32:
used chaos theory in a teleological way. However, this is an extremely specific application of chaos theory. To claim that chaos theory and (strange) attractors are teleological is simply very very wrong. Chaos theory is a mathematical field of study and it makes absolutely no claims whatsoever on "why things are the way they are". As any field in mathematics, you have a bunch of assumptions, you define things and through logic you then make all sorts of conclusions. Naturally, not every mathematician or scientist using mathematics is a non-teleogical person and thus some might then end up trying to apply there thing in a teleological way. One example of a mathematical finding that has been widely (mis)-used in teleological way is the "Golden ratio". Yet, there is no mathematical field that can only be applied teleological way. One of the most well-known things about
Chaotic systems, is the sensitivity to initial conditions. In general (or at least to my knowledge in ecology) it is NOT claimed that systems are structured in a certain way because this allows them to show chaotic behavior. Maybe some 'teleological' scientist in the field of artificial intelligence claim that brains are organized in a certain way with the purpose of showing a chaotic unpredictable (because of sensitivity to initial conditions) behavior. More teleological even, they might claim chaotic systems are mathematically possible, because it allows our brains to show unpredictability and complex behavior. However, such a view does not exist in other scientific fields using chaos theory. Instead, chaos theory is simply used as a handy way to get a better understanding of natural systems; as a lot of natural systems appear not to be stable and chaos theory is very useful in describing those unstable systems. Just as people might say: "There is air so we can breath", they might say: "There are chaotic systems with (strange) attractors so our brain can show complex behavior". However neither air nor chaos theory and (strange) attractors are in any way teleological, it is merely the way people use it that might be teleological. Furthermore, attractors are way more general thing than chaos theory. The notion specific to chaos is that of 'strange attractors' not attractors in general. This is another sign to me that the editors of this part were no experts on the subject. I will remove this example by next week, unless someone comes up with a better suggestion. :
707:
wrong. As many of the discussions imply, this article is in desperate need of revision on the basis of a careful study of the history of teleology and its role in contemporary thought. I had attempted to put a disclaimer in at the start of the article, but it was quickly erased by some "monitor". I have subsequently revised the introduction to give the reader a sense of the different ways that teleology can be used (something effaced in the original article). The original article equated teleology with only one (Christian) version of the theory, and it gave no sense of the broader conceptual framework in which teleological theories are understood. Overall, this article highlights everything that is wrong with
Knowledge (XXG). A good scholarly discussion of a complex theoretical subject cannot be a single, monolithic article that attempts to "converge" on the truth. It effaces the complexity and instructive disagreements that are a healthy part of academia.
3362:"Since the rise of modern thought and natural science, teleological discourses have been banished as explanatory tools in natural investigations. The various contributions to this volume set out whether, and in which form, it is possible to talk of purposes in nature, without resorting to an account requesting some intentional agent. The legitimacy of such a notion as that of internal teleology is addressed, together with the issue of what the term "internal"properly denotes. It is meant to be an alternative both to the position of those who assume that teleology in biology requires a dimension transcending nature itself and find in teleological language an argument for the intelligent designer, and to the stance of those who aim to eliminate teleology from scientific inquiry altogether."
528:
Teleology is an elementary subject in philosphy (it must be, because I was asked to define the term on my very first test for Intro to
Philosophy), so despite the ramblings presented here, there's gotta be some simpler, more cohesive way to define the term. I'm testifying here in the hopes that the "experts" who read this will bear in mind the true purpose of Knowledge (XXG)-- mostly, this is a first source, a quick reference for amateurs who need to know something on the fly, or at most, a first step into deeper research. So please, if people consistently tell you that your writing is obtuse or unclear, leave Knowledge (XXG) authorship to someone else.
2765:'Weltanschauung' or worldview that has called into being a specific ethical theory may or may not have a vision of what is a desirable state of affairs, but the mere presence or absence of such a vision does not alter the taxonomy of the ethical theory that originated within that worldview. A hedonist may aim at some (future) state of affairs in which 'the net pleasure is maximized', but it remains possible for him or her to develop either a deontological or a teleological ethical theory within the hedonistic worldview. If I am well-informed, the ethics of some (or most) hedonistic utilitarians is often called teleological.
3351:"Aristotle has been traditionally misinterpreted as a cosmic teleologist. Modern students of Aristotle are in agreement that he was not (Gotthelf 1976; Nussbaum 1978; Sorabji 1980; Balrne 1981). As already understood by Delbruck (1971), Aristotle's concept of the eidos, in the context of ontogenetic development, is in some respects remarkably similar to the modern concept of the genetic program. What the standard histories of philosophy write about Aristotle's teleology is unfortunately largely wrong, and must be ignored. I myself misinterpreted Aristotle before I became acquainted with the modern literature."
2816:
clearly set out against non-causality in all fields. The reason for this is that causality only has bearing on the workings in the mind. So, what you are talking about is what I am talking about in the sense that some 'duties' can be grasped as 'goals' if improperly wielded. A duty is only that which connects a certain maxim to the will to make it a universal law simultaneously. This leaves the rulebase completely empty, thus being something else (non-causal). A detail of interest might be the term teleology: the logos of telos. This means the reasoning of an endcause; towards that endcause.
137:
approach which would address, among other things (in no logical order): randomness; the problems of knowing the future; the distinctions (developmentally) between living and non-living things; the exclusive prominence of efficient causality in naturalism (especially in theory of biology, and as contradicted by:); the teleological or normative aspects of the idea of law (social or natural); the teleological nature of the theory of evolution (the end being the development of the unit of evolution); and therefore, the absolute inability to describe nature without using teleological language.
3257:
teleology is still in modern science, because the claim is out there. But it is a bit problematic in that some of these neo-teleological claims tend to twist the meaning of teleology so much that it becomes virtually meaningless. See the discussion above about teleo-reactive computer programming. In my mind, teleology means "final causes" in nature, goals in nature equivalent to those that humans have except actually causing things to work in a directed way. And denying that science should assume these is generally seen as one of the defining attributes of modern science?--
3112:
actions are inherent also in teleo-reactive programs". It's true that TR programs have been built to achieve human goals, but this does not need to be the case, i.e., the semantics (of a TR program) simply state that the program will try to achieve its goal (human or otherwise) in a teleological manner. It's also true that we've designed them to be teleological, but the philosophical implications of this is beyond me. Perhaps there should be an article on TR-programs that links to teleology, rather than the other way round. Thanks for an interesting discussion.
2346:
somebody who simply does not know his way around philosophy, but by whom I feel harassed. He has got it in his mind that everything I say here is related to Kant in some way or another. While I do enjoy Kant and I think that not following Kant puts science back about 200 years it is not what I am doing. I am simply adding content that I think is valuable. In this case so that people being raised with 'goals' that there are other ways. I will not type out 12 sources you see. Anyway, I would appreciate an idea on how to deal with this. The latest version was:
584:
that you believe in "super natural" things, like the mind. You go on to say that you believe the mind emerges "naturally" from the brain. Something cannot be both natural and super natural at the same time. I do not doubt your believe, but I suggest that your world view is not consistent and is in fact contradictory, and therefore is not a great example to use. I like the idea of a eternal or everlasting brain existing without god to explain it, but, logically one cannot say that something supernatural emerges out of the natural.
2730:
such as "is substantial in this" is effectively impossible to parse because it could mean just about anything. The same with "the subjectivity which promotes a POV and, for a person is aristotelianism, for persons or humanity is consequentionalism and hedonism is a bit special in the sense that it motivates positive emotions as 'the good'." Quite apart from whether your intentions when writing are correct, such a sentence makes it hard to judge what you mean to begin with.
91:
invocation of Hegel was in order to expunge the latter's idealist teleology and his focus on 'identity' (hence Marx's book 'the
Poverty of Philosophy), and then to take synthetic (dialectical) method and apply it to material history. This current article is not only incomplete and limited in its discussion of teleology, but misleading about other topics as well. There is a debate to be had about Marxism and teleology, but this has not been written here.
1514:
and that should be enough to show its objectivity. Apart from that moral absolutism is not what is stated here. The idea is that a certain act in a certain situation can AT THE SAME TIME be willed to be a universal law, A big difference. Moral absolutism requires a rule base. Deontology has none. Anyway, that is one of the disambiguations I want to make to the teleology and deontology pages. I will add 'simultaniously' to my piece regardless.
2307:
elaboration. This seems very strange to do here to me, which is why the hyperlinks are in there. I have, however placed references because an uninformed critique can inform oneself by following the references. It also proves the unbiased nature of the short piece. Apart from that I do not think I have offended anybody, apart from stating what that person does. If that is insulting, than please behave differently...morally for instance.
