For real, I don't think we can know. I think Earth in the scheme of the whole universe amounts to nothing at all, but we also have no idea what the whole universe amounts to or why it's even wherever or whatever it is, or if it has any inherent value. For all we know the universe could just be some non self aware cell type body among a trillion others in a vast other universe or entity... Kinda depressing when you consider how little humans know and will ever know in our lifetime atleast
Basically, no idea
On a cosmological scale, nothing we say or do, own or belong to really matters. We're as important as the speck of dust on the bottom of your shoe. But we don't live on a cosmological scale. For the most part we're a collective bacteria confined to an insignificant little ball in one of the least eventful reaches of space. So-
On a global scale and humanist standpoint, humanity matters considering humans are the dominant species. As a collective we're arbiters to the earths future. We've the power to heal it as well as destroy it. This is probably important to anyone concerned with the longevity of the human species.
On that note, clean water and food matters.
Science matters as a means to help us understand our past and determine our future.
Material possessions don't, neither do dolphins.
You matter.
Seriously, fuck dolphins.
Cheers, Synthlight.
Last edited by Mourningfall; 10-12-2015, 03:33 PM.
Not sure if serious question but nothing has "inherent value" since the value of something exists in the subject who perceives it and not the object being perceived.
Yes, things matter, even if there isn't a universal scale of worth inherent in nature. Things matter because of people. You can argue that nothing ultimately matters because everybody dies someday, or because the earth is such a small and unimportant component in the universe, or because the universe will one day implode, but what about those eighty some odd years you have in between? The time you spend alive and what you leave behind for those that will be alive after you are what matter. There is inherent value in the things that contribute to the positive well-being of humanity on the micro (personal), meso (community, family, friends, etc), and macro (societal, human race as a whole) levels.
Well said. Honestly if nothing matters why not we all commit suicide, to imply that we small life forms relative to the complexity of our existence and vast scope of things we can be arrogant to yet claim to understand would have to bend the fabric of space in time with our own will (basically become a god or your life is worthless) sounds really impractical to me.
Explain why nothing mattering would mean the absence of a reason to not commit suicide.
Reasoning is a matter you take in your own hands, hell, we are made of matter. What I'm saying is there's no way to be alive were matter doesn't concern you. A statement to commit suicide is equally impractical as thinking there is some unequivocal "meaningless" denominator to everything.
It depends at which scale you are judging things. Too vast of a view of your actions or the collective actions that take place on earth, and no, they don't matter. But we're a system, a self perpetuating system that relies on everything within it to cooperate. Your actions matter in the sense that you can change things big or small with them. The end result of those actions could very well be a global change for the better, for example!!!
Things matter to me. I that it matters that we optimise things so that suffering can be avoided in areas big or small. Especially on the small. Little things like thoughts with a sour taste lead to massive amounts of suffering. It matters that we are helping each other enjoy the ride and to keep momentum somehow. Whether it's through posting and reflecting on things, or if you're actually out there doing things. THAT sort of thing might not matter-- how you do it-- but reciprocal altruism is a part of us at many scales.
Really to even begin to digest this question you need to break it up into something less broad and impossible to answer.
But I respect the existential impossibility of things mattering in scales the size of one universe or many. Although who's to say there's not a very important ripple effect we're amounting to, some many billions of years down the road. Don't think in terms of "when the universe ends, everything wouldn't have mattered"-- untrue. Things happened here, people lived, suffered, and went through many changes. These were things happening at the time, not at THAT time, when the universe has ended (if it does in many of the ways it could).
Also question your requirements for something to matter. In the present there are far more opportunities to realize that things can matter, unless you IMMEDIATELY toss it in the same boat with grandiose existentialism. Which is not a fair thing.
Maybe it's best not to worry so much if it matters in the grandest scheme of things. It's just not our territory. Don't let those anxieties intoxicate you.
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