Hard Work

You believe you earned what you have, yes? You believe you deserve credit for your hard work yes? You believe that credit can come in the form of a good job a safe place to live, and your animal needs taken care of, yes?

If you answered yes to any of that you can no longer feign innocence and retain dignity. You are a part of the problem.

It follows from the answer above that the other end of that spectrum is true. If you believe quality of life is related to work then it follows that those with poor quality of life are to one degree or another at fault for not working as hard or as smart as you who have a greater quality of life.

You defend the myth that with hard work comes reward. You act as if menial laborers choose to be so out of some character flaw. And don’t say you don’t because you believe that sufficient character merit results in success.

You are a millionaire in terms of buying powered compared to the rest of the world. Do you realize how many people will die today because of shitty water? I mean that literally.

I suppose they are all just stupid and lazy? No. And you know it. Face it and go from there.

And how about all the suicides? More stupid people, right? And everyone else trying to live under the crippling weight of chronic depression.

Until you grasp the concept that EVERYTHING in existence is either blind chaotic luck or deterministic inevitability, and apply your ethics accordingly, you’re part of the problem.

If you believe a person can earn a private jet, or starvation via sloth, you’re simply evil from my perspective. A dangerously ignorant machine on autopilot begging to be used as a weapon and little else.

A person is defined by the truths they hold and the actions that result, so long as your data is corrupt your actions will be equally corrupt. The era of the gene has ended. The meme is the new paradigm. And you should watch what you let take root in your brain.

Besides it’s in your best interest because no mater what you do, your species in this arena, will die out. The meat your type of mind is printed on may live, but drones like you are going to go the way of the dodo. If you and those around you are lucky it’ll happen soon, and a new mind will make better use of that shell of yours.

Mercy and Justice.

I was asked…

Justice and mercy are both fundamental to civilized human life. If we are to continue to live in an ordered and supportive world, both justice and mercy are required. However, if we were forced to choose either justice or mercy, which one do you think would be more essential? Why?”

Mercy, no contest.

Nature has shown that time and again rigidity equals death. Mercy is flexibility. Justice tends to be absolute, and thus ill equipped to deal with novel new situations, or exploit novel opportunity. This type of trait is absolutely required for any species to survive in the long term.

Mercy is an extension of the very idea that justice is supposed to promote; comfort, safety, and joy.

Mercy is a means and an and. If the society in question is populated by unaltered humans, then mercy is a far more effective tool of inclusion than justice. Justice is typically about revenge, where as mercy is about prevention. And an ounce of prevention…

Tolerance for the suffering of others, is the root of all our social problems. Competition is tolerance for the loser’s suffering, rape is tolerance for the victim’s suffering, racism is tolerance for a race’s suffering, environmental destruction is tolerance for the suffering of the as yet unborn, and so on.

Mercy is the capacity to look past flaws, which is required because we all have them, justice is the demand that those who carry flaws be attacked. Attacking ourselves is mindless. Persuasion>punishment. No action occurs in a vacuum.

Crime is either the system failing to address someone, or mental illness, neither of which are appropriately responded to with the intentional infliction of pain. And that’s what justice is. Mercy is an objective. It can be demonstrated, universally, it can be codified safely. Justice, is a subjective, and a boundary.

Mercy is a door, justice is a wall. If it’s just us on this island, we need more doors than walls.

We must be in the long run, as a species, utterly intolerant of the absence of mercy. If we wish our great grand children to have great grand children.

The Hidden Variable

“You just let the machines get on with the adding up and we’ll take care of the eternal verities, thank you very much.” ~MAJIKTHISE, The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

First published July 11 2009, reproofed/edited 2013-08-24 0122 PM

This started as an exchange on YouTube. He posted a message attacking my cosmology, making the common accusation that I’m a god of the gaps proponent. (The idea that because we don’t know every last little thing therefor X religion is correct.)

The neoatheists, and indeed some natural atheists appear to lack the brain structure to process the nature of my position, this is not an insult or a weakness, please read to the end before you get all pissy with me. 🙂

To me it is exactly like how some of the faithful are simply immune to reason and evidence.

I wasn’t going to post this having had the debate already publicly over a period of about a month (http://underlore.com/deism-v-atheism-how-and-why/) with a man whom I consider to be more intelligent and more well read than myself. Thus the effort seems redundant, since either you will agree or you won’t.