981:
mention. I fear that to treat it properly without creating a lot of side discussion may be difficult partly because the sourcing might be controversial. By this I mean that while
Intelligent Design as a religious political movement is easy to source and discuss, many sources claim it is best understood only as a political movement, and that its science and philosophy are a front so that the movement can claim to be scientific. --
2284:
points your critics make. You have not done so. In his first comment
Zaspino has criticized your proposal mainly because he/she considered your proposal very unclear. You responded by adding references, without giving the slightest explanation as to why, without giving the quotations we asked for, and by offending him. How could we help you to improve your text if the text is not clear? What's more, you have, as Zaspino said
1727:). As Theobald Tiger explained to you, this caused the previous heading, called "Intrinsic finality - Given. This is fucking bullshit", to automatically show up in my edit summary. It is incredibly disingenuous on your part to claim and keep claiming, despite Theobald's and my explanation, that I consciously called my edit "fucking bullshit". And you were way out of line in using those very same words to describe my edit."
1580:). As Theobald Tiger explained to you, this caused the previous heading, called "Intrinsic finality - Given. This is fucking bullshit", to automatically show up in my edit summary. It is incredibly disingenuous on your part to claim and keep claiming, despite Theobald's and my explanation, that I consciously called my edit "fucking bullshit". And you were way out of line in using those very same words to describe my edit.
2823:
from that I notice that my language is easily readable for people who are able to understand that non-causality takes an ontological grasp. Since this is the entire content of my entry it might be a little difficult for you to interpret, but still important to be included. Please, understand that deontology has two layers and teleology only one, which necessitates the syntax I am using.
2634:
that everybody I meet seems to think this is correct. My advise would be to try to use creditable sources. I do not have the impression that you know your way around ethics. Especially since teleological ethics are based on the notion that an end-cause (a.k.a. goal) is 'the good'. That is why what you are saying above is incorrect on two accounts (sources are given above):
502:, who offers a historicist teleology which describes a final state of human history that we're being driven to. I believe certain religions like Zoroastrianism have teleologies that talk about a process in nature driven towards a meaningful goal. Use of the concept "teleology" in any other way, is either new to me, or misunformed. Please, someone correct these articles!
47:
2792:
target and a good, it is not hedonism or utilitarianism. Indeed he explicitly says that even though people aim at something most of them also misunderstand what it is. And
Aristotle specifically says that pleasure will come with the right type of life, but not as part of the activity, but rather pleasure is a separate activity which occurs as an added bonus. --
3136:, unless the output precedes input, then it works exactly like every program. From the name, I imagine it dynamically adapts to changing goals but, at least for Aristotle, something's final cause never changes; it's just a static generic form. I'm sure the software does something very different and much more impressive (even if can't foresee the future).—
3345:"In spite of the long-standing misgivings of physical scientists, philosophers, and logicians, many biologists have continued to insist not only that such teleological statements are objective and free of metaphysical content, but also that they express something important which is lost when teleological language is eliminated from such statements."
416:"Thus the teleological talk is "just shorthand" for this more verbose claim." In private, among consenting evolutionists, this sort of shorthand may be OK. However, when used in an article that will be read by non-experts, it invites people to believe it is meant literally. One of the merits of natural selection is that it eliminates teleology.
1812:
analysis or some books might help me (The term is "just defined" vs. the term is "in use in discussions"). I had a lot of trouble understanding the text. Too much "because, therefore, herewith" at the start of the lines is part of the reason for that I think. The bracketed text is also a bit much and making the text harder to understand. —
728:
summarily rejected, was that not all forms of teleology involve "purpose" or "design" (in the sense that requires an
Intelligent Designer) and that some teleological theories do not even claim that their final causes are not ontological but only heuristic devices. That was subsequently rejected as an edit despite the fact of the matter.
48:
https://books.google.pl/books?id=n0Hg2ipZeBkC&pg=PT119&lpg=PT119&dq=attractors+modern+dress+teleology&source=bl&ots=JCh3X-LdG8&sig=ACfU3U0ux5vPeISFMhykyfaYsQNuJmiV1Q&hl=pl&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjlz4Pv-oHgAhVFbFAKHeSACBUQ6AEwCHoECAgQAQ#v=onepage&q=attractors%20modern%20dress%20teleology&f=false
1035:"Just as physical masses obey universal gravitational tendencies, which did not evolve, but are simply a cosmic "given,"This is fucking bullshit, if it's intrinsic it's not given, especially in the mind of the young gullible idiot who thinks that HE HIMSELF will live forever, tired of this Marxist crap, fucking die already --
3063:
case the computer is a human tool so it has human goals. This is simply because it is not interesting to point out that humans (and their tools) are aimed at goals. This article can not be about every type of aiming at goals. Teleology is a special word, I think, which is normally used when it is being claimed that their are
2947:
build the word also does not make it teleological. I think the critical point for whether it this subject is related to teleology is neither etymology nor having goals or ends, but whether teleo-reactive programs are routinely referred to as teleological in reliable, notable and relevant sources. Can you say whether it is?--
2928:
inherently present, namely actions that appear later in the sequence must be completed "in order to" enable execution of the earlier statements. The word reactive is needed because such programs are also able to react dynamically to changes in its environment - which I agree does not have much to do with teleology.
181:
external waterflow. The concept has been used very widely and loosely and had its meaning change considerably over the years. While it is in common practice of viewing something in terms of what it does or is good for, the term "Teleology" itself is best known by
Teleological arguments for the existence of God.
1485:
heading is listed in the edit history (in this case: 'Intrinsic finality - Given. This is fucking bullshit'), together with the edit summary itself. I think Faust's proposal is not a good and balanced piece on teleological ethics. It is one-sided and seen from a
Kantian and moral absolutist point of view.
3219:
Looking at recent edits I would say that I agree with the short un-sourced paragraph you have put in now instead, which says modern science takes a pretty negative attitude to teleology. There might be exceptional cases worth mentioning, but I think we'd want good clear sourcing and explanation about
3062:
Yes but (a) this is not what teleology means normally, and (b) you've not really shown a source which tells us that there is a notable special computer meaning that strongly connects teleo-reactive programmes with teleology. The word teleology is normally not used to describe human goals, and in this
2640:
2) The example of the good to a person, persons or mankind is a very good one since it stipulates the very essence of teleology: the subjectivity which promotes a POV and, for a person is aristotelianism, for persons or humanity is consequentionalism and hedonism is a bit special in the sense that it
2306:
Theobald, why are you lying? I have nowhere posited Kant's idea as neutral. I have placed teleology against deontology here. That was the entire point of the section. It is quite clear to everybody who does not have a POV, as far as I know. The supposed unclearity were, in my opinion, requests for an
1918:
is defined by the thought that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good' to a man, men, or humanity for example. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'. Because of this, behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'.
1881:
Faust, I do not think that TheDJ's troubles to understand the text are completely due to TheDJ's difficulties to grasp what the discussion was about. The proposal itself is flawed, has defects, as Zaspino already has pointed out. Besides, none of the references you have added in the text is available
1790:
Faust, I do not know what is meant by "would have replied to the header under which the remakr was placed here", but anyway, when someone corrects a heading (not a remark under a heading) the previous heading automatically shows up in the edit history. You seem to have an inveterate habit to overlook
1630:
Faust, I urge you not to incorporate your text proposal in the article, since two users (Theobald Tiger and I) object to it. Please try to properly address our complaints instead of resorting to innuendos. You should at least quote the different philosophy handbook sections you refer to, so I can see
1552:
Theobald, you are twice wrong again (and proven so. I never said what caused the header's name, nor did I forbid you to edit here. Herewith I would like to notify you that I will no longer address your remarks if I had properly addressed them before. I left a message on your talk page addressing this
1464:
NOTE: I do remember editing the wrong pieces at first. I didn't think it important enough to revert again. One can check the history regardless, so I didn't see much point. I would like to clearly state that I had no intention to make things appear other than they are. I would also like to say that I
1266:
is defined by the thought that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good' to a man, men, or humanity for example. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'. Because of this, behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'.
955:
I searched through several chapters trying to find that line "there is of course no 'architect'" or something similar. I think that science literature written for other scientists (in the form of actual papers) couldn't afford to use such clumsy and potentially misleading metaphors, since it would be
946:
I shall make use of the metaphor of the architect's plans, freely mixing the language of the metaphor with the language of the real thing. ... This metaphor will take us quite a long way. When it finally breaks down, I shall introduce other metaphors . Incidentally, there is of course no 'architect'.
