Read Cosmos.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
The human condition is a physical state.
Read Cosmos.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
And the Lord God said, "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever." So the Lord God banished him from the Garden of Eden to work the ground from which he had been taken. After he drove the man out, he placed on the east side of the Garden of Eden cherubim and a flaming sword flashing back and forth to guard the way to the tree of life.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
In economics it's described as unlimited desire in the face of limited resources.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
Why is that the "human" condition? Wouldn't it be true of any species?amused wrote:In economics it's described as unlimited desire in the face of limited resources.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
We want more than we can ever get.
What other species is known for wanting more than it can ever get?hiyymer wrote:Why is that the "human" condition? Wouldn't it be true of any species?amused wrote:In economics it's described as unlimited desire in the face of limited resources.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
We want more than we can ever get.
I get your point. Every species lives in the reality of limited resources, but we do have our own take on it.Seraph wrote:What other species is known for wanting more than it can ever get?hiyymer wrote:Why is that the "human" condition? Wouldn't it be true of any species?amused wrote:In economics it's described as unlimited desire in the face of limited resources.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
We want more than we can ever get.
No. Wait. Don't bother. I have already read many of your posts. I need a break.
Specieist...Seraph wrote:What other species is known for wanting more than it can ever get?hiyymer wrote:Why is that the "human" condition? Wouldn't it be true of any species?amused wrote:In economics it's described as unlimited desire in the face of limited resources.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
We want more than we can ever get.
No. Wait. Don't bother. I have already read many of your posts. I need a break.
But the human species can symbolically construct alternatives that don't exist. It's an adaptive strategy that doesn't exist in other species except as latent capacities. We don't adapt to our environment. We create our own. If nature offers it's bounty, other animals will partake because it just is what it is. We will conceive of ways to create our own bounty. Hey if we got torches and drove the antelope over the cliff at night and then smoked the meat, we'd eat like kings all winter. Hey what if the antelope don't come back next year. Hey what if we pray to the antelope God. He what if we try to be better than we are. Etc etc etc.JOZeldenrust wrote:Specieist...Seraph wrote:What other species is known for wanting more than it can ever get?hiyymer wrote:Why is that the "human" condition? Wouldn't it be true of any species?amused wrote:In economics it's described as unlimited desire in the face of limited resources.Rum wrote:What does the phrase 'the human condition' mean to you?
We want more than we can ever get.
No. Wait. Don't bother. I have already read many of your posts. I need a break.
Pretty much any species will overindulge if a normally limited and valued resource suddenly becomes abundant.
To me at least it seems apparent that any difference between humans and other species is a difference of degree, not of category.

mmm poooooooooooor us .The Mad Hatter wrote:Terrible lot? It's precisely our abstract thought that makes it terrible.

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