Blue Peter wrote:Ludwig wrote:Personally, I think all morality is enlightened self-interest, or rather unenlightened genetic self-interest.
Presumably with an "evolutionary" origin? Except, I can't quite understand how a universe which started off witgh just bits of matter and energy ended up with self-interest, enlightened or not,
Peter.
No, nor can I, which is why I don't think it did. What I mean is that I don't think the universe started off with just bits of matter and energy - I think matter and energy are manifestations of a deeper order, that incorporates consciousness and meaning. I would go so far as to say that I think consciousness and not matter is probably the basic stuff of the universe.
We have evolved to perceive the universe in a certain way, which is neither "right" nor "wrong". For example, through our highly developed sense of vision, we perceive patterns invisible to an earthworm, but I see no reason to imagine that our senses represent the apex of possible perception.
Quantum mechanics tells us that, at bottom, the universe is very different to how we perceive it, existing as states of probability - but we still don't accept that, so we're still searching for a way to fit QM into our "intuitive" modes of perception and our essentially materialist world view.
QM also says there is such a thing as retrocausation: the present affects the past. This really makes a mockery of our "intuitive" ideas of time.
What we should be doing is accepting that QM may tell us how the world IS, and that our apparently intuitive perception that it is otherwise is wrong - that we perceive only a fraction of what is really out there, and that the way we perceive may result in basic misapprehensions as to the nature of space and time.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."