371:
Can someone help me with this... I wanted to include some very recent, interesting comments by one of the more note worthy philosophers of modern time… Antony Flew is the David Hume of our day….And he recently (December 2004) stated, "What I think the DNA material has done is show that intelligence
297:
Eyes do not see - eyes detect light - better eyes detect light better and focus it better / faster / clearer etc. Eyes in combination with brains 'see'. Primitive eyes in combination with primitive brains sense and induce reaction without thought - is that sight? Eye-ness is not sight. Final Cause of
205:
The criticisms of the article appear justified but too harsh. The breadth of coverage is good but it lacks clarity. The first paragraph suggested here by Markbassett is much better. I'd suggest a minor change to "Originally stated by Aristotle in terms that everything material can only move or change
2822:
NOTE: I think you are a friend of Theobald or otherwise recruited by him. This means I am not going to give you much room for strange behavior. The reasons for this are that you are making the same strange mistakes he is (which point to a clear lacking of knowledge in this field of expertise). Apart
2646:
Another point by which I know that you do not know your way around is that you mysteriously remove the examination of the maxim from your definition of deontology. The entire core of deontology is that an act is moral when the subjective principle of action (maxim) can simultaneously be willed to be
2359:
is defined by the thought that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good' to a man, men, or humanity for example. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'. This is why behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'. The
2164:
is defined by the thought that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good' to a man, men, or humanity for example. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'. This is why behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'. The
1686:
Zaspino, you did call it 'fucking bullshit', as I have proven You can just follow the link. Other than that, we are retracing our steps. I have given sources for my opinion and you haven't. I have answered all your (unfounded) objections and refuted them. If you do not believe my sources, please, go
960:
written with a teleological bent, since that seems to make the seemingly self-organizing nature of evolution easier for the nontechnical to understand. Writers such as Dawkins should be more careful, or at least give more than two sentences to explaining this common misunderstanding of the mechanics
752:
they were designed for an end we can better discover the true (efficient) causes of things. Not all teleology implies "purpose" or "design" (in the sense that requires an Intelligent Designer), for example Aristotle believed that ends are present in nature (that natural processes occur "for the sake
727:
While writing the last post, my corrections to the teleology article were deleted; the article reverted back to its impoverished form. It seems the only way to provide a better version is to post it in here (which no one really reads). See below. The main issue that I attempted to correct, which was
706:
My revisions of this article were prompted by reading a handful of student papers who all plagiarized this site - and all made the very same errors that the article makes. As a consequence, my students came away with an understanding of the topic that was at best impoverished and at worst completely
162:
FIRST, FIX JUST THE TOP: I will suggest an approach of starting with (a) initially edit just the top basic description part, and including (b)getting closer to the concept, where I think the article has really missed that this is a fundamental approach to viewing things, one that is widely applied,
2729:
You make some points about my attempt to reword you which require me to comment that your English is not very easy to read, both in the paragraph I was trying to re-write and also in your explanation. That is going to make discussion difficult so please take your time when writing. Novel word usage
1909:
You and I both know you have a membership of said dictionary of philosophy Theobald. Further more: You are retracing our steps again and clearly not referring to the changes I made. Why are you always ignoring what is plain to see, apart from painting a false picture? @TheDj: Are you sure you found
1614:
Theobald, I am asking you not to transfer problems from the nl.wiki to the en.wiki. Please do not twist the facts around again. Since Zaspino has stated no valid arguments and I have responded to all his arguments by giving more references. will now await to see if there will be any more arguments
1397:
I think this deals with everything, except for the quotation marks. Quotation marks are used when a word is being used in manner which is not normal to the word. Such as an explanation of that word. Hence they are well placed here both with 'good' (which is the topic of investigation of ethics as a
757:
2.8, 199a20-35, 199b27-9). Moreover, not all teleology implies a global teleological view of the universe where every part is adjusted to some overall purpose. For example, Aristotle (in contrast to Plato) held that bile lacks a function: this is supposed to show that we should not look for ends in
731:
This is just one more example of the major problems with this mode of conveying scholarship. If someone does not like your version, regardless of the truth, it will be deleted in favour of his. (It's a good thing Darwin didn't try to publish his theory of evolution by natural selection on Knowledge
583:
One cannot believe in both meta physical naturalism and teleology. They may not be opposites but they are definitively not compatible. You cannot believe in both, or you will be inconsistent to your own world views. For instance in the example you have given of you your own beliefs, you have stated
531:
Hi! I don't know if anyone is still editing this page but one question I had was about the claim: "Teleological philosophy stresses essence before existence, form before being"--it is not clear to me that teleological theories necessarily assume essence before existence--Aristotle, maybe. Also, the
375:
Wiki-P has noted some philosophers who are not in the middle of the teleology debate today... I hope Wiki-P is "cool" as they want us to believe…. If you're going to have links to these other philosophers, include Flew and let the chips fall where they may, vice framing definition of teleology in a
240:
I'm liking it being older and the Britannica authority, but want to snip at the definition leaving for later the where it went into most commonly refers to there being an overall plan or at least tending towards an end, or evolution being scientific teleology, or that usage is loose and the meaning
31:
In the introduction it is claimed that chaos theory and its notion of an attractor is an example of teleology being applied in modern science, together with a reference to "the Encyclopedia of artificial intelligence". I can see how some scientists in the field of Artificial Intelligence could have
3271:
Thanks. Re defining of modern science: yes I think that is fair. That means stuff like the cybernetics is a bit problematic: computer programs obvious *do* have a purpose, because they were built to have one. Nonetheless they don't really belong where they are in the article. Obviously, most human
2815:
I will briefly respond to Andrew here and specifically not to Theobald, since he has declared not to be interested in the objective content of an encyclopedia if that includes my thoughts. I need to run so it will be short Andrew. Be careful of your POV (that all ethics is teleology). Teleology is
2791:
but that is initially just defined tautologically in order to start discussion and work out what it might be. He eventually defines it more precisely as a certain way of being in action which is natural to humankind. The aim is to do that as well as possible. So although he does refer to this as a
2712:
Faust FWIW I do know "something" about this subject, but of course it is difficult for us to judge each other's knowledge over the internet and so a better method of practical discussion is to judge what we actually say, not try to guess things about each other as people too much, and as you point
1646:
Oh, come on. I am not going to type out 6 references. I have cited the truth, I have made proper references to it and most of these references can be found online. Please, if there is something that you think is incorrect, say so. I have refuted all of your previous remarks, so come out with a new
1531:
Faust, Everyone is allowed to contribute to discussions on talk pages. Your indignation has prevented you from reading what I wrote. I explained to you that the heading under which an edit belongs is presented, without any interference of the editor, in the edit history. Zaspino is not responsible
1513:
2) The edit I am making sets out teleology against deontology. Since Kants is the leading deontological system (according to the oxford dictionary of philosophy), it is only natural that a definition reflects his ideas (at least a bit). The definitions concerning teleological ethics are referenced
90:
How is Marxism considered to be at odds with Darwinism? In some Fascistic sense maybe? Marxism is supposed to be about an economic-social science; Darwin about biological science. Marxist teleology is as much political stance as it is analytic, if it even is analytic at all. In fact Marx's precise
2855:
Concerning difficult wording, you'll need to make an effort. Please define any unusual terms, be careful of relying on long strings of unclearly defined pronouns, and use normal English grammar. There's no other way to communicate here than by typing, and no other way to get you material accepted
2783:
Well it could indeed be that people sometimes called utilitarianism teleological. I am more familiar lately with classical and early modern ethics. I guess my point would be that we need to be careful to "disambiguate" this word. Obviously for example, calling Aristotle's metaphysics teleological
2764:
Taxonomists of ethical theories usually distinguish (among other things) between teleological theories and deontological theories. An ethical theory is called teleological if, within that ethical theory, the consequences of an act have a considerable impact on the moral judgement of this act. The
2760:
Discussing abstract concepts can be useful only if the participants try to be precise in their use of terminology. AL has expressed doubts whether certain philosophical positions ('utilitarianism' and 'hedonism') should be categorized as teleology. I think those doubts are justified. Almost every
2756:
By now Faust has told nearly everyone with whom he happens to have an argument that he or she does not know enough about the subject to fully participate. This is a nasty habit. Since AL has made considerable efforts to understand Faust's proposals and explications in the first place and has done
2633:
You are restating what I have been going through before. I personally have never seen any other mention of aristotelianism, hedonism and utalitairianism than as teleology since they all have a rulebase with goals. It surprises me that the only source for this is an online standford dictionary and
1714:
And again: "Your indignation has prevented you from reading what I wrote. I explained to you that the heading under which an edit belongs is presented, without any interference of the editor, in the edit history. Zaspino is not responsible for headings that previous editors have created (my guess
1594:
Faust, On my talk page you asked me not to edit here. That is the reason I said that I was allowed to do so. I will continue to do so. Because all Zaspino's criticisms that I have come across thus far are sound and stated in a clear and unambiguous way, I would politely suggest that this argument
980:
attempts, or claims to attempt, to reinstate teleological science. I guess if someone has time, good sources, and perhaps most difficult of all, an idea about how to mention this without diverting the whole article into being about intelligent design, then it would probably fit someone as a short
443:
For the horses, not already; they've only had a few generations since we've been making them jump over fences...and besides, they don't tend not to reproduce if they're good jumpers. On the other hand, we've seen this with the strains of bacteria resistant to penicillin. I'm not exactly sure what
365:
Dear Wiki - Thanks for moving closer to the center on this term. It is can be quiet alarming to see words being high jacked or whose meanings are diminished by the 'world view' filter of a few --- and then passed on to others as definitive…. Although (in my opinion) there are some tinges of post
353:
I've added a section which those socialised in the analytic tradition in philosophy tend to overlook: that there is also a specifically 'middle european' angle to the teleology debate - namely Kant, Hegel and the 'dialectical' tradition. It's a big debate, mine is a short addition, but it does at
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Pens do not write and eyes do not see, pens dribble ink in a controlled fashion when brought into contact with a surface that they were designed to or coincidently can dribble on - and thus in combinatioon with other forms they can do something called write - the pens final cause (pen-ness) is to
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That's true indeed, which is why I asked if there is a notable history of computer programs being named that way. I do realize there are exceptions, and I do agree that no matter how near my logic is, if reliable sources start doing something we have to find a way to follow no matter how awkward
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Thanks for posting here. Let´s work out what to do. Obviously not everything which has an end or goal or aim can be in this article. Having an end or goal is common, but teleology does not just mean having an end or goal. Also, as I mentioned above, just because the Greek word for end is used to
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Hi Andrew, not much has changed to be honest. I think adding this part would be an improvement because it shows (at least in an ethical sense) that there are more than one epistemologies. I will work on quantum mechanics later, bvut to me ethis is more important. Anyway, this is being blocked by
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Look, do you two really think I am going to fall for this? You and I both know the 'Zaspino' user knows all inns and outs of the wikipedia. If that user would have replied to the header under which the remakr was placed here there would have been no such remark. I do not believe that this was an
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Of the hundreds of Knowledge (XXG) articles (thousands?) that I've read, this aricle is the best single answer to the question "what are the shortcomings and limitations of Knowledge (XXG)?" Any authority this article might otherwise have is obliterated by its lack of organization and clarity.