But there is another advantage. I can give those who share my beliefs but lack my skill at articulation, a cheat sheet as it were.

And so I answer.

I took that message down because I was using my business account instead of my personal account. I think in the US it would be harmful to my business if Google searches revealed my personal attitudes toward religion.

When I signed back in as myself and re-read what you posted I realized I had made a mistake anyway, I misunderstood your position. You are correct, you did not fill the gap.

That being said, I’m not sure that the question you ask about the speed of light cannot be answered by science. I am also not sure that there is any point to focusing on such questions other than to attempt to reduce (in a very small way) the realm of science. What is your motive? One can create a multitude of questions pertaining to the properties of “things” like, “why are rocks hard?”

If you wish to engage, please use (email withheld)

thanks, S

To which I responded… (Text may be edited from what was originally sent, but not much.)

My purpose is simple. It’s the same purpose many have. The search for truth. Not merely the accumulation of facts, or the ability to predict events, though those are part of truth, but the whole truth, at least as close as my limited brain can contain.

To me the point of life is in large part the effort to increase the mind’s parity with reality. In addition of course to the twin axioms of fighting death and suffering.

I do not think the questions diminish science in a ‘small’ way, though I don’t see a point in announcing that. Indeed my view is logically inescapable as it demands ultimately that science abandon the use of the word “why” in favor of more carefully constructed “how” questions.

You nailed it when you asked “why are rocks hard” and then classed that sort of question. The fact is the only way science can ever answer any “why” question is by changing the meaning of it to an approximation of “how.” That is the essence of science’s limitation. Those areas which are not opinion, and yet not objective. Put simply, meaning and purpose.

Why is purpose. How is process. There is no objective measure of purpose. And there is a significant difference between purpose and function. How a clock works is not why we have clocks.

The speed of light for example may very well be a function of some other facet of reality, but I assure you as you dig eventually you’ll hit axiomatic bedrock. (Quantum weirdness abounds.) http://www.stanford.edu/dept/HPS/writingscience/Ferris.htm

Science can only ask “how does this work” and can only answer in relation to other answers. The reference of a clock is another clock. By definition it cannot originate beyond the creative guessing of an unknown observation of previously existing reality. It can follow lines of reason, sometimes combine and synthesize them, but it cannot originate them.

Religion however can, because it is not bound by observation, I need not see cause to imagine effect, though the brain itself may. Religion and philosphy potentially provides insight into the creation and enforcement of the reality that science seeks to descriibe and predict. This is necessary to complete understanding, and allowing science to claim the capacity to answer ALL forms of question is corrosive to learning because it creates a misconception of what science is, and a perversion of what religion is supposed to do.

To be able to understand our existence we must be able to ask both How and Why. Neither is superior to the other generally, though each excel in different contexts. Mutually exclusive contexts often. Religion won’t grow an arm back and science can’t cure existential terror.

“Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.” – Albert Einstein

Do you see what he meant now?

It is no more correct to say god exists as a personal being than is it to say science can tell if an electron is evil. They need to be kept in their corners, as with church and state. Or disaster will eventually result.

Some mental illness takes on a religious form, but not all religion is mental illness. (Though I will admit the vast majority of it is, when it isn’t simply mistaken and intellectually lazy.)

Weeks went by at this point.

Brandon,
I almost completely blew off this message because I have heard this rhetoric before.

This sort of comment is very common. It is used as an insurance policy. It is a means of nullifying any potential win I may have, indeed, he steps up this loss prevention bet hedging later.

By saying he’s heard it before, before he even hears my response, he’s in effect implying that even if he can’t beat me himself, the reason whatever it is, will not be because I am right. Because if I was right then others would not have been able to answer my “rhetoric.” He’s saying “though I may not have an answer for you, one is out there, thus you’re already beaten the only question is can it be done again.”

Also it betrays a complete closedness, that I’m going to talk about a bit more later. He’s already decided that he’s heard my arguments and seen them refuted before. So he’s not even really reading my response he’s just looking for argument points. Talking because he feels compelled to talk. He knows to not reply is to behaviorally admit something distressing but he’s not consciously aware of what it is.

This is extremely ironic as later he goes on to accuse me of closed mindedness.

