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Is this like Nietzsche's will to power?
Ah, Brad, you of all people shouldn't miss the obvious. He's either in the process of transitioning to or from a centipede. If you can imagine it, it must be true!I wouldn't trust whoever put your poster together. Your spider has one too many legs.
A quote I cannot bother to source comes to mind, "Good artists borrow, great artists steal."That's what came to mind for me, but there is a history of that idea before he appropriated it. Schopenhauer, for instance, also comes to mind. On the general notion, we do seem to have a drive not only for existence but also for some sense of progress. Does that speak of a creator? If it does, the idea of "creator" will have to be general, since many types of "creator" could fit the bill, not all of which would be like those of the Abrahamic traditions.
A quote I cannot bother to source comes to mind, "Good artists borrow, great artists steal."
I'm not sure how much attribution to some creator we can apply such ideas, as the notion appears to be a post hoc idea.
See the last quote in my signature below.On the general notion, we do seem to have a drive not only for existence but also for some sense of progress.
Fair enough, just a thought on the association of Nietszche with an admittedly appropriated idea.Ha! I like the thought but won't ask for examples.![]()
Yeah, it's an inherently flawed approach "I have desires, so the universe must too." I believe the common joke around the internet is the "Creationist puddle" thinking "This hole must have been made for me personally".Do you mean the idea that we have a will to live proves God is also a post hoc idea? If so, I agree.
Yeah, though I find desire and all other subjective experiene fascinating. Qualia, they call it. One of the clear limits of scientific explanations, with some even willing to go so far as to declare it an illusion because it doesn't fit in a third-person understanding of reality.Nonetheless, it is a fascinating aspect of our existence. Why do we want to survive? Is it just blind desire? For most folks, actually, it probably is.![]()
Well, a genetic glitch might have caused it. If something tries to catch it as food it'll scuttle off, but with 5 legs on one side and 4 on the other you'd only have to wait a few moments and it'll be back where it started. Something of an evolutionary dead end I'd say.It has evolved.
Thank you for pointing that out. For some reason I can't see signatures unless I click on the name.See the last quote in my signature below.
See my last post above.Ah, Brad, you of all people shouldn't miss the obvious. He's either in the process of transitioning to or from a centipede. If you can imagine it, it must be true!
Sure, could be that we just haven't discovered what specific circumstances the 9 legged spider has adapted to.Well, a genetic glitch might have caused it. If something tries to catch it as food it'll scuttle off, but with 5 legs on one side and 4 on the other you'd only have to wait a few moments and it'll be back where it started. Something of an evolutionary dead end I'd say.
Well, a genetic glitch might have caused it. If something tries to catch it as food it'll scuttle off, but with 5 legs on one side and 4 on the other you'd only have to wait a few moments and it'll be back where it started. Something of an evolutionary dead end I'd say.
Careful there, the notion that organisms adapt to circumstances is a bit backwards. Organisms don't mutate in order to adapt, mutations occur and then selection pressures render some advantageous...the ones that are produce advantages survive, or at least the ones that don't actively produce disadvantages. So the question is, what selection pressures would make a 9-legged spider hold an advantage?Sure, could be that we just haven't discovered what specific circumstances the 9 legged spider has adapted to.
"Natural selection" and "will to live" seem like two ways of saying the same thing. How are they different?Natural selection. That's the reason for the 'will to live'.