this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2025
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collapse of the old society

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Why?

Survival of the human species.

Which should be an extention of your own personal will to survive if you are not a sociopath, narciccist, or suicidally depressed.

The entire history of human civilization has pretty much only moved forward when we worked together with like minded goals.

This is because the power and skill one person can obtain will always be dwarfed by the power and skill obtainable by hundreds or thousands. Even the most impossible problems to solve, like landing on the Moon without computers, has been conquered through the collective will and skill of our species. But rarely, if ever, by an individual.

During the industrial age, the goal of working together was the improvement of our livelihoods and well being. Now in the information age, it's about survival.

No Billionaire has the skill or power to stop climate change.

But enough of us together do. Unquestionably.

Unless you only care about yourself and can't see the benefits of what working towards a goal that isn't your own can bring.

No offense, but your argument is that of a rich white liberal that's too insulated by money to bother reading about the overwhelming economic benefits of things like taxes, and regulations.

Basically, in case you didn't know - as someone else mentioned - you live in the same world as everyone else.

And what that means is that this world very much has an effect on your day to day life in what opportunities and options it provides you. All of which are not at all decided by you.

The quality of institutions, education, healthcare, and security you have access to are directly related to the skills and efforts of the hundreds of people running them. Not yours.

You will be better educated, have a better job, and have better health in these communities because these are things ONLY others can provide YOU.

So working towards improving these jobs, and the people doing them, also allows you access to that improvement. When a communities environment improves for all in it, that certainly includes you.

That's the short of it - but unfortunately we live in a world where billionaires have decided that's just all bullshit instead of accepted science with hundreds of years of validated experiments in sociology, economics, and anthropology to confirm.

So now because of the actions of billionaires who have been taking from all our communities for the benefit of themselves - we are now ALL in the same prisoners dillema. They have created an environment for us all where we only have the following choices:

A) Be too distracted by the firehouse of social media bullshit to do anything. B) Be a coward and convince yourself to do nothing. C) Work together to combine resources and prevent our own extinction.

Billionaires are actively working towards our own existential demise, so you are either choosing to fight against that or do nothing to let them kill us all.

So to answer WHY:

It's so the future is one where your kids are happy instead of living as slaves in a dying world. Your inaction guarantees the later result.

Bonus: everyone becomes happier when working towards a better future if you ever decide to try.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

your argument

I haven't made an argument.

It's so the future is one where your kids are happy instead of living as slaves in a dying world.

The statement that I responded to was about all humans, regardless of whether they are parents. Your answer is limited to parents only. You haven't answered why non-parents have a duty.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

I haven't made an argument.

Then why are you saying I'm wrong? About what? What point are you defending if you never made one?

These are not rhetorical questions.

Playing pin the tail on your point isn't a game others should be playing for you. Say what you're thinking out loud, or it isn't worth saying.

Because this:

Your answer is limited to parents only.

Is completely wrong.

My answer is limited to family. Children of which were the best example. However, any human can be your family. Adoption, Friendship, and close relationships all form the bonds that can make up a family. And helping better our families helps better their own environment which in turns helps others. No human relationship requires a biological componant for you to be in their family.

So my answer is indeed for all humans.

You're either a troll or an edge lord that's too young to understand their own Temu version of nihilism.

Literally open any book on morality, read it, then ask yourself why humans are compelled to feel "right" about what they are doing.

They want to feel that way because we are social animals who are biologically compelled to help each other. Which strengthens our communities, and therefore our lives in them. We even evolved to release dopamine in our brains when what we are doing for that community feels "right" aka morality.

This works for all humans (except sociopaths.)

Helping other humans literally makes you feel good, and improves the quality of the community you live in for a better future. The closer you feel to that community (family) the better you feel when helping them.

There you go. All humans.

And why we should treat each other well due to our basic biology (it makes you feel good) and improves of our own futures and that of our families.

Looking forward to hearing about how this is still wrong when compared to the point you've never made.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (1 children)

why are you saying I'm wrong?

I haven't said that.

this:

Your answer is limited to parents only.

Is completely wrong.

You said "your kids".

Children of which were the best example. However, any human can be your family. Adoption, Friendship, ...

You didn't say any of that. In fact, your comment didn't contain the word "family" once. You've changed your tune.

Regardless:

and improves of our own futures and that of our families

Why does one have a duty to improve one's own future or the future of one's family?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

You didn't say any of that.