I think you are looking for a gap.

So I went from not filling the gap to looking for a gap. Clever. I would say I’ve found a gap, but saying finding a gap equates to making a god of the gaps argument is deceptive to say the least. It’s like the jump from saying Hitler was a good public speaker to saying I admire Hitler’s ideology. It doesn’t work that way. The gaps argument is not noting the existence of a gap, it’s implying that because the gap exists it must be filled with X specific and unsupported by the evidence, thing.

If you are serious about challenging yourself, don’t waste your time on me.

Here is a more advanced insurance policy. Here he makes my response to him, if any at all, an admission of weakness. This is cheap. It’s like saying “by reading this sentence you agree to pay me 10$.” He’s trying to put me in a similar position I put him in, where I’m to feel that by talking, I’ve somehow lost, because as I said he knows that he’s already lost and it merely proving it by talking.

Go to http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/ and ply your skill.

Well for the record I am about finding the truth, as I explained above. I am not going to speak to Pharyngula who is a famous anti-religious blogger, equivalent to Bill O’Reilly.  There is a difference between being willing to challenge yourself and accepting any no matter how pointless or counter productive like Marty McFly being led around by being called chicken.

The whole purpose of his page is humiliation and satire. Not rational debate. It would be like debating gay rights on a Fred Phelps forum. A strong proponent is not always a rational one.

It is possible to have a closed mind that was 99% right when it was closed, and like I said even if I did get headway he will gloss over it or simply make fun, that’s the point of his character. He is an expert at humorous diversion.

While there do not complain about the insults, put on your thick skin and really pay attention.

Even he seems to realize this with yet another insurance policy. I’m supposed to just ignore incivility abuse and Ad Hominem. The response I would get on pharyngula’s blog is basically a verbal beating, the truncheon in lieu of reason. I’m not going to dig through a mountain of tripe for nuggets of wisdom.

I said to him: If you can find points Pharyngula’s made that you consider salient, then paste them. Truth has no copyright. Make them your own. I suspect you can do so without name calling and grandstanding, which he cannot.

If you are sincerely interested in the truth and not just looking for a gap for your version of god, you will find it.

So again if I don’t find it it’s because I’ve failed, not because he is wrong.

I and others greatly admire people who are capable of changing their minds in the face of reality.

I was a strong atheist for decades. And I still am if you define god as having any trait other than existence and enforcement of the physical constants. For all practical purposes I am still a strong atheist, except for my recognition of the limits of reality and my belief that those limits create an irrefutable logical demand for an outside, effect/existence. The hidden variable from The Hidden Variable interpretation of quantum mechanics, that which literally twists reality to make it conform to it’s rules confounding logic in the process because it supersedes logic.

I came from where he is suggesting I advance to. For me it would be a step back. Burt because I am in advance of him my position is difficult to understand.

I did it, others have done it, you can do it.

To him I say: Perhaps you’ll do it again. I certainly can. But that is academic at this point, the possibility on this topic for me is precisely as remote as gravity reversing itself. My position is based on the axiomatic facts of our observable reality. Specifically the existence of axioms generally. So unless you can dissolve the concept of an axiom, I’m not going to be changing my mind.

Am I closed minded for saying that nothing can talk me out of believing that 1+1=2? OR am I simply certain of a reality?

You are obviously an intelligent person and I don’t understand your need for something more than the natural.

Thank you, I think it is obvious you are intelligent as well. This is not about our personal hangups, again you make a disclaimer, that if I persist in my position I am neurotic. So again I suggest a third option.

It’s not my need. It’s reality’s. I could just as easily ask you why you need matter to attract itself. Do you have greed issues? You would say no, it’s just how it is, yay for gravitation. And you would be right.

If am wrong and you really aren’t looking for a gap, then you should be able to muster more than “search for truth” when you describe your objective.

Agreed.

Your true intent hinges on one simple question: Do you believe in the supernatural?

Well that depends on how you define nature. If by nature you mean all of existence. Then of course no. By definition the word supernatural means not in nature, and if nature is everything that exists anywhere under any circumstances then the question becomes “Do you believe in things that don’t exist?”

