 2009 4:47 pm
too funny
Shawnee123 • Sep 30, 2009 4:49 pm
classicman;598438 wrote:
No problem - Gotcha covered ;)


Don't play me like your punk, mmmmmmkay?
classicman • Sep 30, 2009 4:52 pm
okay, but there will be no piece of peace in this thread till.....

<SMACK> but she started it!
Pie • Sep 30, 2009 5:08 pm
Don't make Bruce pull this thread over.
henry quirk • Sep 30, 2009 5:52 pm
"Perhaps you hadn't noticed that everyone else already stopped participating with you."


Seems to me, despite your assessment, the thread marches on in fits and starts.

#

"I WAS trying to be nice. Perhaps you should consider that next time. mmmkay?"


Actually you were acting like a great, flagellating, pussy. Since you are a great, flagellating, pussy, this is no surprise.

I, on the other hand, have been civil throughout till provoked by pedestrian insult and muddled thinking.

Classic: if you don't like 'me' (or my method of presentation) say so and move on.

If you don't like my positions, then, refute them or move on.

Frankly: I don't give a runny shit what you do. I think you're an idiot who couldn’t reason himself out of a paper bag. I don't like you. I can't see a single reason why anyone would.

So, to sum up: you’re a reactionary pussy...you can't think beyond the tip of your wet little nose...you can't refute me so you do what all great, flagellating, pussies do and dance fast and hard and avoid the topic(s) at hand.

Now: do something...pussy.

#

"How many have replied to HQ since 11:00 this morning?"

Figures: quantity is your measure of quality.
Spexxvet • Sep 30, 2009 6:35 pm
Shawnee123;598427 wrote:
ORLY? I'm counting 5 other people who have participated today. :headshake

And I haven't even added my .0000002 cents.


Does it count as participation if you posted, but couldn't bring yourself to read any of Henry's posts?:blush:
Griff • Sep 30, 2009 9:19 pm
Spexxvet;598472 wrote:
Does it count as participation if you posted, but couldn't bring yourself to read any of Henry's posts?:blush:


You're having trouble with the non-standard format as well? Unreadable. Does anyone know what this thread is about?
dar512 • Sep 30, 2009 9:27 pm
Griff;598489 wrote:
You're having trouble with the non-standard format as well? Unreadable. Does anyone know what this thread is about?

Not even henry. But it's all quite intentional. Just ask him.
Spexxvet • Oct 1, 2009 9:54 am
Griff;598489 wrote:
You're having trouble with the non-standard format as well? Unreadable. Does anyone know what this thread is about?


It's about 118 posts, as of now.
henry quirk • Oct 1, 2009 10:09 am
"Unreadable"

Then go away.

#

"It's about 118 posts, as of now."

HA!
monster • Oct 1, 2009 12:06 pm
[COLOR="LightBlue"]it is a little hard to read....[/COLOR] /quiet voice at the back

Are you unaware of the multi-quote facility or deliberately non-conformist? Sometimes conformity on more trivial matters can be a good tool to highlight those areas where it is imperative to go against the flow...

Just sayin'

as you were.

(or not)
henry quirk • Oct 1, 2009 12:52 pm
I'm aware of the quote function. I'm not making some kind of statement.

I just like the way I do things.

If others don't like the way I do things, what I have to say, or the way I say it: they can go away.

Seems pretty damned simple to me.
monster • Oct 1, 2009 12:59 pm
to me to. no offence was intended.
henry quirk • Oct 1, 2009 1:03 pm
Same here: you asked an honest question; made an honest point.

I did the same, so, peace, monster, peace...HA!
monster • Oct 1, 2009 1:16 pm
hey, I'm chilled :lol:
TheMercenary • Oct 1, 2009 1:50 pm
Image
henry quirk • Oct 1, 2009 3:43 pm
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

Never could stand peas. Vile things. ;)
classicman • Oct 1, 2009 4:54 pm
henry quirk;598466 wrote:
I'm a reactionary pussy...I can't think beyond the tip of my wet little nose...I can't refute you so I do what all great, flagellating, pussies do and dance fast and hard and avoid the topic(s) at hand.


ok lets see ...

1) I initially found you intriguing. That lasted till you were repeatedly asked for supporting info, and/or clarifications and you repeatedly couldn't or wouldn't.

2) Your opinion of me is meaningless. You don't know me nor anything about me.

3) At this point, I'll take the "I don't like you" option and move on for now.

4) Perhaps another time/place... stranger things have happened. Its too bad, you came highly recommended.

5) Then again, after finding out your were/are somehow related to PD ... I should have known better than to bother.
henry quirk • Oct 1, 2009 5:25 pm
go away, pussy
Griff • Oct 1, 2009 6:14 pm
henry quirk;598683 wrote:
I'm aware of the quote function. I'm not making some kind of statement.