That's what my second comment saying just that was for.

You didn't understand my original point (and still don't).

Which is why I made a second comment explaining that you can ctrl+F for "children" and replace it with "family" to better understand my point.

The answer to your question can be found in multitudes of philosophy, ethics, and biology books. I encourage you to read them instead of trolling here for the sake of your own ego.

Because this question of yours:

Why does one have a duty to improve one's own future or the future of one's family?

Has an obvious answer. One that you can reach by asking similarly obvious questions.

"Why does one have a duty to eat?"

Or breath?

Or sleep?

Survival. That's why. Without eating, sleeping, or breathing you die. Without a community to help provide security for these things, you also die. (Unless you want to tell me humans aged 0-8 are expected to survive if yeeted into the wild? I sincerely doubt you would too despite being older)

Survival is a BIOS level operating function of everything living.

And the same point I first made along with everyone else that you will continue to ignore.

So it's not so much a "duty," as a biological compulsion similar to being hungry. Making us all want to survive, and eventually thrive for a happy life. And the only way that happens is if we work to maintain or improve our environment. (Like eating when you're hungry). Our own biology pushes us to do that through internal reward mechanisms that spiral out into a feedback loop of prosperity. Like when you body tells you something tastes good, and you want to share that taste with a friend.

Your question implies an unsaid argument that is essentially the fast food equivalent of nihilism. That humans don't matter, and our lives are meaningless.

No offense, but you are either too young or too far up your own ass if you think you're on to anything new with your question. It's been answered hundreds of times throughout history by people far smarter than us, and I'm not going to hold your hand through understanding something you are clearing saying just because you want to feel special when saying it rather than learn an actual answer.

If you want to feel that life is meaningless, go right ahead. But stop pretending that you can't give it meaning yourself. I've given you the basic biological one, you're gonna have to open a book if you want the rest.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

it's not so much a "duty,"

All of:

  1. the statement in the posted article
  2. my question about that statement
  3. the response to my question
  4. my response which you originally replied to
  5. my question, which you quoted in the comment I'm replying to here

were about duty.

Whatever you're talking about, it isn't an answer to any of my questions because you're not talking about duty.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

The definition of "duty" fits my point perfectly, unless you want to explain it how it doesn't.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

Firstly, you haven't given a definition of "duty".

Secondly, you just said it's not a duty, now you're saying it is a duty. Please sort your shit out.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Second definition from Google / dictionary:

Duty - a task or action that someone is required to perform.

"the queen's official duties"

Or in the way I used it:

The "human biological duties" we all have specifically required for human survival.

You brought up the importance of "duty" and how it's something my point didn't fit, but the responsibility of defining it was up to you. Yet you failed to provide a definition, just like you've failed to say literally anything this whole conversation.

I knew you'd fail to define "duty" which would allow me to provide it in turn and fully prove my point. Which I just did.

So now you're fucked.

You're clearly incapable of admitting fault, listening, or forming a coherent concept that isn't just your opinion disguised as questions.

All you can do now is split hairs (look that one up yourself) so your next response will be to move the goalposts of your question somewhere else you feel you can still be right.

Lemme guess - another definition of duty? Maybe a weaker one you will claim you really meant, but clearly just failed to provide in the first place and now are just scrambling back to?

Or, you really are just a boring troll who gives zero fucks and will now say your question has nothing to do with duty after forgetting how hard you just really went in on that being the key part of the argument you never made.

There's another option you could take: Your question has been answered in full.

Which is very much what a reasonable person would do at this point. But it's pretty clear that's not what this conversation is actually about for you anymore.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

a task or action that someone is required to perform

This I can understand.

"human biological duties"

This, which you've made up, I don't understand. It doesn't make sense to me. "Biological duties" seems like a contradiction in terms. In fact it sounds ridiculous. And there's no logical connection between the definition of "duty" you gave above and this undefined term "human biological duties" which you've introduced. If it's in line with your previous expositions about family, then it is in fact distinct from the definition of "duty" you gave and incoherent.

Regardless, whatever it is you're talking about doesn't seem like what the authors of the article were talking about or what I was asking about. So again, consistently, it seems like we're talking about different things. In fact it's looking more and more like you're just reaching and trying to shoe-horn the subject that you want to talk about into this discussion.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Analogy:

a comparison between two things, typically for the purpose of explanation or clarification.

My first attempt at explaining "biological duty" was through an analogy.