However, if you define nature as our observable reality, and only that. No other levels of existence, no parallel universes, etc. Then of course yes. I think there is clearly an underlying (or overlaying) system. Glimpses of this system and the logical requirement for it/them manifests in many ways. Now I’m no quantum mechanist so I’ll admit complete ignorance, but I have read some popular science on the subject of 11 dimension ideas.

My belief is somewhat like those ideas. It is logically demanded but totally unobservable. We can’t get there from here but that does not mean ‘there’ does not exist. Indeed the fact that we can’t get there is part of what I’m talking about.

By being aware of the fact that here exists, and the fact that there is a barrier, I know that ‘there’ must exist. Though I can not tell you a single aspect of it’s nature. For all I know there’s a void, or a picnic, or solid rock.

If you made it this far, I addressed your email.

I’m glad we’ve gotten past the tiresome insecurity rituals. My intent is not to humiliate you or win. I am using you for content generation. And conceptual sharpening. And public service.

Can you sincerely not think of a “why” question that is answered by science?

Of course not, why is always a subjective.

You can say “approximation of how” all you want, it is just quibbling over semantics.

That’s like saying higher math is just quibbling over numerics. Semantics are how we express thought. If you don’t like me being specific don’t ask subtle or vague questions. Precision of word is precision of thought. That english is inherently flawed is a social issue not a scientific one.

I contend that applying “why” to physical constants is a meaningless exercise.

Why is about purposes, meanings, and qualia. Like I said about the electron. You chose to undermine the existence of evil. Well ok, let me put it another way. Is there a test to determine if an electron is my favorite one? Of course not. There is no objective criteria.

And science by its nature can only answer in an objective fashion. And since reality is composed of both objective and subjective questions, then by definition science cannot answer all questions.

This does not mean that questions which science can not answer are “meaningless.” It just means they are different. I am not a creature of objectivity. Indeed *I* is the essence of subjectivity. To dismiss it from your world view because your belief system can’t parse it as an objective phenomenon is basically insane and cheating.

You are either capable of understanding that or you are not. If you are not this is not a weakness on your part any more than my being unable to sense heat like pit viper is. I am not making a qualitative judgment I am simply suggesting that some people can’t, by dint of their neurological construction, grasp this concept.

It’s like being able to visualize a hypercube. Or imagine a new color. Even the mind has limits, and those limits are different among individuals.

Here is Einstein’s “religion.” He was not talking about some belief that completed his world view. He explicitly states that he uses science to reveal. Your quote is from 1941. In his later years he was disgusted by the attempted subversion of his words by religious factions. Here he sets the record straight:

“It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it.” (Albert Einstein, 1954) From Albert Einstein: The Human Side, edited by Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman, Princeton University Press

Note his qualifier, “personal God,” the man was a deist and so am I. What was annoying Einstein was the false dilemma often applied to his words. “See he believes in a god therefor he believes in my God.”

Besides, the quote was not some sort of argument from authority, it was just meant to express a concept. If you choose to believe that Einstein was a strong atheist, that’s cool with me. It really has no bearing one way or the other.

The “electron is evil” comment presupposes there is such a thing as evil. Do you believe in evil?

As explained above I was just grabbing a subjective at random for exemplary purposes. It is not germane. For the record though I am a moral relativist. There are no specific actions which are universally evil. Unless you define an action via its consequences.

Example: The only act which is universally evil is one which causes a net increase in pain coupled with a net loss of life. It’s all about pleasure and life. We can dig into that later if you’d like.

The idea of “non-overlapping magisteria” is a thoroughly refuted accommodationist viewpoint.

If that’s what my viewpoint actually is then I disagree. If it is not then the statement becomes irrelevant. I find the angst implied by “accommodationist” amusing. As if cooperation is weakness. I could easily say that science itself is an “accommodationist” idea because it utterly bends to the will of reality. Do you ascribe such obvious personality traits to other non-living things? Your response is as absurd as me saying “If science were a real man it wouldn’t bow to anything, including evidence!” Heh.

Your statement in which this sentence appeared indicates a leaning in that direction, IMHO.

Well I hope I’ve removed any significant ambiguity.

Religion trespasses on science. When it no longer does so, it will no longer resemble what is thought of today as religion.