I just like the way I do things.

If others don't like the way I do things, what I have to say, or the way I say it: they can go away.

Seems pretty damned simple to me.


Fuck you. See how clear that is.
jinx • Oct 1, 2009 8:32 pm
That is crystal clear Griff - making your post not just readable, but damned enjoyable.
henry quirk • Oct 2, 2009 10:42 am
Likewise, I'm sure... ;)
skysidhe • Oct 2, 2009 1:21 pm
This morning I slept past the usual time I get up. I woke to my cat. He would gently tap my cheek once with his paw then sit there staring at me. I would barely open one eye and doze back off then he would gently tap my cheek once again. I am not sure how many taps it took for me to awaken fully but I remember three and it looked as though he had been sitting there for awhile just methodically tapping my cheek in a sneaky..'it wasn't me kind of way'.

I know he was hungry as usual but I thought it was quite the use of subterfuge for an animal. It was nothing less than sneaky. How did he come up with that if it's all about instinct? He has never done that before.
henry quirk • Oct 2, 2009 2:44 pm
The cat was hungry, you are its source of food, you overslept (I presume past its normal feeding time), it wanted food, it went to the source.

Don't underestimate the complexity of the animal or downplay the intricacies of instinct. I don't. I also don't mistake instinct and training for 'self', or person-hood.

Your animal can learn, can adapt, is relatively intelligent, but it doesn't self-reflect, has no consciousness of self, isn't an 'I'.

Your cat didn't say to itself, 'gee, I'm hungry...Sky is dragging ass this morning...I best go and rouse her'.

Instead: the animal is hungry...habit and routine say food should be in place...it's not...you are the source of food...cat goes to the source of food...cat taps you on the face, not to rouse you, but to get food.

Seems to me a perfectly reasonable chain of events having nothing to with understanding, or 'I'ness.
skysidhe • Oct 2, 2009 3:00 pm
henry quirk;598912 wrote:


Your cat didn't say to itself, 'gee, I'm hungry...Sky is dragging ass this morning...I best go and rouse her'.



hehehe

See you can do animal talk.:)

He has such a Garfield face so I got a chuckle out of your animal ad lib.

Even while negating the likelihood there is that part of you that went so far as to imagine what the cat might say and that image is the one I like best.

Plus it makes life more fun.;)
henry quirk • Oct 2, 2009 3:07 pm
and: that's fine, Sky.

I have no problem with agreeing to disagree... ;)
skysidhe • Oct 2, 2009 3:41 pm
henry quirk;598918 wrote:
and: that's fine, Sky.

I have no problem with agreeing to disagree... ;)




I am not exactly disagreeing either. It's not about proving or disproving. I'm just picking and choosing. I choose to see this in a subjective rather than a critical or objective way. I know there must be a smidgen of truth in what you say. Much of science agrees with you.

Perhaps only critical and objective statements are best for a philosophy thread and I am way off the mark but there doesn't seem to be much critical analysis happening here anyway so I thought to have fun with it.
Queen of the Ryche • Oct 2, 2009 4:03 pm
henry quirk;598466 wrote:
"Perhaps you hadn't noticed that everyone else already stopped participating with you."


Seems to me, despite your assessment, the thread marches on in fits and starts.

#

"I WAS trying to be nice. Perhaps you should consider that next time. mmmkay?"


Actually you were acting like a great, flagellating, pussy. Since you are a great, flagellating, pussy, this is no surprise.

I, on the other hand, have been civil throughout till provoked by pedestrian insult and muddled thinking.

Classic: if you don't like 'me' (or my method of presentation) say so and move on.

If you don't like my positions, then, refute them or move on.

Frankly: I don't give a runny shit what you do. I think you're an idiot who couldn’t reason himself out of a paper bag. I don't like you. I can't see a single reason why anyone would.

So, to sum up: you’re a reactionary pussy...you can't think beyond the tip of your wet little nose...you can't refute me so you do what all great, flagellating, pussies do and dance fast and hard and avoid the topic(s) at hand.

Now: do something...pussy.

#

"How many have replied to HQ since 11:00 this morning?"

Figures: quantity is your measure of quality.



Sorry, don't know you that well other than being repeatedly offended by you and your generally unsupported, hard to read opinions Henry, but THIS post was completely uncalled for. Classic was asking for you to support or defend your opinion, simply because he had a conflicting opinion that he CAN support. You calling him names completely wiped away all respect I may have once had for you.

Just because you're lonely and sad and can't believe that any being might love you unless they SAY IT, doesn't mean you are right. I know my cat loves me, and I know lots of people on this planet are filled with love even though they can't SAY THOSE WORDS right now.
henry quirk • Oct 2, 2009 4:28 pm
"I am not exactly disagreeing either."

Even among hardcore analytic philosophers ambiguity abounds, so, no worries Sky.

