<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by Mltdwn:<BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by OrangeCream:<BR><BR>If you want to be logical, you must first use good logic. Logic is a tool, like a hammer or a saw, and if you use the wrong tool in the wrong situation you make mistakes.<BR><BR>You are using bad logic to make bad recommendations. It's like outlawing hammers because they crush skulls...<BR><BR>Logic isn't the problem. Just like emotion isn't the problem.<BR><BR>A purely logical world would evolve to solve all the problems you submit because a purely logical world would see that genetic breadth and depth is good, that accumulated knowledge and wisdom is useful, and that compassion is reciprocal and beneficial, all without emotion involved. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>I don't believe a purely logical world would evolve to solve all of the problems I speak about. Facts dictate that it takes money, time and resources to eliminate a particular problem through medical means (say Downs Syndrom). </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>You misunderstand. When and where did I say we would ever eliminate Downs Syndrome?<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">It is therefor much more expedient to simply extinguish those who carry the gene and remove the possibility of it reoccuring. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Did you not see my example of sickle cell anemia? What if people with Downs Syndrome had some genetic fluke that prevented Alzheimer's? By preserving people with Downs Syndrome we may find (through research, study, and analysis) cures for other conditions totally unrelated to Downs Syndrom.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Same as say AIDs, look at the cost it has had to try to find a cure. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>So? At the same time we look for a cure, we understand so much more of our immune system. Without AIDS to spur such research we wouldn't be nearly as advanced today.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Where as it would be far more practical and pragmatic simply to have rounded those individuals up, executed, or locked them away until they die, take care of the few minor ones that spring up here and there and thus alleviate the entire issue. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>But logic has proven (my examples of sickle cell anemia, increased understanding of immune system, and genetic unintended consequences) that NOT eliminating the problem is actually beneficial. So if I, as an emotional person, can show this amount of logic, why wouldn't a logical person without emotion therefore come to the same conclusion?<BR><BR>1) Allow the weak and infirm to survive to increase our genetic diversity<BR>2) Allow the weak and infirm to survive to increase our understanding of ourselves<BR>3) Allow the weak and infirm to survive to increase our understanding of disease<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"><BR>As for genetic depth and breadth being required for the greatest chance for survival I agree and disagree. Yes you need a deep gene pool (look at the monarchs of the middle ages who often married relatives with the result of children who oft times went mad), but you also need a clean one. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>No, you don't. Your perception of clean is purely subjective.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">There are certain "maladies" (for lack of a better words) that are completely hereditary. Were we to cull those out of the gene pool who contain the genetics for such maladies they would simply no longer exist and time/money/resources that would be directed for decades to try to find a cure could instead be spent on more pragmatic and purposeful research. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Wrong. You keep harping about cure; no cure is necessary because evolution has already done the work for us. If the condition is fatal, people die before they can reproduce and therefore it isn't an issue. If it confers any sort of benefit at all then evolution will keep that condition in the genepool, even if it is detrimental.<BR><BR>My argument, as before, is sickle cell anemia. It is a mutation that is detrimental to people but it makes us immune to malaria.<BR><BR>Another example? AIDS. If we kill everyone with AIDS, do you know what? You are STILL susceptible to it. It just means 100 years later another monkey, another man, and another epidemic will occur. And will keep occurring. The only solution is evolution: We either adapt to it, or we die.<BR><BR>Science gives us a third option: Live with it. In the process we understand so much more about antiviral drugs, our immune system, and viruses in general. Logic, not emotion, dictates then that killing people with AIDS is also a waste of resources because, if nothing else, these people can still work.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"><BR>As for the infirm, yes they provide wisdom, but not many do. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Every single one of them that knows even a single bit more than you can provide wisdom.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">And by infirm I mean those who are say bed ridden or individuals handicapped by age. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>So what happens to YOU when you get sick and become bed ridden? Or old, since that is inevitable? Do we kill you at the age of 30 when you come down with mononucleosis? Or at 45 when an undiagnosed neurodegenerative disease makes you bedridden?<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Again there are certain maladies which are only brought on by onset of age (i.e. Prostate cancer, at age 40 you have something like a 1 in 50 chance, past age 60 you have a 1 in 3 chance and it increase even further past then), while yes those individuals may have wisdom what is the benefit that wisdom provides vs. the cost of treatment (in terms of time and resources) for the conditions they suffer from? It would make more sense from a logical point of view to spend what time you could learning from them and then simply extinguishing them from the pool to prevent the costs associated with their existance. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Silly, it takes 40 years to learn everything a 40 year old knows, and by then they are 80! By the time you "catch up" with any one of a certain age, you are already at that age.<BR><BR>Put another way: How long does it take to teach a 5 year old the knowledge of a 20 year old? 15 years... so that by the time they are 20, they have the knowledge of a 20 year old! How long does it take to teach that 20 year old the knowledge of a 40 year old? 20 years!<BR><BR>The costs associated with their existence is more than outweighed by the wisdom they have. Parents learn how to raise kids from their grandparents, and great grandparents, so that if you are 40 raising a 10 year old, you still need a 70 year old around to ask, "How did you do this when I was a kid"?<BR><BR>So if you still wish to extinguish men because of prostate cancer, you couldn't do it until your own kids were old enough to have kids, which would be about 90.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"><BR>And strength is not just physical, it is mental, creative, charismatic, etc. the problem is when I say "the strong survive" you're taking strong to mean physical which it doesn't and never has. Out on the Savannah a hunter may think he sees something out of the corner of his eye. It could just be the wind or a Hyena. If he chooses to run and is wrong then no loss, if he chooses to stay and is wrong he dies. We evolved from those who chose to run. That is a demonstration of strength other than physical.<BR><BR>Anyways in a logical world each person would be surveyed for a purpose and then put into a job for that purpose. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>This is where I start to suspect you are stupid. You obviously don't understand evolution if you propose this solution. This is totally 100% against evolution.<BR><BR>Evolution exists because it works. In a logical world the intelligent people would understand evolution and would accept it as the most efficient manner of solving the problem of existence. If they accept evolution than the only real solution is to allow as many people to survive as possible so that when a new problem arises as many individuals capable of solving that problem exists.<BR><BR>If you survey for a purpose then you must know every single purpose in existence! That is a knowably unknowable problem. How can you possibly know that person A will solve world hunger, person B will improve agricultural yields, person C will produce a superior method of distribution of milk?<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">You have a physically strong individual, but light on IQ then why bother providing them with education? </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Because a strong person with an education is stronger than a strong person without education. In other words, it improves their chances of survival!<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Simply place them into a gov't run public works job for say road maintenance or what not and once they can no longer perform that job "retire" them. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Your method total ignores the concept of "unrecognized problems". What if he has a gift for a skill that was uninvented when he was born? By the time that gift was necessary, you would have retired him. A logical world would keep him around as a backup so that when that skill was necessary, he would be available.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">It makes far more sense than spending money attempting to educate those who cannot handle much above basic high school algebra. Like wise, highly intelligent, weak of body focus on educating them as much as possible, and again when they can no longer think/do and become a burden rather than an asset remove them. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>As I already proved, they remain assets until the age of 90. At which point evolution has already programmed death into 99% of the human population.<BR><BR>90 years old has 60 year old children who has 30 year old children just starting to raise a family. Only then can the 90 year old retire/die because they know they finished the job of raising their kids to the point of being able to raise their own family.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"><BR>That's just what pure "logic" makes plain to me. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Pure logic makes plain to me that your IQ is probably 20 points lower than mine. You also have less education, you don't understand evolution, research, or science.<BR><BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"><BR>Once one ceases to serve a purpose, then they cease to be a contributing member to a society, and thus cost the rest of society without adding anything back. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>No. Once one ceases to serve ONE purpose, then they need to find a second purpose to stay a contributing member of society and thus provide a benefit to society. Evolution and 10,000 years of survival have programmed that into human nature.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">End result, you work until you are dead for it is illogical to do anything but. </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>As a result, MY world would have you be productive for 50 more years than your world; my world has science, compassion, medicine, electronics, computers, bionics, prosthetics, cars, and spaceships.<BR><BR>Your world would probably 10,000 years behind mine.<BR><BR><BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"><BR>And note I speak of money here in terms of cost, but that is really just a reference word. I think a more applicable term would be resources (in the form of physical resources, individual time, etc.). </div></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><BR>Look at it another way: When your arm falls asleep, do you cut it off? When your legs grow tired, do you remove them?<BR><BR>Or do you rest them, feed them, and put them back to use after they recover?<BR><BR>Why is a person any different? When someone becomes incapable of performing an action, they aren't useless, they just need to find a new purpose.