Agreed. But religion is not part and parcel with its consequences. Just as phrenology is not science. Science too trespasses on religion. You’re doing it now by basically saying science can explain anything and that which science can’t explain doesn’t exist or is trivial. If I set you on fire subjectivity would quickly come to matter to you a great deal. Science wouldn’t care, it would just measure the temperature differential between you and the room and the decibels of your screaming. 🙂 Ethics on the other hand can be systematized but they can’t be made into a science because the axioms on which ethics are based are subjective in nature. IE pleasure is good pain is bad. Science could answer questions like which way of government is most productive and longest lasting but it can’t answer what way of life is best because that’s a subjective question. You could apply a scientific method to the question and feed it subjectively derived premises and get a useful answer, but that’s my point. Science in order to be complete must be given a subjective component from outside and that’s what philosophy and religion and subjective experience do. That’s again what he meant when he said science without religion is lame. With out an arbitrary direction or someone to ask questions and have a goal science is immobile.

My brother in law is in love with (it seems to me) the idea of religion. He recognizes that religion as it exists (and is practiced by the majority) is shallow. He also concedes that it has been, and continues to be, complicit in countless atrocities throughout history.

I do not know your brother so this is pure speculation, but I suspect that is because he can separate the actions of those inspired by religion from the ideological concept of religion. Religion is like emotion. It’s ethical value stems from what we do with it.

If I say the Mona Lisa inspired me to kill brunettes would that make the Mona Lisa evil? I suspect it’s a bit like that.

Somehow, he is still reverential of it, as are many people. He spends a lot of time searching for a place where he can keep his love alive. He wants his belief to just be intellectually superior and justifiable through his abstract mental contortions. I think that he is simply narcissistic. He cannot accept the insignificance of his own existence.

You may be right, but again, I don’t know the man. However I think your appraisal of yourself as insignificant is dishonest. I could put you in a  dozen situations where you would demonstrate your own believe of significance, its just that you recognize that what makes you special is outside the realm of science and since your science (like a religion which demands no other gods) demands that you claim all things outside science to be trivial, you logically know that you must include yourself, and so you do rather than admit that science is fundamentally incomplete because it’s a tool without a hand.

A few questions:
re: “Some mental illness takes on a religious from, but not all religion is mental illness.” That is an interesting sentence. Why not “Some religion is mental illness and some is not.” Which one(s) is/are not?

Because that’s like saying some science is mental illness and some is not. If it were mental illness it wouldn’t be science. The same applies to religion. Saying god told you to kill your son is not religion, that’s schizophrenia. Saying god wanted your son to die because he did despite all ethical efforts to save him, is religion. It’s about perspective and interfacing your qualitative experience with the quantitative world.

Are you a theologian, by chance?

No.

Do you think there is a purpose to our existence?

Regards,
-S

Of course, but I do not think of my answer as objective or valid beyond anyone but me.

I look forward to your rely.

Paradise Engineering

This page is in response to…

http://www.hedweb.com/huxley/

Which is possibly imo the most articulate, pressing, relevant, and hope inspiring text ever constructed.

Ironically given some topics covered, I cannot express clearly the subjective value this work has.

I have only one primary complaint, and it is below.

Each paragraph is lifted from the original work located here.

<blockquote>Potentially, transhumans will be endowed with a greater capacity for love, empathy and emotional depth than anything neurochemically accessible today. Our selfish-gene-driven ancestors – in common with the cartoonish brave new worlders – will strike posterity as functional psychopaths by comparison; and posterity will be right.</blockquote>

Just as those like me are considered psychopathic by today’s standards. I’m not crazy, I just see different things and that perception for better or worse has fundamentally altered who I am.

<blockquote>Scare-mongering prophets of doom notwithstanding, a life of unremitting bliss isn’t nearly as bad as it sounds.</blockquote>

Obvious but it needs to be reiterated over and over.

<blockquote>Thus mescaline, and certainly LSD and its congeners, are not fail-safe euphoriants. The possibility of nightmarish bad trips and total emotional Armageddon is latent in the way our brains are constructed under a regime of selfish-DNA.</blockquote>

There’s a lesson pertaining to the drug war in there.

<blockquote>In any case, our descendants are likely to automate menial drudgery out of existence; that’s what robots are for.</blockquote>

This will be the first visible step of humanity away from its infancy. And the first step towards my final solution. They will clean our homes, dig our gardens, and prepare our meals long before they love us and elevate us past suffering.