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The author has learned to use some buzzwords correctly, but has no sense of what final cause and teleology are about. If, as Aristotle says on the subject, "what comes before is for the sake of what comes after," then perhaps this confusing article will be a stepping stone towards a more nuanced
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Is it fair to say, *when it's misapplied*, that teleology is nothing but post hoc ergo propter hoc? I don't pretend to understand the ways teleology may be correctly applied; it just seems to me that common mistakes about it are sometimes made to sound more complex or more interesting than they
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Unlike other action selection paradigms, teleo-reactive programs execute in a teleological manner (hence the name). In particular, teleo-reactive programs are structured so that the "goal" or "end-result" is execution of the first action in the sequence. Statements "X in order to achieve Y" are
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is any ethical system that proposes that behavior should be directed towards what is 'good' - either what is good for people, or "good" in some more general sense In such ethics, what is 'good' is understood as a 'goal', and in some extreme versions of teleological ethics what is a goal is even
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Faust, I think you are mistaken on the true nature of criticism. Several editors have criticized your proposals. The objective of criticism is either elimination (if it's too bad) or improvement of a proposal. To see which outcome is appropriate, in both cases you should respond properly to the
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So, changed the choice of words. About the online source I do believe that you said so on nl.wiki. However, A reference I am willing to type out, not all of them. I am of a mind that if you want to edit articles you should do your own research...at school, or by reading and not just block edits
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Zaspino repaired an error in the heading 'Teleology and Ethics', and his edit summary was appropriately called "don't know what happened, but fixed". In the edit history not only the edit summary is listed, but also the heading under which the edit belongs. When you fix an heading, the previous
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Zaspino repaired an error in the heading 'Teleology and Ethics', and his edit summary was appropriately called "don't know what happened, but fixed". In the edit history not only the edit summary is listed, but also the heading under which the edit belongs. When you fix an heading, the previous
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Metaphysical naturalism and teleology are mutually exclusive, but aren't opposites. For example, a person can reject teleology by believing that there's no design or purpose in nature, but can also reject metaphysical naturalism by believing in "supernatural" things, like mind/body dualism. For
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Darwin's theory allows us to make claims like "giraffes grew long necks in order to reach high branches" without a guilty conscience; we know that what this claim "really" means is something like "over the course of their evolution, the giraffes with shorter necks tended to die out, recursively
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Hey, I Hope I don't cause offence by putting up the "cleanup-confusing" tag in, but after reading this article, I still don't know what teleology actually is/means/is the study of (while the opener obviously defines it, it doesn't really give much context for understand what it ACTUALLY means).
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I'm not fussed either way anymore especially because there seem to be wider issues with the teleology and science section in general. In my view, the way teleo-reactive programs are used in computer science makes them teleological, i.e., "the design and purpose analogous to that found in human
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That would be because only a few sources are needed to establish the relationship between the two terms. The research on teleo-reactive programs focuses on their applications, not on teleology itself --- there is no need keep bringing up "teleology" in every article on teleo-reactive programs.
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I appreciate your comments, although i'm not sure how they should be integrated into the article. feel free to edit as you will! i attempted to differentiate between the two uses for the word in the intro -- both your definition of a purpose behind the process (as less commonly used) and the
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I think in the article can be interesting the use of papers about the necessity of unreplaceable teleological terms and concepts in life sciences, but without any appeal to supernatural or metaphysics entities. I suggest the following Ernst Mayr's text "The multiple meanings of teleological":
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I have read this proposed addition, and one of my concerns of this addition is one of undue weight. The theory seems marginal at first glance to me (total outsider of the field here). Using references to works other than dictionaries and other reference works, like papers and other scientific
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Teleology is considering something in terms of its final ends or design. Originally stated by Aristotle in terms that everything material can only move or change for some intrinsic or extrinsic end, for example an acorn becomes an oak by intrinsic nature, while a stone becomes rounded due to
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Yes the Ayala stuff keeps coming back on articles about these subjects. I think you'll find stuff on the archives of this article. He seems reasonably well known, so not quite fringe, but also not standard mainstream obviously. I guess in the end we'll need to cover the "best of" claims that
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on my talk page because I have removed attempts to include a sub-section on teleo-reactive programs. I request Bdongol to explain the connection here on this article talk page, between teleo-reactive computer programs and teleology. Just to start with the obvious, these are different words,
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evolution, is making a teleological argument." I have no education in philosophy so I don't feel confident to try and edit this myself, but there are too many examples of the application of teleology, things pointing out how teleology differs from other philosophical thought processes and
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TheDJ wrote on your talk page: "You should probably apologize to Zaspino, for calling his comments "Fucking bullshit", which clearly was an error in your assessment of the talk page history, something that Theobold correctly and helpfully pointed out to you, before you told him not to
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I agree. In general, one could think of software in terms of teleology, but it's never formally described that way. Developers and analysts (even academics) commonly use metaphor in non-rigorous descriptions... That would seem to be the case here and if it's notable, it's not in this
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you're saying in the second part, but it seems that you're also ignoring the Darwinian constraint of reproduction; however, if it seems that humans who go to war more often have populated the Earth now, that may be due to natural selection against overpopulation (though I doubt it).
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Prophetic software would probably do the trick but no, just a small joke. Very small. But surely there's a whole class of algorithms that iteratively reduce the difference between some established goal and monitored values? If you can't find an article, you should probably start
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in nature itself. The word might sometimes be used for rhetorical effect in contexts relating to human-set goals, of course, but the article can't be about all those cases I think? Why would we not have a section on the teleology of screw-drivers for example? They achieve an
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equated with what is good. Such teleological systems can be contrasted with those which understand that human action should be guided by universal laws which exist apart from humanity which are sometimes held to be a necessary conditions for an ethics to be considered as a
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Your edit was called: this is complete bullshit, so I returned the favor. It is you who should keep it civil. Apart from that I have addressed ALL your points. The ones I didn't mention I made a reference of. So, if there are no constructive criticisms, I will place piece.
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suggests) is the study of ends. Some teleological theories hold that ends are part of the causal structure of the world or some part of the world (e.g. living things), while others hold that final causes are useful "heuristic" devices. On the latter view, ends are not
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Faust, You did not "copy the wrong version" - the version you have posted above appears for the first time on this talk page. As far as I can see, changing "the choice of words" does not make any difference. If a blue car has defects, it's no use painting it yellow.
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If we applied pseudo giraffe teleological explanation to horses, shouldn't they already have developed 8' legs in order to jump over 10' fences? Could nuke bombs have been developed to curb overpopulation? Could preemptive war ben devised for similat noble purposes?
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must have been involved in getting these extraordinarily diverse elements together," he said. "The enormous complexity by which the results were achieved look to me like the work of intelligence."….. I mean this stuff is hot off the press, and Flew is note worthy….
