The Lorax
- Deltamatic
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I don't see how it's unethical to kill bacteria, plants, insects etc.(.?)
Relying on intelligently designed technology for our survival would be better than relying on our bodies' bionano. If we just keep living unmodified we'll eventually die.
Nature adapts well to its own disasters. If we fully controlled our surroundings there wouldn't be disasters in the first place.
As for efficiency, I'm thinking long-term. We'd regret wasting energy on a nonsentient biosphere when the stars had died.
Relying on intelligently designed technology for our survival would be better than relying on our bodies' bionano. If we just keep living unmodified we'll eventually die.
Nature adapts well to its own disasters. If we fully controlled our surroundings there wouldn't be disasters in the first place.
As for efficiency, I'm thinking long-term. We'd regret wasting energy on a nonsentient biosphere when the stars had died.
- MOM4Evr
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Well, I sure wouldn't like to eat manmade slime every meal. I like my vegetables!Deltamatic wrote:I don't see how it's unethical to kill bacteria, plants, insects etc.(.?)
Problem is, us humans have a tendency to mess things up. Just think of how many computer crashes there are in the world every day. I sure wouldn't like to be the guy to program something that's supposed to control the weather. Whoops, I set this variable wrong... now we're going to have massive hailstorms for the next month...
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When our sun expands into a red giant, it won't matter because we won't be on Earth in the first place. It doesn't matter how much technological advancement there might be in the next 5 billion years, we won't be able to survive when the planet is engulfed by the sun and vaporized unless we're not on it.Deltamatic wrote:As for efficiency, I'm thinking long-term. We'd regret wasting energy on a nonsentient biosphere when the stars had died.
The problem is that, as MOM4Evr points out, the human species is capable of causing plenty of disasters of our own. The nice thing about the Earth being regulated by a self-sustaining, nonsentient system is that there's really no way a malicious minority of people could ever use it against other people. And the fact of the matter is that, as much as our technology may advance in the centuries to come, we as a species will almost certainly retain our age-old tendency to fight amongst ourselves. And it's at least comforting that the biosphere, our current basis of survival, is incapable of being subverted against us short of its being totally destroyed.
As for your other point about whether it's unethical to eliminate species with limited or no sentience...this is an endless point of argument, but I would personally simply hate to imagine wiping out entire species of anything simply because they were "unnecessary." Perhaps its simply because I have a deep-set appreciation for life and the natural world, but I wouldn't want to live in a world without plants, wild animals, and uninhabited open space away from human society.
Also...I can't help myself, I'm reminded of this...
The Khmer Rouge wrote:To keep you is no benefit. To destroy you is no loss.
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The Lorax seems less of an actual indigenous character and more of a mythical "if nature could speak what would it say" kind of thing. It does, however, sound a lot like an environmentalist protestor in the video.VikingBoyBilly wrote:I've had the book since I was a kid, and I always saw it as the Lorax representing indigenous people
Indigenous people historically don't react and warn with such clout, more like are driven off or murdered. The Lorax may appear a victim at first, but at picking himself up and flying off through a hole in the smog, he's really just a myth.
As for long-term efficiency, the universe will end up frozen, an we're going to be kicking ourselves that we ever bothered to improve anything ever.
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@MOM4Evr: wow, your username is hard to type. You could still eat vegetables and do whatever you want in a VR environment, I wouldn't want to get rid of the status quo to replace it with something inferior. Weather wouldn't be an issue without an atmosphere.
@StupidBunny: Yeah we'd better be somewhere else 5bil years from now. Inter-human conflict can be solved by modifying humans' brains or putting moral nonhumans in charge. Species wouldn't be wiped out because they were unnecessary, but because they would have used energy that we'd like. Yeah, killing unintelligent things is debatable, especially when applied backwards to us. Maybe all life could be converted to programs and given virtual paradises to live in. (Fly paradise? Ebola paradise? But then again our paradise is bound to be abhorrent to other intelligent species which evolved under different conditions.)
