Where are the snubs? I try to engage you in conversation ... shut down. Try again ... shut down. I complain about being shut down ... now you engage. Okay, if that's how it works ... the squeaky wheel and all that
uwot wrote: ↑Sat May 26, 2018 8:42 amGreta wrote: ↑Sat May 26, 2018 12:08 amReduction of stress in a dying person reduces strain on the body, increasing the chances of survival, obviously. Those whose dying brains were awash with calming hormones would have had a little more chance of surviving than those who bore the full brunt of the stress of dying.
The thing I think we both agree on is that evolution is a fact, and that everything about our being here can be explained in that context. The problem I have is that those explanations only make sense if you happen to believe in evolution in the first place. It's probably easier to explain by analogy. You know the type of argument that some theists offer to account for the problem of evil; some version of: 'There is an all powerful, all good god that gave us free will. Evil is our fault, but it is better than not having free will.' Any number of stories can be made up based on a few simple premises; some are clever, beautiful, compassionate; others are ridiculous, ugly, narcissistic. Either way, the story will tell you everything you need to know about the story teller, but it won't tell you anything about the 'material' world. If someone doesn't believe in god, someone else's story isn't likely to change their mind. Same with evolution. The difference is that evolution is demonstrably the case and while trying not to sound like too much of a self-righteous pr*ck, I think that is the point that needs making and let people interpret evolution as they will.
I agree. I see evolution denial as akin to flat Earthism. It's odd given that sacred texts metaphorically describe the process of evolution on the first page. "Day" is clearly just a posited age of indeterminate length and not meant to be taken literally. I expect that the ancients would be surprised to find ostensibly advanced modern people taking their observations literally. Or maybe they would say, 'Oh, we had
them back in our time too!"?
uwot wrote:Greta wrote: ↑Sat May 26, 2018 12:08 amThanks for not listening, as usual.
I always listen and the stories you tell are always interesting and entirely plausible within a context that I broadly agree with. If I didn't, I would probably make it more obvious that I am paying attention.
Okay, sorry for my wrong assumption. What about riffing on ideas that you find somewhat plausible rather than just slaying the dragons of misinformation? As long as everyone is aware the ideas are mere conjecture rather than "biblical truths", no drama IMO.
Thing is, dying is not just dreaming and trippy. There is a fundamental state change going on where, for a few minutes at least, the subjective outweighs what we think of as "objective" - our shared observations - in terms of perception of reality.
Being in that twilight state is subjectively akin to being in a black hole. The inside of a black hole is said to be sealed off from the rest of the universe, effectively a separate domain perhaps playing by some different rules within the inner horizon. The brain-alive, clinically dead patient is sensorially insulated from the universe so, what happens "out there" is a separate domain and less relevant to what is happening within the mind (barring perhaps an accident that immediately crushes the brain).