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Sorry to be devil's advocate, but that google scholar search shows only a very small number of articles using the terms teleological and teleo-reactive in the same article. It looks like just an odd wording choice by a few authors? I hope other editors will comment
638:. To quote from Carter himself, certain observational aspects of apparently exotic behavior could in principle have been predicted by conventional theory (without resort to exotic theories), "However, these predictions do require the use of what may be termed the
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artifacts have a "purpose", like a knife or anything, else why would you build them? But that really has nothing to do with modern science: the cybernetics is there because it seems modern-sciencey, but it seems to me not to belong any more than knife-making does
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Zaspino wrote: "Faust, since you seem intent on clinging to your mischievous interpretation of the facts, here is what really happened. While adding some text to this talk page, I accidentally and thus unwillingly changed the heading == Telelogy and Ethics == to
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are confused as to what "teleology" means, or at least what it has meant in the philosophical sense. Stating that God creates life spontaneously is not "teleological". Rather, teleology is about meaning or purpose being behind a PROCESS. Thus, a philosopher like
1005:. This work is in Latin so can't really be claimed to be a source for a word in English. The word that appears in the index of the book is teleologia but I have to admit I couldn't find it in the main text in any case. The earliest known English usage is in
2650:"Deontology asserts that there are several distinct duties. Certain kinds of act are intrinsically wrong. The rightness or wrongness of any particular act is thus not (or not wholly) determined by the goodness or badness of its consequences. <<etc: -->
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The next day Zaspino has kindly asked you the following: "I would appreciate it if you'd apologize for calling my remarks "fucking bullshit" and for stubbornly sticking to your wrong assessment that I first used those same words. That would be the civil and
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relevant to this article. It is being claimed that "Most modern theories of evolution are unabashedly teleological", and it is being argued that the article should remove references to modern science not being teleological and say the opposite. Comments
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Teleology is more commonly a word for theories of causality that assert that their are aims outside of the aims of individual humans - for example, to take a very simplistic case, if we say that animals were created with the intention of being eaten by
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Faust, since you seem intent on clinging to your mischievous interpretation of the facts, here is what really happened. While adding some text to this talk page, I accidentally and thus unwillingly changed the heading == Telelogy and Ethics == to
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It was one of the merits of Darwin's theory of evolution that it eliminated teleology from the account - it was no longer necessary to suppose that giraffes grew long necks in order to reach high branches (or that God had designed them with that
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TELEOLOGY (Gr. TE¦or, end), in philosophy and theology, strictly that branch of study which considers "final causes" as real principles of explanation, i.e. which explains things as existing solely as pre-requisites of the results which they
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I would say everything from there on in the intro should be removed. Thomas Nagel is not a biologist. The side debate about using teleology to teach is a different subject, and very debateable obviously, but anyway not something to shove in
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biologist philosopher Francisco Ayala has argued that all statements about processes can be trivially translated into teleological statements, and vice versa, but that teleological statements are more explanatory and cannot be disposed
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Faust, if those references can indeed be found online, it should be quite easy for you to copy and paste them. (By the way, as my questions mostly concern your particular choice of words, how are a couple of references going to answer
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example, I believe that the mind is metaphysically distinct from the brain and can even survive death. However, I also believe that the mind emerges "naturally" from the brain, instead of being designed by God or having some purpose.
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I disagree with this statement. In general, software is thought of in terms of inputs and outputs or if you like, pre- and post-conditions. A teleological action choice (or teleological planning) is unique to teleo-reactive programs.
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I have real doubts that the sources you cite are being interpreted correctly by you. But in any case with your writing style it is actually hard to tell what you mean. Either way, can you give some exact quotations? That could help
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Faust, for the most part you fail to address my criticism. And please try to keep it civil. Calling my remarks "fucking bullshit" is totally uncalled for. And I most certainly didn't use those words myself to describe my remarks.
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Okay, There are not many valid points in this remark, the rest is 'fucking bullshit', as the author luckily calls it himself. Regardless I have adapted the above in a way that I think will be more comprehensible to Zaspino.
536:(as an immaterial unity) but it is also true that material objects had being, but it was a lesser or inferior way of being because of its determinate nature. The question was the degree of being a particular substance had.
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In a subsequent exchange, the person "monitoring" this page explained that he deleted my edits because they were based on "personal opinion" and were not "good for Knowledge (XXG)". I question the whole process involved.
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in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'. This is why behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'. The reason for this is that the principle of action
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Faust, Your ability either to read what your fellow wikipedians have written or to understand it seems to be limited to the point that communication is nearly impossible. ZASPINO DID NOT USE THE WORDS "FUCKING BULLSHIT".
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page states. You were right to take it out. I lately restyled the page, but left the data more or less as found. You (or someone) have also taken issue with the teleology v naturalism contrast. Perhaps the citations need
2761:'Weltanschauung', worldview, conception of life has a vision of what is a desirable state of affairs ("the good"), but the mere fact that this is true does not make automatically such a worldview a form of teleology.
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Apart from that I would appreciate it if you'd apologize for calling my remarks "fucking bullshit" and for stubbornly sticking to your wrong assessment that I first used those same words. That would be the civil and
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section needs major work. As it is, you could probably replace the whole thing with "Some people think telology may have a place in science - here are some books to read about it in" without losing any information.
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Concerning what you call my POV about the meaning of the word teleology, please read my reply to Theobald. I said that that it might have several meanings, but that if this is the case the we at least need to
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All human behavior has ends and all ethical theories discuss ends. Humans aim at goals. So it is not normally useful to use the word teleology in those contexts, because all ethics is effectively teleological.
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I have used boldface to emphasize the words 'because', 'therefore' and 'herewith' (mentioned by TheDJ). I do not have a copy of the ODPh and I neither have access to the online edition. But of course I found
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I removed my contribution on "American philosophy" because of possible copyright issues. It's part of a larger piece on teleology in American philosophy, and I have become aware that it may be protected by
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THIRD, HANDLE YOUR TOPICS. I confess it's beyond my skil, I am limited to about the level of pointing out scientific teleology includes evolutionary consideration of what's it good for for an adaptation.
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I need help here. In a complicated definition paragraph like this it can be very heavy going for readers if you repeatedly refer back to "this". "This" is obviously something back near the beginning but
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is defined by the thought that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good' to a man, men, or humanity for example. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal', but contains no
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So this is your proposed paragraph? It is complex and if you don't mind I'll play with it below. Let's see what we come up with in order to at least get it in a form that we all see in the same way.--
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Okay, thanks for the feedback. Perhaps I am that. Some words are crucial to statements, the ones you mentioned are not. Would you be willing to rewrite my piece in a more comprehensible language?
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It is flawed to use the word sight to debate final cause in the example of eye and sight (chickens and eggs). It confuses the definition of final cause. Final cause is the '...ness' of something.
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It might be a good thing if we could start gathering relevant references on the topic of teleological ontology, which is a branch of philosophy which tends to combine both teleology and ontology.
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Thought is an odd choice of word here. A thought can be a passing flight of fantasy. I think better might be "understanding of reality"; "proposal"; "philosophical theory"; "ethical account" etc?
1089:(in the narrow sense)t. Because of this, behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'. Herewith it is contradictory (at least in ethics) to
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Sorry; not sure about the mode of discussion here--first time posting on a Knowledge (XXG) talk page. Between reading higher priority texts for school, I'm very slowly reading Richard Dawkins's
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for headings that previous editors have created (my guess would be that he/she considers that heading in shockingly bad taste). Your reaction to my criticism of your proposal is off the mark.
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a universal law (intent). Only to examine the rule (intent) is to make that rule into a goal and therefore into teleology. This is why virtue ethics is teleology. Here is a creditable source:
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It's interesting also that Mayr reports that Aristotle is often misinterpreted in the past as an anti-scientific cosmic teleologist but this interpretation is recently shown as inaccurate:
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It is not true that Greek ethical theories focus only on the benefit of the individual. The first works called Ethics were those of Aristotle and he certainly did not take such an approach.
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What is it that makes a table a table what is tableness - what makes a pen a pen - what is pen-ness? Many say "pens write - and that's pen-ness" - "just like eye-ness is sight, eyes see".
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concerning entirely different areas of discussion. I see no connection apart from the Greek prefix? Should we also include a sub-section on every word beginning with the letters teleo?--
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is defined by the thought that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good' to a man, men, or humanity for example. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'.
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makes no sense: it asserts that all teleo can trivially be translated into non-teleo, and then that teleo can't be disposed of. This needs to be corrected or removed. I also wonder re
646:, it is inevitably privileged to some extent)." ("Large number coincidences and the anthropic principle in cosmology", Brandon Carter, presented 1973 at the IAU Symposium at Krakow).
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FOURTH, HOW ABOUT MORE THOUGHTS: If no one else tackles it, I will take a shot at a first paragraph more of the form seen in dictionary or encyclopedia. Thinking along the line of (
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it is clearly visible what he named his last edit. Since this heading was not called that his edit should not have had that name. Regardless of the reason, his edit was named thusly.
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Teleology means "an account with ends" and is a term which normally refers not to ethics especially but to theories of causality more generally, amongst things which are not human.
2288:, a tendency to present your Kantian take on the matter as the neutral approach. I am so far not at all convinced that a paragaraph of this tendency is appropriate in the article.
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for some intrinsic or extrinsic end. For example an acorn becomes an oak (intrinsic end), while a stone in a river becomes rounded (extrinsic: abrasion)." but that's just fiddling.
3154:? The goals are not dynamically changing - there is only one goal (final cause). The dynamic part comes from the fact that the program is able to react to a changing environment.
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The latest versin was new, the before last was a copy. That is what I meant. I think I ad eliminated the terms that were referred to in a previous version, but I may be mistaken.
