Showing posts with label meaning of life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meaning of life. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

False Patterns

As human beings, we attempt to find patterns. We are pattern-seeking species. Recognizing patterns is beneficial for our survival, so why would this capability be discarded? Finding the purpose for something, the cause and subsequent effect, has allowed us to develop useful food gathering/hunting techniques until they've eventually reached epic proportions (see our genetic modifications of food to produce as much as possible for our constantly expanding populations). Our ability to recognize patterns has allowed us to develop complex systems of communication, of transportation, of social interaction.

It's no surprise that we would find pattern where there otherwise would not be a pattern. We actively seek them out, even if we are not completely aware of the processes our brains are engaged in. Even though we have the capability to consciously participate in critical thinking to determine if these patterns are, indeed, legitimate, many people are convinced solely upon their personal perceptions or anecdotal evidence.

Time and again humans have been misled by their pattern-seeking behavior. For instance, despite all evidence to the contrary, many people still choose to see a pattern between vaccinations and autism. Prior to researching this phenomenon of autism and its cause, vaccinations would sound quite plausible to people unfamiliar with the medical aspects of vaccines and autism. Around the same time that a child is vaccinated is about the time that symptoms of autism begin to sprout. However, since the medical community has been studying this pattern of cause-and-effect, they have not been able to find any link with vaccinations and autism (except that they coincidentally occur at approximately the same time).

People strive to find a pattern, a reason, a purpose for something that occurs. It helps us to cope with the phenomenon in question and allows us to have a sense of control about a situation that we might find ourselves in.

Belief in there being a supernatural deity or a meaning to life is no different. Though we have the natural instinct to locate a pattern that would offer us a satisfactory explanation for something that is otherwise mysterious to us, we must curtail this instinctive behavior in favor of something that will provide a more substantial explanation. Critical thinking and the scientific method are available for this very purpose.

We would like for there to be a "meaning" or "purpose" for our lives as homo sapiens and as individuals, an overall meaning that prevails all personal meanings. Based on how well finding patterns between cause and effect relationships have been for us as a species, it seems common sense that we would be able to use this same ability for things more abstract, like the meaning of life.

I believe that this is where our natural instincts for locating a pattern or a purpose fails us. We are misled by this capability time and again, in instances of ghosts, spirits, vaccines/autism, the Obama/birth conspiracyhomeopathic remedies, and dream interpretation. Likewise, I would venture to propose that we are being misled by our need to find pattern and purpose in things more abstract and broad like an "ultimate" meaning of life. I remain unconvinced by the assertions made by those who claim that there is a meaning to life. Especially when that meaning includes a supernatural aspect.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

The Secret to the Meaning of Life (for only $11.99 +S&H)

When someone like Rick Warren, author of a (somehow) nationally well-received book, The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth am I Here For?, states that the secret meaning to life is to serve and obey god (the Christian one, of course), from where did they derive that information? What life are they talking about? All of life, or just the modern homo sapiens? Did homo neanderthalensis or homo erectus have the privilege of being god's creations, made for god's intention to have a species serve him (again, the Christian one)? Or were they failed experiments? Or perhaps just too boring?

Do these people who believe that the meaning of life is to be their god's slave get this information from the bible? Or did their god conveniently speak to them in private, far away from other people's ears? In either case, it seems this "hidden" meaning of life -- specifically the life of those species capable of conscious self-awareness -- must stand trial and answer some pretty basic questions in order to hold any credibility.
1. How reliable is the source of the claim (the claim being that the meaning of life is to serve and obey the Christian god)?
2. Does this source often make similar claims?
3. Have the claims been verified by another source?
4. How does this fit with what we know about the world & how it works?
5. Has anyone, including and especially the claimant, gone out of their way to disprove the claim, or has only confirmatory evidence been sought?
6. In the absence of clearly defined proof, does the preponderance of evidence converge to the claimant's conclusion, or a different one?
7. Is the claimant employing the accepted rules of reason and tools of research (i.e. - scientific method), or have these been abandoned in favor of others that lead to the desired conclusion?
8. Has the claimant provided a different explanation for the observed phenomena, or is it strictly a process of denying the existing explanation?
9. If the claimant has proffered a new explanation, does it account for as many phenomena as the old explanation?
10. Do the claimants' personal beliefs and biases drive the conclusions, or vice versa?
(Thank you, Michael Shermer, for this very useful list)

The fact that so many U.S. citizens slurp this condescending and questionable information up like so many Catholic priests at an altar boy field trip is ridiculous. Take two minutes to question the origin of this information, and you'll likely find that an overall, ultimate "meaning of life" is a bullshit concept to begin with, let alone that any answer given by someone who is clearly biased in their perspective (or is trying to make bank on a half-assed-written self-help book) is probably going to be full of shit as well.