<blockquote>The impregnable well-being of our transhuman descendants is more likely to promote greater diversity, both personal and societal, not stagnation. This is because greater happiness, and in particular enhanced dopamine function, doesn’t merely extend the depth of one’s motivation to act: the hyper-dopaminergic sense of things to be done. It also broadens the range of stimuli an organism finds rewarding. By expanding the range of potential activities we enjoy, enhanced dopamine function will ensure we will be less likely to get stuck in a depressive rut. This rut leads to the kind of learned helplessness that says nothing will do any good, Nature will take its revenge, and utopias will always go wrong.</blockquote>

Like many of these quotes, this was just reproduced because I liked it.

<blockquote>Unfortunately, the true altruists among our (non-)ancestors got eaten or outbred. Their genes perished with them. </blockquote>

This trend and concept is why I constantly rail against mate selection issues. Not because I myself am generally excluded for whatever reasons, as painful as that is, but because, selection pressure is the fundamental force acting on our species. This is also why my final solution takes the form it does. It is designed expressly to shortcut the system for our collective and individual benefit.

<blockquote>Hopefully, the need for manifestos and ideological propaganda will pass.</blockquote>

And like the honest cancer researcher, I too hope to one day, hopefully in the next 12 hours, be completely out of a job.

<blockquote>The contrast between true and false happiness, however, is itself problematic. Even if the notion is both intelligible and potentially referential, it’s not clear that “natural”, selfish-DNA-sculpted minds offer a more authentic consciousness than precision-engineered euphoria. Highly selective and site-specific designer drugs [and, ultimately, genetic engineering] won’t make things seem weird or alien. On the contrary, they can deliver a greater sense of realism, verisimilitude and emotional depth to raw states of biochemical bliss than today’s parochial conception of Real Life.</blockquote>

Again, just a really valid point I liked.

<blockquote>Post-humans are not going to get drunk and stoned. Their well-being will infuse ideas, modes of introspection, varieties of selfhood, structures of mentalese, and whole new sense modalities that haven’t even been dreamt of today.</blockquote>

Again, just really cool.

<blockquote>Citizens must not fall in love, marry, or have their own kids. This would seduce their allegiance away from the community as a whole by providing a rival focus of affection.</blockquote>

Sadly, while this was meant to be an indictment of the brave new world fictional society, I see it as a reality here today in the real world. Sure we are allowed to love marry and have children but the process at every level is so unimaginably constrained that it might as well be disallowed. The Company tell us effectively in this context “You can have anything you want, so long as you want what we say you should want.”

<blockquote>And above all, when suffering becomes truly optional, we shouldn’t force our toxic legacy wetware on others.</blockquote>

As we do today on both a genetic and memetic level. Our effort to insure that our children are like us is the most cruel thing we can do to them.

<blockquote>Enhancing serotonin function – other things being equal – is likely to leave an individual less likely to submit to authority, not docile and emasculated.</blockquote>

And that is another reason why the pill must be given in food, not merely to pacify the patient, but the patient’s ever watchful but dimwitted jailer.

<blockquote>Animal suffering is just savage, empty and pointless. So we’ll probably scrap it when it becomes easy enough to do so.</blockquote>

In vitro meat. It funny how recently all the things I’ve spoken and written about are becoming realities, or at least far more widely discussed.

<blockquote>Down on the farm, tasty, genetically-engineered ambrosia will replace abused sentience. For paradise-engineering entails global veganism. Utopia cannot be built on top of an ecosystem of pain and fear.</blockquote>

Good point. As the Hero Norma Borlaug put it, “You can’t build a better world on empty stomachs and human misery.”

<blockquote>But as science progressively gives us the power to remould matter and energy to suit our desires – or whims – it would take an extraordinary degree of malice for us to sustain the painfulness of Darwinian life indefinitely. For as our power increases, so does our complicity in its persistence.</blockquote>

Power = Responsibility. If you can help at reasonable cost or below, you have an ethical responsibility to do so. This is related to sex, monogamy, and the term ‘slut’.

<blockquote>Even unregenerate humans don’t tend to be sustainably ill-natured. So when genetically-engineered vat-food tastes as good as dead meat, we may muster enough moral courage to bring the animal holocaust to an end.</blockquote>

Again. Simple win.