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Don't filter knowledge through your singular world view - to the exclusion of the conclusion of the observations of some of the best minds known within the last 50 years… fear
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Indeed, I found more clear definitions/context from reading the talk page, e.g. "Rather, teleology is about meaning or purpose being behind a PROCESS. Thus, a philosopher like
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SECOND, WORK THE WRITING: in particular I note parts such as statement re material naturalism or Aristotle are repeated, and think it better to have it just in the proper area.
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I think the Aristotle phrasing is kind of a wierd reverse in terms of the ends make the means, but would always be a view for something that is and not these hypotheticals.
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I am grateful with your attempt to mediate, but if you do not know your way around, please do not judge. You will only create a whole lot of static, like many before you. --
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Theobald, you are interrupting a discussion that might prove a learning experience to Zaspino. On top of that you are also giving false information, please stay out of this.
629:), since grown ever more complex to the extent that it is even more hospitable to human life than is necessary for mere survival but even allows advanced human civilization?
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Can you tell me if the follow version (which is not a proposal I am making or agreeing with, just a test at re-wording to see if I understand) would mean the same thing...
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I just decided to put this article on my watchlist. I had not seen this discussion before. Faust, may I ask you to state your late proposal after the discussion above?--
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increasing the percentage of giraffes with long necks. This is why giraffes have long necks." Thus the teleological talk is "just shorthand" for this more verbose claim.
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to the effect that what we can expect to observe must be retricted by the conditions necessary for our presence as observers (Although our situation is not necessarily
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With all due respect, but I really don't think it would be a good idea to add this to the article text, mainly because your proposal is very unclear. A few comments:
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of this, behavior is called 'good' if the consequence of that behavior adds towards achieving these 'goals'. The reason for this is that the principle of action (
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Thinking this over I remember that all ancient Greek (ethical) theories always focus on the benefit to the individual (so that goes for hedonism as well). The '
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I don't like this formulation either, because I think it does violence to human psychology. (I may explain this later.) But I think it may be an improvement.
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as to why using dictionaries and other tertiary sources are good as 'supporting' sources, but why we usually prefer secondary sources in Knowledge (XXG). —
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Hi, I would like to add to this article by setting teleological ethics apart from deontological ethics in a short and compact manner. This is my proposal:
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http://books.google.com/books?id=awg_AAAAcAAJ&ots=-87UsEHG1l&dq=Philosophia%20rationalis%2C%20sive%20logica&pg=PP5#v=onepage&q&f=false
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What if you claim, as science does, that the inherent purpose and final cause for all energy existing is entropic and ends in heat death of the universe?
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Now, if you really do think that the piece is unclear, than I invite you to rewrite it so that it will be clearer. To me it is crystal clear, you see. --
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heading is listed in the edit history (in this case: 'Intrinsic finality - Given. This is fucking bullshit'), together with the edit summary itself."
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whole) and with 'goal', since this takes the special meaning of cause: endcause. In normal life this is usually meant as aim and not as endcause.
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Fixed the definitions, though I note that I have more commonly heard them referred to as "vertical" and "horizontal teleologies," respectively.--
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very difficult to have such a paper taken seriously by reviewers. Still, a lot of literature written for the layperson on the topic of evolution
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coined in 1973. One of the problems the anthropic principle tries to address is this: why has the universe, which began in a very simple state (
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Well, at least I think they do. I don't understand the article at all anyway and I have an exam on epistemology in a few hours. Anyone up for a
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Note: I think that the discussion was hard for you to follow, not the text itself. The words you mention are not in there. Is that correct?
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get some sources of your own. This will be the last time that we will retrace our steps. So, which particular wording did you object to? --
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out, actually being able to source things might help. Anyway though, maybe these first remarks help explain what I am thinking so far...
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Anyway, if both of you are so upset about my formulation, why don't you help out by reformulating? I do not see the problem you see. --
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http://books.google.com/books?id=rYxYAAAAMAAJ&dq=Elements%20of%20the%20critical%20philosophy&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false
658:"Carter has protested that such teleological readings "are quite different from, and even contradictory with, what I intended"." - the
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Furthermore, teleo-reactive programs are a relatively new concept and have only just become an active research area in recent years.
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in the sense of what's it good for or what use is it, and gotten fixated on theistic teleology and missed other forms of application.
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So, proven wrong twice. It is very surprising to see you here by the way. Especially since you do not use this account normally. --
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As if this abstract subject weren't difficult enough to understand, the very first sentence of this article is incomprehensible:
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I will be out for the next few days, so please do not run amok along with all the strange mumbo jumbo I have seen placed here. --
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Incidentally, why is the modern ideological fad of Intelligent Design not mentioned in this article? It seems closely linked. --
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work with other causes to write - which in turn has it's own formal cause - communication. We would't say pens communicate.
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1) It is not in an extreme version of teleology, but in all versions of teleology that the goal is equated with that good.
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Does that dictionary really call Utilitarianism and hedonism a form of teleological ethics? I believe that is incorrect.--
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Should a neo-Aristotelian account (see Veatch's Rational Man) be taken into account here as a modern view of teleology?
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evolution, is making a teleological argument. Other philosophers and thinkers who have made "teleological arguments" are
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I have to say that what I can follow does not seem correct to me. But at least let's first confirm if I've understood.--
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183:) But if anyone has some desired content or ideas for this, please add them to the talk. Please RSVP any thoughts
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Faust, I'm not going to reply to the ad hominem stuff. It just makes the discussion longer and more complicated.
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Far from being a revival of teleology, Brandon Carter's anthropic principle is a very elegant sidestep of the
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519:. please! stick around! you obviously know what you're talking about and i'd greatly appreciate your help!
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than by consensus. If people interested in editing this subject have trouble reading it, there is a problem.
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means something very different from calling Bentham's utilitarianism teleological (if that is what they do).
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a thing is not end-cause it is a composite of other other forms of causein a heirarchy of abstractions.
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further suggestions for improvement in the second place, I think AL's efforts deserve to be appreciated.
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position that there is such a purpose (as more commonly used). for an example of the latter, consider
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Teleology is sometimes used to describe human goals, as in the sense used in "teleological ethics". --
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this. I see a source has been called for your new sentence also though. I think one can be found.--
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in what way they constitute an answer to my specific questions and support the text you propose.
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That... didn't actually make any sense. Can you restate your query in a more coherent manner?
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Four causes article: is modern science teleological or does it at least attempt the opposite?
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3317:, and Wiener went out of his way not to use teleological language in the title of his book.
2753:
I agree with most comments made by Andrew Lancaster (AL). I have a few additional comments:
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I wrote on this talk page: "Zaspino's edit was not called "this is complete bullshit". In
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As Aristotle wrote in support of teleology, "Nature adapts the organ to the function, and
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In recent decades a form of teleological reasoning has reappeared in certain quarters of
2737:(After typing this I looked at what others have written and noticed similar comments.)--
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And just on Aristotle, in case it is helpful, his word for the goal of human living is
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235:(Encyclopedia Britanica past period of copyright) and wonder if there's a preference.
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3411:"A teleology is any philosophical account which that final causes exist in nature..."
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http://books.google.it/books/about/Purposiveness.html?id=Ased-Na1uy4C&redir_esc=y
3309:, regulation, feedback control... If anything, they are 'efficient causes'. They are
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3150:"unless the output precedes input" - So you're saying we are capable of solving the
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those crazy reliable guys can be. So what do you think about this particular case?--
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because you feel like it, even though good and credible sources have been given. --
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The DNA instructions have been assembled by natural selection. -- Richard Dawkins,
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I reviewed the second version that you proposed, which contains those words. Also
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I've hacked it a bit more. There is a lot of dodgy stuff in the bio section. Eg
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of" an end) but famously denied that this requires an intelligent planner (see
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2211:. The logic of teleological and deontological ethics is examined in detail in
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1957:. The logic of teleological and deontological ethics is examined in detail in
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1304:. The logic of teleological and deontological ethics is examined in detail in
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About necessity of teleological concepts (but without metaphysics) in biology
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in the narrow sense. In other words, teleological ethics are the opposite of
1890:, p.172 and 173 (5 and 6). Could you please quote the sections you refer to?
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Apply the suffix 'ness' to things and you begin to understand final cause.
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1927:(in the narrow sense).Herewith it is contradictory (at least in ethics) to
1275:(in the narrow sense).Herewith it is contradictory (at least in ethics) to
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situation. Kindly respond there since it disrupts normal activity here. --
498:, who talks about reality driving towards perfection in the Absolute, and
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least emphasise this one point: the notion of the 'present as history'. (
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2551:(in the narrow sense).This is why it is opposite (at least in ethics) to
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2368:(in the narrow sense).This is why it is opposite (at least in ethics) to
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2173:(in the narrow sense).This is why it is opposite (at least in ethics) to
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the function to the organ" (so organ is the eyes; seeing is the function)
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Again I know what you mean but odd wording: "behavior is best aimed at"?