#

"THIS post was completely uncalled for."

I disagree.
toranokaze • Oct 6, 2009 3:38 am
There will only be peace once we are all crushed into a singularity
W.HI.P • Oct 6, 2009 8:22 pm
the word peace has lost its meaning.
its used to describe war.

it is not within our nature to have peace.
we've always made war, and we will always make war.
within human perception, war is as much a god as jesus or allah.

in this day and age, with human over-population, war holds greater value than peace.
war is a blessing if you think about it, much like a virus, aids, homo-sexuality and natural disasters.
our deaths need to start out-numbering our births.
some nations need to follow in china's footsteps.
Urbane Guerrilla • Oct 9, 2009 7:08 pm
Shawnee123;598440 wrote:
Don't play me like your punk, mmmmmmkay?

Shawn, that's gonna call for you not to stay vulnerable to that. If the opposition can pants you and put you over a barrel, be sure they will. If they even think they can, they'll try. If they think your butt is cuter than LabRat's, they'll try all the harder. If they're old enough not to give a damn about cellulite, "old age and treachery" gets into it too. Hard to win when you're over a barrel.

There's a LOT of hemipygian philosophy written on the 'Net. If you don't like hemipygian, try sophomoric -- the word springs from "wise fool," you know.

(And maybe next time I come here I'll read the entire thread and say something really relevant instead of peripheral. 'Til then...)
Shawnee123 • Oct 9, 2009 7:51 pm
Oh, I hope you say something relevant. I've been waiting for so long. I think it's somewhere buried deep inside your irrelevance. A relevance cocoon, if you will.

Keep me posted. Ta ta!
TheMercenary • Oct 10, 2009 5:56 am
Shawnee123;600188 wrote:
Oh, I hope you say something relevant. I've been waiting for so long. I think it's somewhere buried deep inside your irrelevance. A relevance cocoon, if you will.
:D That was funny.
henry quirk • Oct 13, 2009 2:03 pm
Peace, I think, is another of those great, but sometimes useful, fictions like equality, justice, morality, ethics, etc.

A wonderful carrot to focus everyone's attention on, a goal to chase and devote one's self to. Always unobtainable.

#

And: dogs still can't love...HA!
dar512 • Oct 13, 2009 4:08 pm
henry quirk;600900 wrote:
Peace, I think, is another of those great, but sometimes useful, fictions like equality, justice, morality, ethics, etc.

A wonderful carrot to focus everyone's attention on, a goal to chase and devote one's self to. Always unobtainable.

#

And: dogs still can't love...HA!

Peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics (did you skip 'love' on purpose?). They aren't fictions. They're quite important. They're just hard to define in concrete terms.

If what dogs do isn't love (or at least companionship), then it's a really good imitation.
Henry • Oct 13, 2009 4:33 pm
Peace is relative and more often remembered than experienced.
henry quirk • Oct 13, 2009 4:53 pm
"Peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics (did you skip 'love' on purpose?). They aren't fictions. They're quite important. They're just hard to define in concrete terms."


In a philosophical sense they are fictions: peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics, these and others, only exist as compact or agreement between individuals. That is: for peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics to exist they must cudgeled together by individuals, then, agreed upon. To agree upon something requires at least two individuals.

Love too is a fiction, but a slightly different order of fiction, one that requires only 'one'. For example: if I'm right and dogs can't love, then the wholly reasonable love you feel for Fido is not reciprocated. This one-way love doesn't invalidate the love. Your love is something 'you' do whether or not the object (or subject) of your love feels, or is capable of feeling, the same.

What makes them all fiction (philosophically) is -- again -- the necessity that 'you' and/or 'me' 'do' them.

Also: peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics, democracy, etc., I maintain, are essentially unobtainable because each requires at least two to agree. Plenty of agreement there is, in the short-term...

Love (along with hate) has the virtue (or vice), being as it is 'done' by one, of potentially existing as long as the one does.

Nonetheless: kill all humans, everywhere, one minute from now, and peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics, love, democracy, hate, etc. (all esoterica) die with us.

The world has an objective reality independent of what you or I think or feel about it. But only you and me, him and her, and them, bring subjectivity (meaning) to the world.

So: forgive my imprecision. I don't mean to denigrate these 'fictions', only to label them as such and to place them properly 'within' 'you' and 'me'. That is: peace, equality, justice, morality, ethics, love and all the others are what we, as individuals, 'do'.

#

"If what dogs do isn't love (or at least companionship), then it's a really good imitation."


Dogs make great companions! For reasons that have nothing to do with love as you 'do' it.

And: computers can be made to be quite convincing in text responses to questions, so much so that, initially, it's hard to tell if the 'person' on the other end is a person or not.

A prepared response (a programmed computer or informally trained dog) does not a person or lover make...