Breathing. Shitting. Pretty obvious tasks your body has a "biological duty" to perform without your consent if you are to survive.

If your heart stops beating, you die If you don't breath, you die.

Are you personally choosing to make your body do these things at all times?

No. Your body is doing it for you (regrettably).

Why is your body doing that?

My answer: It's because our genetic code evolved to have a duty to preserve our existence.

You answer: shrug emoji

If you want to insist that you can't understand what I mean when I say "biological duty" then you're gonna have to explain how your heart beats without you thinking about it.

Because frankly, at this point, I'd love for you to be right about me making up "biological duty" when it comes to your body and the heart that keeps it going.

Whether you want it to or not, your body is forcing you to preserve yourself. Which is a basic concept in biology, and readily observable in all living things if you ever bothered to go outside.

First result from Google:

"biological duty" refers to the inherent functions or purposes that living organisms are considered to have, often relating to their SURVIVAL and reproduction.

So to put it all back in context for you to obstinately refuse to consider:

You aren't the reason your heart beats. You aren't the reason you get hungry. You aren't the reason you feel lonely.

That's your body.

It does its own thing to guarantee your survival. Whether you want it to or not. Which is why it's considered a "duty." In the biology books I previously mentioned you need to read, this is defined as your bodies "biological duty" of self preservation.

All humans have it. Whether you understand it or not, you have it too.

It forces you to eat. It forces you to breath. It forces you to sleep. But more importantly, it forces you to build an environment where you can obtain these things in the future too.

Birds build nests. Beavers build dams. Humans build small familial communities.

These provide you with food when your body can't. These provide you with a place to sleep if you have none.

Ever feel lonely? Yeah, that's your bodies way of telling you you're "hungry" for socialization. Socialization that when developed enough, can provide you reproductive options, and food / shelter security.

Your body wants you to meet other humans to guarantee your survival. Your body wants you to help these people as that both increase your chances they will help you survive, and bonus, releases a fuck load of dopamine to make you feel good.

So:

Everyones bodies, regardless of their control over it, compels them to survive and to help other humans due the same - which over time, creates groups of people helping each other mutually beyond what they are capable of providing themselves. This grouping can be a family, or any other grouping of humans as I previously mentioned.

At scale, this means all humans are working to benefit themselves and others. Which in turn benefits the species as a whole.

So if you are human, your DNA is literally programmed with an unavoidable duty to preserve you and other humans as far as it possibly can.

If you occupy a human body, then that body is programmed with a biological duty to preserve you and other humans.

Unless you are:

A) Depressed B) Sociopath C) Sourrounded by wealth C) Not human

This is the same answer I've always provided. It is a very simple and widely accepted answer to the questions you have asked.

If you want an answer, you now have one.

But you don't want an answer. You just want to feel special about something ignorant you thought of, never defined, never researched, and now clearly can't back down from.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

"biological duty" refers to the inherent functions or purposes that living organisms are considered to have, often relating to their SURVIVAL and reproduction.

Right so this is a different concept to the definition of "duty" you gave previously. So again, we're talking about different things.

This is the same answer I've always provided.

Which isn't an answer to my question. I asked about duty, not about "biological duty".

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Right so this is a different concept to the definition of "duty" you gave previously.

It isn't.

Please explain the difference between both to prove it.

I provided an analogy. Which doesn't contradict anything.

I also already provided the definition of what an analogy is so I could mention it now.

Because your ignorance is very predictable.

I also accurately guessed you'd be backpedaling to saying there's a seperate concept of duty.

And here we are.

Next up - you refusing to explain your own claimed differences between the concepts of duty.

The problem isn't my answer. It's your willful ignorance to understand it.

Simply put:

I asked about duty, not about "biological duty".

Explain how these are different. Otherwise they aren't.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Explain how these are different. Otherwise they aren't.

ROFL

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 days ago (1 children)

ROFL: Retarded Or Fucking Lonely. In your case, I think it's both.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Clowns like you are pretty funny. Especially when they laugh at themselves being the punchline. Really curious how long it's gonna take you to realize it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

Still waiting.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I love your answer, but I think you just overfed the troll.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago

Thanks! And appreciate it.

I'm more trying to trap the troll with bait than just feed it.

While I was honest about what I said, it leaves the troll with no place to go that isn't morally reprehensible.

So they'll either stop, or continue on with some shallow belief that the value of human life can be quantified. The conversation ends there eitherway 👍