1415:
NOTE: not all references show up here. They will on the project page. --
610:
87:
I want to take up the points about Hegel and dialectical materialism:
2547:) is not meant to be a (duty to a) universal law and, as such, has no
2364:) is not meant to be a (duty to a) universal law and, as such, has no
2169:) is not meant to be a (duty to a) universal law and, as such, has no
1923:) is not meant to be a (duty to a) universal law and therefore has no
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would be that he/she considers that heading in shockingly bad taste)."
1271:) is not meant to be a (duty to a) universal law and therefore has no
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second claim "form before being" is confused; for the Greeks form was
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If there are any serious constructive remarks, please let me know. --
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The previous version of this wiki page claimed the word appeared in
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here we have a source the editors od the source are experts for sure
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raised this point a while back - perhaps this is a start.) best,
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that man sees because he has eyes and has eyes so that he can see.
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Knowledge (XXG):PRIMARY#Primary.2C_secondary_and_tertiary_sources
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sub-divisions of teleology. I still don't really get what it is!
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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this piece, since none of the term you mentioned are in there?
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
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The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, P172 and P173
1206:. This in the sense that this 'good' is understood as a 'goal'
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There is an inherent purpose or final cause for all that exists
386:
I'm removing this, because I find it particularly troublesome:
1480:
Zaspino's edit was not called "this is complete bullshit". In
1735:(pun intended) thing to do and I think you owe me that much."
1671:(pun intended) thing to do and I think you owe me that much.
27:
Chaos theory and its notion of an attractor IS NOT teleologic
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Good intentions there I guess but doesn't humanity cover it?
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online. The pages 375 (1), 360 (2), 294 (3), 240 (4) of the
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677a12-18). This should be borne in mind in what follows.
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I think something like this would be a better formulation:
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accident. So, no, I will not apologise. 'Zaspino' should.
1756:(One more quotation added - 19:34, 4 September 2010 (UTC))
231:
I've another alternative of starting with definition from
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Teleological ethics knows several forms, among which are
2199:
Teleological ethics knows several forms, among which are
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Maybe I copied the wrong version. Easily remedied though:
1945:
Teleological ethics knows several forms, among which are
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Teleological ethics knows several forms, among which are
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Teleological ethics knows several forms, among which are
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that behavior is subservient to that which is the 'good'
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who put all the teleology-and-modern-science stuff in?
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Would you be willing to try re-writing your proposal?--
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Metaphysical naturalism isn't the opposite of teleology
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operative in the world; rather, by thinking of things
2096:) is not meant to be a (duty to a) universal law and
1919:
The reason for this is that the principle of action (
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The reason for this is that the principle of action (
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Intrinsic finality - Given. This is fucking bullshit.
1222:. Herewith it is contradictory (at least in ethics)
2490:Below my running through your proposed paragraph:-
1886:are not available online, and the same is true for
508:
I am so delighted to find Wonderful Knowledge (XXG)
2131:. The pages you refer to are not available there.
2360:reason for this is that the principle of action (
2165:reason for this is that the principle of action (
3341:http://faculty.washington.edu/lynnhank/Mayr3.pdf
1888:The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy
1465:expect you to assume good intentions Zaspino. --
2608:) and not just what goals are being aimed at..
2081:Faust, Again, you have overlooked the obvious:
1595:could be a learning experience to you as well.
1166:I am hoping for some constructive criticism. --
366:modernism I do applaued you in your efforts...
3305:Biology and cybernetics are full of feedback,
8:
2108:it is contradictory (at least in ethics) to
494:, who phrases it in terms of "final cause",
3651:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
3642:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p294
3633:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p360
3624:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p375
3606:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
3597:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p294
3588:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p360
3579:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p375
3552:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
3543:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p294
3534:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p360
3525:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p375
3498:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
3489:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p294
3480:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p360
3471:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p375
2026:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
2017:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p294
2008:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p360
1999:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p375
1373:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
1364:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p294
1355:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p360
1346:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p375
1194:is subservient to that which is the 'good'
1160:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, 2008, p240
2641:motivates positive emotions as 'the good'.
1976:Online works of Immanuel Kant on Gutenberg
1323:Online works of Immanuel Kant on Gutenberg
1137:Online works of Immanuel Kant on Gutenberg
942:, which is filled with such text as this:
651:Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival, The
3387:really are. Maybe I'm missing the point.
555:
233:http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Teleology
3402:Verb missing in the VERY FIRST SENTENCE!
1191:is defined by the thought that behavior
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2525:to a man, men, or humanity for example.
1992:
1744:So, are you going to apologize or not?
1339:
1153:
2430:(also known as consequentionalism)and
2207:(also known as consequentionalism)and
1953:(also known as consequentionalism)and
1300:(also known as consequentionalism)and
1114:(also known as consequentionalism)and
997:Earliest use of the word was incorrect
486:who argues that consciousness and God
272:who argues that consciousness and God
3354:I suggest also the following volume:
3298:Interesting material can be found in
862:Is this section really needed???????
702:Plagiarism and Inadequate disclaimers
7:
3203:Errm <struggles to be polite: -->
2677:' thought is substantial in this.
1615:and if not I will place my piece. --
604:I've removed the following for now:
327:Teleology, on the other hand, holds
2969:Yes, there are plenty of sources.
24:
3300:Adaptation#Function and teleonomy
2897:teleo reactive computer programs?
2878:Editors here may want to look at
55:2A00:F41:5849:2EE2:0:3D:6E4F:4701
1884:Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy
951:, 30th Anniversary Edition, p22
723:Useful edits summarily rejected
323:These two sentences conflict:
3457:12:14, 11 September 2010 (UTC)
2892:19:41, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
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2836:13:58, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
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2747:08:00, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
2698:21:08, 13 September 2010 (UTC)
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2652:" (P172, Deontological Ethics)
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2479:17:28, 13 September 2010 (UTC)
2463:16:32, 13 September 2010 (UTC)
2406:17:28, 13 September 2010 (UTC)
2340:12:24, 11 September 2010 (UTC)
649:No teleology there at all. --
42:21:51, 12 September 2015 (UTC)
1:
3440:17:47, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
3426:16:18, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
3313:teleological in the sense of
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3230:08:51, 22 February 2011 (UTC)
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2957:09:48, 10 February 2011 (UTC)
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2320:08:34, 8 September 2010 (UTC)
2298:18:24, 7 September 2010 (UTC)
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1009:. See page 113 for example.
910:13:08, 17 December 2009 (UTC)
872:11:20, 25 February 2009 (UTC)
852:07:03, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
825:23:45, 16 November 2008 (UTC)
798:21:08, 16 November 2008 (UTC)
783:19:20, 16 November 2008 (UTC)
717:19:15, 16 November 2008 (UTC)
697:10:30, 12 November 2008 (UTC)
539:Great to see the discussion!
496:Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
2919:16:14, 9 February 2011 (UTC)
1723:== Teleology and Ethics == (
1576:== Teleology and Ethics == (
991:15:51, 2 February 2011 (UTC)
465:04:16, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
319:03:35, 3 November 2006 (UTC)
308:11:33, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
197:03:58, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
156:03:58, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
126:11:33, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
107:10:09, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
78:19:14, 23 January 2019 (UTC)
63:18:03, 22 January 2019 (UTC)
2326:Andrew Lancaster discussion
2129:the ODPh using Google Books
1250:17:52, 27 August 2010 (UTC)
1176:13:33, 26 August 2010 (UTC)
594:13:39, 22 August 2008 (UTC)
577:02:53, 6 January 2008 (UTC)
258:19:57, 14 August 2013 (UTC)
3677:
3377:14:25, 29 April 2013 (UTC)
3327:12:57, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
3294:Final and efficient causes
2497:is defined by the thought.
1203:, or humanity for example
972:) 03:38, 2 Feb 2011 (UTC)
934:09:07, 13 March 2010 (UTC)
551:06:13, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
484:Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
270:Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
142:14:46, 4 August 2007 (UTC)
83:Does really need a Rewrite
1066:21:03, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
1052:14:28, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
891:06:16, 24 July 2009 (UTC)
673:23:07, 18 June 2008 (UTC)
654:22:18, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
376:'preferred' world view….
282:09:05, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
3397:19:22, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
1025:15:04, 3 June 2010 (UTC)
523:16:38, 19 Apr 2005 (UTC)
434:teleological Casus Belli
426:07:58, 7 July 2013 (UTC)
222:15:37, 19 May 2013 (UTC)
2555:, which focuses on the
2440:Critique of Pure Reason
2372:, which focuses on the
2217:Critique of Pure Reason
2177:, which focuses on the
2112:, which focuses on the
2104:(in the narrow sense).
1963:Critique of Pure Reason
1931:, which focuses on the
1310:Critique of Pure Reason
1279:, which focuses on the
1229:, which focuses on the
1124:Critique of Pure Reason
1093:, which focuses on the
919:There is discussion at
678:"Teleology and science"
617:, under the heading of
448:23:03, 7 Oct 2004 (UTC)
2616:
1213:(in the narrow sense)
241:has changed over time.