@StupidBunny: Yeah we'd better be somewhere else 5bil years from now. Inter-human conflict can be solved by modifying humans' brains or putting moral nonhumans in charge. Species wouldn't be wiped out because they were unnecessary, but because they would have used energy that we'd like. Yeah, killing unintelligent things is debatable, especially when applied backwards to us. Maybe all life could be converted to programs and given virtual paradises to live in. (Fly paradise? Ebola paradise? But then again our paradise is bound to be abhorrent to other intelligent species which evolved under different conditions.)
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Well, I liked The Lorax, the book anyway. Never seen the TV thing...
...says the most charming guy in the room.
I'm back... kind of? Not really.
You can also find me here.
I'm back... kind of? Not really.
You can also find me here.
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Umm... in 5 billion years the human species will be extinct. Period. No otherworldly colonization or any bullfucl like that is gonna extend human existence in the universe for that long.Deltamatic wrote:@StupidBunny: Yeah we'd better be somewhere else 5bil years from now.
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To be honest, I'm almost seeing the Lorax as a parallel to the kind of nutbag protesters that make the environmental movement look bad, because they don't know what they're talking about.KeenEmpire wrote:The Lorax seems less of an actual indigenous character and more of a mythical "if nature could speak what would it say" kind of thing. It does, however, sound a lot like an environmentalist protestor in the video.VikingBoyBilly wrote:I've had the book since I was a kid, and I always saw it as the Lorax representing indigenous people
Indigenous people historically don't react and warn with such clout, more like are driven off or murdered. The Lorax may appear a victim at first, but at picking himself up and flying off through a hole in the smog, he's really just a myth.
As for long-term efficiency, the universe will end up frozen, an we're going to be kicking ourselves that we ever bothered to improve anything ever.
Let's look at the basics: he appeared the instant the first tree was chopped down, to be a nag (which may have encouraged the Onceler to ignore him).
What did he say when he first appeared? It wasn't "HEY YOU CUT DOWN MY HOUSE!", it was "I know what's best for EVERY tree and it's not YOU!"
Then, he never tried to adapt to the situation, and used the same tactics that had failed before to convince the Onceler that he was wrong repeatedly. This, again, made him a nag that the Onceler would want to ignore. In the end, he just gave the guy a look, in that "I told you so" way, and left, even though as the Onceler seemed to indicate at the end, it was possible for the area to become green again. This means that, ironically, not only did the Lorax probably contribute to the mess by sending people in power the wrong message, but he abandoned his own responsibilities even though there was still a possibility for the area to be made green again (anything can happen in a thousand years).
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Now that's what I call an unconventional interpretation.RoboBlue wrote: To be honest, I'm almost seeing the Lorax as a parallel to the kind of nutbag protesters that make the environmental movement look bad, because they don't know what they're talking about.
Let's look at the basics: he appeared the instant the first tree was chopped down, to be a nag (which may have encouraged the Onceler to ignore him).
What did he say when he first appeared? It wasn't "HEY YOU CUT DOWN MY HOUSE!", it was "I know what's best for EVERY tree and it's not YOU!"
Then, he never tried to adapt to the situation, and used the same tactics that had failed before to convince the Onceler that he was wrong repeatedly. This, again, made him a nag that the Onceler would want to ignore. In the end, he just gave the guy a look, in that "I told you so" way, and left, even though as the Onceler seemed to indicate at the end, it was possible for the area to become green again. This means that, ironically, not only did the Lorax probably contribute to the mess by sending people in power the wrong message, but he abandoned his own responsibilities even though there was still a possibility for the area to be made green again (anything can happen in a thousand years).
"In order to ensure our security, and continuing stability, the Kingdom has been reorganized into the First Vorticon Intellectuality!"
- No. 1 Machop Fan
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If this is the Dr. Seuss Lorax I'm thinking, then the message is the effects of destroying and polluting the environment solely for profit. Men chopped down trees to start a business, the land got polluted and the poor air quality forced the business to shut down. All the while the Lorax was trying to protect his home.
"Please! I speak for the trees!"
"Please! I speak for the trees!"
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Come on, you know Machop is cute! I mean, how could you not love those endearing eyes? That adorable face? That loving embrace?
Just don't call it cuddly or else it will hurt you.
Come on, you know Machop is cute! I mean, how could you not love those endearing eyes? That adorable face? That loving embrace?
Just don't call it cuddly or else it will hurt you.
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