We don't all have PhD's in Physics: Everyone knows what we're talking about.
I guess it's a matter of striking a balance between humanity & science. After all, the question 'what is the purpose of life?' is as much a human question as it is a scientific one.
Tubby: I have no interest in having children, yet plenty of purpose. carry on
If it's a human question, mightn't one expect the answer to be more complex than, "to create more life" ?
Quote from: quadz on February 14, 2011, 01:43:34 AMIf it's a human question, mightn't one expect the answer to be more complex than, "to create more life" ?No, I don't think so.Occam's Razor; the most simple explanation is usually the correct one.
You could become the next President of the USA, but if you don't procreate (have children), your legacy will die with you. There will be nobody to carry that superior genetic inheretance into the next generation and beyond. You and all your 'purpose' will essentially become a biological corpse.That's not to say you can't do wonderful things in the world today - which may influence the world tomorrow - but without procreating you're effectively consigning your genes to the dustbin of biological history.
Note that the children of two geniuses are often not in turn themselves geniuses.
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whether or not a particular human breeds should be generally irrelevant to our gene pool.
I never said that OTHER intelligent life would be dangerous, what I said was that it's possible that they are terrified of us given our propensity for war.
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Quote from: |iR|Focalor on February 13, 2011, 01:39:10 AMI never said that OTHER intelligent life would be dangerous, what I said was that it's possible that they are terrified of us given our propensity for war. Good point Foc.Mostly we tend to think that 'aliens', if they exist, would be far superior to us in our ability to conquor and destroy. Why is that? Are we as humans so fixated on domination and destruction that we automatically suppose that any alien life form who visits must necessarily wish us harm?Yes. What would happen if a real UFO touched down in NY Central Park? The US Government would send fighter jets out to greet it...Says a lot about the human mindset, I guess.
But it's still only relevant in the wider context of the continuation of the species: As far as nature / biology is concerned, that surgeon has failed in his duty as an individual member of the human race to pass on his genetic inheritance: We are all naturally predisposed to procreate, so, when that great surgeon dies, his own individual genetic legacy will be lost and he will become little more than an agent for the promotion of other people's genes.
http://anthro.palomar.edu/mendel/mendel_2.htmLet us assume, for instance, that both you and your mate are carriers for a particularly unpleasant genetically inherited disease such as cystic fibrosis click this icon to hear the preceding name pronounced. Of course, you are worried about whether your children will be healthy and normal. For this example, let us define "A" as being the dominant normal allele and "a" as the recessive abnormal one that is responsible for cystic fibrosis. As carriers, you and your mate are both heterozygous (Aa). This disease only afflicts those who are homozygous recessive (aa). The Punnett square below makes it clear that at each birth, there will be a 25% chance of you having a normal homozygous (AA) child, a 50% chance of a healthy heterozygous (Aa) carrier child like you and your mate, and a 25% chance of a homozygous recessive (aa) child who probably will eventually die from this condition.
A little like a wife who gets pregnant by sleeping with her lover instead of her husband...
http://www.news-medical.net/news/2006/10/23/20718.aspx?page=2Homosexual behaviour has been observed in 1,500 animal species."We're talking about everything from mammals to crabs and worms. The actual number is of course much higher. Among some animals homosexual behaviour is rare, some having sex with the same gender only a part of their life, while other animals, such as the dwarf chimpanzee, homosexuality is practiced throughout their lives."Animals that live a completely homosexual life can also be found. This occurs especially among birds that will pair with one partner for life, which is the case with geese and ducks. Four to five percent of the couples are homosexual. Single females will lay eggs in a homosexual pair's nest. It has been observed that the homosexual couple are often better at raising the young than heterosexual couples.
Quotehttp://www.news-medical.net/news/2006/10/23/20718.aspx?page=2Homosexual behaviour has been observed in 1,500 animal species."We're talking about everything from mammals to crabs and worms. The actual number is of course much higher. Among some animals homosexual behaviour is rare, some having sex with the same gender only a part of their life, while other animals, such as the dwarf chimpanzee, homosexuality is practiced throughout their lives."Animals that live a completely homosexual life can also be found. This occurs especially among birds that will pair with one partner for life, which is the case with geese and ducks. Four to five percent of the couples are homosexual. Single females will lay eggs in a homosexual pair's nest. It has been observed that the homosexual couple are often better at raising the young than heterosexual couples.Simple maxims like, "if an individual doesn't breed he/she has failed in his genetic duty" are (a) too simple to account for the interactions of complex life forms (homosexual couple might be better at raising the young), and (b) just wrong at the genetic level (unless that individual has a rare advantageous mutation, he/she didn't have any new genes to pass on that aren't already present in much of the rest of the population.)
But galaxies don't have the ability to ask questions about why they exist. Human beings do, and human beings typically rationalise such things as having some sort of 'purpose' or 'meaning'. I know that's not science, but it's how most human beings generally do things.