<blockquote>Selfishness, whether in the technical or overlapping popular sense, is a spectacularly awful principle on which to base any civilization. Sooner or later, simple means-ends-analysis, if nothing else, will dictate the use of genetic engineering to manufacture constitutionally happy mind/brains.</blockquote>

But that logic will not convince anyone unless they already were in a position to agree as a result of complex nature-nurture interaction and requisite ancestral genetic pressures. Again, the final solution.

<blockquote>But the attributes of power, status and money, for instance, however obviously nice they seem today, aren’t inherently pleasurable. They yield only a derivative kick that can be chemically edited out of existence. </blockquote>

Means to an end. People generally miss this whole idea. A fun game is asking people what they want with this in mind. Ultimately everyone wants to be happy, what they think they want are merely tools they think will get them there. In this context I find it amusing, thinking back on all the answers I’ve ever gotten which related to drugs. Since they were closest to a real answer.

<blockquote>Likewise, intense and unpleasant social anxiety was sometimes adaptive too. So was an involuntary capacity for the torments of sexual jealousy, fear, terror, hunger, thirst and disgust. Our notions of dominance and subordination are embedded within this stew of emotions. </blockquote>

That explains me nicely. I often wondered how someone like me got here, in a purely Darwinian sense.

<blockquote>Sado-masochistic images of domination-and-submission loom large in a lot of our fantasies too. The categories of experience they reflect were of potent significance on the African savannah, where they bore on the ability to get the “best” mates and leave most copies of one’s genes. But they won’t persist for ever.</blockquote>

God willing.

<blockquote>Allegedly “immutable” human nature will change as well when the genetic-rewrite gathers momentum and the reproductive revolution matures. The classical Darwinian Era is drawing to a close.</blockquote>

Again.

<blockquote>Unfortunately, its death agonies may be prolonged. Knee-jerk pessimism and outright cynicism abound among humanistic pundits in the press. They are common in literary academia. And of course any competent doom-monger can glibly extrapolate the trends of the past into the future.</blockquote>

Not if you trick them into thinking it was their idea or they can profit by some element of it. Slippery slope them. Make them think they’re getting away with something.

<blockquote>Yet perhaps asking whether we would appreciate ecstatic art of 500 or 5000 years hence is futile in the first place. We simply can’t know what we’re talking about. For we are unhappy pigs, and our own arts are mood-congruent perversions. </blockquote>

And that’s why I hate the vast majority of art, television, movies, and music because all I see is erotic capitol and antler bashing, and those who profit from it. Our art as it stands now is disgusting and shallow and worthless on the whole. Which is why to me arguments about how great we are based on our art fall on incredulous ears. I mean really, a can of soup, some naked girls, a guy with his eye in the wrong place, a melted clock? And that’s not even starting on the trillions of examples of ‘art’ that boil down to “I desperately want to fuck all hotties and kill all other males.” or “Compete for the privilege of fucking me.” Come on, we can SO do better.

<blockquote>One hopes, on rather limited evidence, that the birth-pangs of the new genetic order will be less traumatic.</blockquote>

If the right people hear and listen to me, it will actually be enjoyable.

<blockquote>Windfalls and spending-sprees do typically bring short-term highs. Yet they don’t subvert the hedonic treadmill of inhibitory feedback mechanisms in the brain. Each of us tends to have a hedonic set-point about which our “well”-being fluctuates.</blockquote>

Again.

<blockquote>The endless cycle of ups and downs – our own private re-enactment of the myth of Sisyphus – is an “adaptation” that helps selfish genes to leave more copies of themselves; in Nature, alas, the restless malcontents genetically out-compete happy lotus-eaters. It’s an adaptation that won’t go away just by messing around with our external environment.</blockquote>

And here is where science needs philosophy and the concept that inspired Einstein’s famous quote about science being lame.

<blockquote>A few centuries hence, we may rapidly take [im]material opulence for granted. And this virtual cornucopia won’t be the prerogative of a tiny elite. Information isn’t like that. Nor will it depend on masses of toiling workers. Information isn’t like that either. If we want it, nanotechnology promises old-fashioned abundance all round, both inside and outside synthetic VR.</blockquote>

Yup.

