9ansean wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2019 6:06 pm
abki wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2019 3:53 pm
Riedquat wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2019 8:46 pm
MithrandirOlorin wrote: ↑Mon May 20, 2019 7:01 am
The problem with Chuck''s outrage here is that Bigots always view themselves as the ones thinking logically and us as the ones blinded by emotion.
Any position concerning morals and ethics and values is ultimately an emotional one. And because they're the things that make life worth living they're the most important ones - beyond even the necessities for survival (what's the point of surviving otherwise?) Logic is only of any use in working out how to get to what your ultimately emotional or sentimental feelings say is worth having.
Some people don't like that because they believe they are rationally correct, or that it has no absolute means of differentiating between angels and demons, to which all I can say is, yep, that's the universe for you.
I disagree that any position concerning morals and ethics and values is ultimately an emotional one; it's more to do with the underlying reward function of the individual. I would say you're right in that it's typically tied with emotion in the specific case of humans, but I don't believe that it has to be so.
The most obvious example would be the thought experiment of the Paperclip maximizer: an intelligent machine told to create paper clips, which eventually converts the entire universe into paperclips. Clearly the paperclip maximizer is intelligent (it's smart enough to figure out interstellar travel, how to deal with those pesky lifeforms interrupting it's paperclip manufacturing, etc...) and it obviously values making paperclips (it's "morality" is that anything is acceptable so long as it is to make paperclips). BUT the maximizer has no emotions. It's values are undeniably arbitrary, but they are not emotional ones (well, unless you want to call "# of paperclips made" an emotion
).
As I recall, the review of The Most Toys illustrated how even an emotionless being like Data could still reach conclusion about the right course of action based on person evaluation of action and consequences.
Such a story implies a fiat of sorts that is fundamental to Data: He's a character played by an emotional being trying his best to not show emotion but inevitably will. It's also the reason why Data is naively charming and not outright creepy and repelling in an Uncanny Valley way an android like him would be.
The role emotion plays in us is something of a catalyst. I like to think of it as the powder in a bullet that ignites and launches the latter. A bullet, though, requires a barrel to guide it to its target and different barrels have different qualities of accuracy they can lend a bullet, like smooth bore and rifling.
So God knows where a bullet fired outside of a gun will go, but placing a bullet into a barrel without any charge to send it down its path is a non-starter as it has nothing to set it in motion.
I think this matches what I've heard about people who have had the emotional regions of their brain damaged. They don't become Vulcans, they struggle to perform any action to the point of being catatonic. They're unable to do anything because that part of them that pushes them into action is impaired to the point of absence.
I do wish I could find a solid source for that and just have to put it out as hearsay, as it reveals something I think that applies to Vulcans better than being emotionless, that they are in fact more like recovering alcoholics obsessed with falling off the wagon and very stringent in how they act on emotion wishing they could do without it, but allowing just the bare minimum in there to perform an action.
That also reminds me of a bit of an incongruous element to the Vulcans, which is how the Romulans behave. They aren't nice guys most of the time, but they certainly don't act like Vulcans do when emotion takes over them.
Makes me think a bit of their relationship should be explored in depth more that would highlight the trouble in their relationship. One thing that comes to mind is that the Romulans could've originally been the "moderates" of the Vulcans (rather than the unrepentant radial reactionaries they're portrayed as) surrounded by the rest of their wild and crazy race which forced them into xenophobia, close-knit interdependence and insular pride for being the only normal ones in their race. They later left Vulcan as Surak and others found a way to get the rest of their race "on the wagon", but the fundamental animosity between them is now that the Vulcans look on them as alcoholics refusing treatment while the Romulans look on them as crazy drunks trying to punish them for the Vulcans own excesses.
The more I think about that the more I like it. Part of the appeal of the Klingons (and later the Ferengi and to a lesser extent beyond Garek and Dukat, the Cardassians) as an antagonist race is that they have sympathetic elements to them, something which the Romulans rarely were given.