<blockquote>The experience of this-is-real – like all our waking- or dreaming consciousness – comprises a series of neurochemical events in the CNS like any other. It can be amped-up or toned-down. Reality does not admit of degrees; but our sense of it certainly does. </blockquote>

Yup.

<blockquote>Thus Huxley doesn’t offer a sympathetic exploration of the possibility that prudery and sexual guilt has soured more lives than sex. In a true utopia, the counterparts of John and Lenina will enjoy fantastic love-making, undying mutual admiration, and live together happily ever after.</blockquote>

Yup.

<blockquote>If suffering has been medically eradicated, does happiness have to be justified any more than the colour green or the taste of peppermint? Is there some deep metaphysical sense in which we ought to be weighed down by the momentous gravity of the human predicament? – Only if it will do anyone any good. The evidence is lacking.</blockquote>

Yup.

<blockquote>Moreover this transformation of the living world, and eventually of the whole cosmos, into a heavenly meaning-steeped nirvana will in no way be “unnatural”. It is simply a disguised consequence of the laws of physics playing themselves out. </blockquote>

And the point of the path is revealed.

<blockquote>Until now, selection pressure has ensured we’re cursed with a genome that leaves us mostly as callous brutes, albeit brutes with intermittently honourable intentions.</blockquote>

Again, why I’m always on monogamy’s ass. It’s not just me people.

<blockquote>This isn’t to deny that love is real. But its contemporary wellsprings have been poisoned from the outset. Only the sort of love that helps selfish DNA to leave more copies of itself – which enable it to “maximize its inclusive fitness” – can presently flourish. It is fleeting, inconstant, and shaped by cruelly arbitrary criteria of physical appearance which serve as badges of reproductive potential. If we value it, love should be rescued from the genes that have recruited and perverted the states which mediate its expression in blind pursuit of reproductive success.</blockquote>

Love through the lens of the meat.

<blockquote>When sexual guilt and jealousy – a pervasive disorder of serotonin function – are cured, then bed-hopping will no longer be as morally reckless as it is today.</blockquote>

Again with the term slut, and the profit The Company gets from us fighting each other for sex.

<blockquote>And just as during much of the Twentieth Century, any plea for greater social justice could be successfully damned as Communist, likewise today, any strategy to eradicate suffering is likely to be condemned in similar reactionary terms: either wirehead hedonism or revamped Brave New World. This response is not just facile and simplistic. If it gains currency, the result is morally catastrophic.</blockquote>

Again, final solution.

<blockquote>But one does one’s best. The ideological obstacles to genetically pre-programmed mental super-health are actually more daunting than the technical challenges. </blockquote>

Hence my life’s work.

Hence my approach, which may be self defeating as I’m about to explain it, but honor demands that i do so. I’ve always said that if you can’t trick a child into doing what you want you shouldn’t breed, this is an indictment of brutality and dominance through fear. The relevant point here is that humanity must be tricked into this, it must be delivered in candy as surly as one must hide medicine in the dogs food. We will never eat this as it is, as we are. The hedonic engineered populace may be swayed by logic and clarity but normal humans simply are not. They are too thoroughly owned by their dopamine addiction, and social masters.

It has been suggested quite astonishingly well that the solution is to edit the species in such a manner as to preserve our humanity and eliminate suffering as an option.

Some may see my solution and dismiss it out of hand as a result seeing the direct edit preferable. I am aware of this argument.

Which is more likely to be accepted by a given individual. A syringe of retrovirus which will forever make them happy and different? Or a delicious little slave thing that adores the very idea of their pleasure and makes its life goal the enhancement of it’s host’s enjoyment and general well being?

The end goals of genetic hedonism and my symbiotic slave species solution are one in the same. I’m simply suggesting a different more palatable way of getting there. Creation of this servant race of neo humans who actually enjoy helping will lead to interbreeding, and eventually the traits of suffering et all, will be quietly annihilated. Our species as it is will NEVER accept the hedonic genetic option no matter how technically feasible or desirable logically it may be. Only the most bold and fringe among us will attempt it, others will murder to the point of self annihilation.

One fact is always overlooked by the writers of these essays, a fact I’ve personally discovered again and again, and hopefully learned from. Logic does not dictate emotion. In order to affect change, one must use emotion creatively and responsibly.

So my final solution stands.