132:Needs Complete Rewrite
2600:, which focus on the
2579:
896:Teleological ontology
858:Philosophy of science
684:Teleology and science
479:teleological argument
3274:William M. Connolley
3244:William M. Connolley
3206:William M. Connolley
2880:Deontological ethics
2598:deontological ethics
2553:deontological ethics
2380:) at the same time.
2370:deontological ethics
2185:) at the same time.
2175:deontological ethics
2110:deontological ethics
1939:) at the same time.
1929:deontological ethics
1277:deontological ethics
1227:deontological ethics
1091:deontological ethics
1074:Teleology and Ethics
636:Copernican Principle
2589:teleological ethics
2563:) at the same time.
2495:Teleological ethics
2357:Teleological ethics
2162:Teleological ethics
2120:) at the same time.
2086:Teleological ethics
1916:Teleological ethics
1287:) at the same time.
1264:Teleological ethics
1237:) at the same time
1189:Teleological ethics
1101:) at the same time.
1083:Teleological ethics
660:Anthropic principle
640:anthropic principle
619:anthropic principle
543:Numberthreefourfive
2602:manner of behavior
2557:manner of behavior
2374:manner of behavior
2179:manner of behavior
2114:manner of behavior
1933:manner of behavior
1281:manner of behavior
1231:manner of behavior
1216:. Because of this
1209:, but contains no
1095:manner of behavior
978:Intelligent Design
758:all things alike (
2701:
2684:comment added by
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2449:comment added by
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2060:comment added by
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1769:comment added by
1015:comment added by
842:comment added by
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769:comment added by
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567:comment added by
473:The articles for
97:comment added by
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3449:Andrew Lancaster
3382:Misapplications?
3259:Andrew Lancaster
3222:Andrew Lancaster
3171:Machine Elf 1735
3138:Machine Elf 1735
3099:Andrew Lancaster
3070:Andrew Lancaster
3035:Machine Elf 1735
2989:Andrew Lancaster
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1864:
1817:
1785:
1763:
1508:this comparisson
1392:
1389:
1383:
1380:
1374:
1371:
1365:
1362:
1356:
1353:
1347:
1344:
1161:
1158:
1027:
983:Andrew Lancaster
949:The Selfish Gene
940:The Selfish Gene
926:Andrew Lancaster
854:
832:Neo-Aristotelian
827:
805:
785:
763:
760:Parts of Animals
562:
109:
70:Andrew Lancaster
3676:
3675:
3671:
3670:
3669:
3667:
3666:
3665:
3664:
3659:
3655:
3650:
3646:
3641:
3637:
3632:
3628:
3623:
3619:
3614:
3610:
3605:
3601:
3596:
3592:
3587:
3583:
3578:
3574:
3569:
3565:
3560:
3556:
3551:
3547:
3542:
3538:
3533:
3529:
3524:
3520:
3515:
3511:
3506:
3502:
3497:
3493:
3488:
3484:
3479:
3475:
3470:
3466:
3447:Thanks. Typo.--
3404:
3384:
3334:
3296:
3201:
3152:Halting problem
3065:non human goals
2899:
2679:
2444:
2424:Aristotelianism
2328:
2201:Aristotelianism
2055:
2048:
2043:
2039:
2034:
2030:
2025:
2021:
2016:
2012:
2007:
2003:
1998:
1994:
1947:Aristotelianism
1862:
1815:
1809:
1764:
1395:
1390:
1386:
1381:
1377:
1372:
1368:
1363:
1359:
1354:
1350:
1345:
1341:
1294:Aristotelianism
1164:
1159:
1155:
1108:Aristotelianism
1076:
1033:
1017:137.222.105.134
1010:
999:
917:
898:
879:
860:
837:
834:
806:
764:
725:
704:
680:
602:
558:
436:
418:Rjm at sleepers
265:
134:
92:
85:
29:
22:
21:
20:
12:
11:
5:
3674:
3672:
3663:
3662:
3653:
3644:
3635:
3626:
3617:
3608:
3599:
3590:
3581:
3572:
3563:
3554:
3545:
3536:
3527:
3518:
3509:
3500:
3491:
3482:
3473:
3463:
3462:
3461:
3460:
3459:
3414:
3413:
3403:
3400:
3389:TooManyFingers
3383:
3380:
3333:
3330:
3319:Macdonald-ross
3295:
3292:
3291:
3290:
3289:
3288:
3287:
3286:
3285:
3284:
3200:
3197:
3196:
3195:
3194:
3193:
3192:
3191:
3190:
3189:
3188:
3187:
3186:
3185:
3184:
3183:
3182:
3181:
3130:
3129:
3128:
3127:
3126:
3125:
3124:
3023:
3022:
3021:
3020:
3019:
3018:
3017:
3016:
3015:
3014:
2977:
2976:
2975:
2974:
2973:
2972:
2962:
2961:
2960:
2959:
2941:
2940:
2923:
2898:
2895:
2876:
2875:
2874:
2873:
2872:
2871:
2857:
2853:
2849:
2841:
2840:
2839:
2838:
2824:
2813:
2812:
2811:
2810:
2809:
2808:
2807:
2806:
2805:
2804:
2785:
2771:Theobald Tiger
2768:
2767:
2766:
2762:
2758:
2750:
2749:
2735:
2731:
2727:
2724:
2720:
2717:
2705:
2704:
2703:
2702:
2668:
2667:
2653:
2648:
2644:
2643:
2642:
2638:
2615:
2614:
2613:
2612:
2611:
2610:
2575:
2574:
2573:
2572:
2565:
2564:
2536:
2535:
2534:
2533:
2527:
2526:
2522:
2521:
2520:
2519:
2513:
2512:
2508:
2507:
2506:
2505:
2499:
2498:
2488:
2487:
2486:
2485:
2484:
2483:
2482:
2481:
2428:Utilitarianism
2415:
2414:
2413:
2412:
2411:
2410:
2409:
2408:
2387:
2386:
2385:
2384:
2383:
2382:
2348:
2347:
2327:
2324:
2323:
2322:
2308:
2303:
2302:
2301:
2300:
2290:Theobald Tiger
2267:
2263:
2262:
2261:
2260:
2259:
2258:
2248:Theobald Tiger
2225:
2224:
2223:
2222:
2221:
2220:
2205:Utilitarianism
2192:
2191:
2190:
2189:
2188:
2187:
2153:
2152:
2151:
2150:
2144:
2143:
2133:Theobald Tiger
2124:
2123:
2122:
2047:
2046:
2037:
2028:
2019:
2010:
2001:
1991:
1990:
1989:
1987:
1981:
1980:
1979:
1978:
1971:External Links
1967:
1966:
1951:Utilitarianism
1942:
1941:
1907:
1906:
1905:
1904:
1903:
1902:
1892:Theobald Tiger
1839:
1808:
1805:
1804:
1803:
1793:Theobald Tiger
1760:
1758:
1757:
1746:Theobald Tiger
1742:
1741:
1740:
1736:
1728:
1716:
1712:
1684:
1683:
1664:
1644:
1643:
1612:
1611:
1610:
1609:
1608:
1607:
1597:Theobald Tiger
1566:
1565:
1549:
1548:
1547:
1546:
1545:
1544:
1534:Theobald Tiger
1515:
1511:
1504:
1498:
1497:
1487:Theobald Tiger
1447:
1446:
1429:
1394:
1393:
1384:
1375:
1366:
1357:
1348:
1338:
1337:
1336:
1334:
1328:
1327:
1326:
1325:
1318:External Links
1314:
1313:
1298:Utilitarianism
1289:
1288:
1257:
1255:
1254:
1253:
1252:
1183:
1182:
1163:
1162:
1152:
1151:
1150:
1148:
1142:
1141:
1140:
1139:
1132:External Links
1128:
1127:
1112:Utilitarianism
1103:
1102:
1075:
1072:
1071:
1070:
1069:
1068:
1032:
1029:
998:
995:
994:
993:
961:of evolution.
953:
952:
916:
913:
897:
894:
878:
875:
859:
856:
833:
830:
739:(as the Greek
724:
721:
703:
700:
679:
676:
632:
631:
623:Brandon Carter
601:
598:
597:
596:
557:
554:
525:
524:
509:
471:
470:
469:
468:
467:
450:
449:
435:
432:
431:
430:
429:
428:
402:
401:
393:
392:
384:
370:
368:
364:
351:
344:Simple English
340:
339:
332:
311:
285:
264:
261:
247:
246:
245:
244:
243:
242:
210:
209:
208:
207:
200:
199:
185:
184:
175:
174:
170:
169:
165:
164:
159:
158:
133:
130:
129:
128:
84:
81:
52:
51:
28:
25:
23:
18:Talk:Teleology
15:
14:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
3673:
3657:
3654:
3648:
3645:
3639:
3636:
3630:
3627:
3621:
3618:
3612:
3609:
3603:
3600:
3594:
3591:
3585:
3582:
3576:
3573:
3567:
3564:
3558:
3555:
3549:
3546:
3540:
3537:
3531:
3528:
3522:
3519:
3513:
3510:
3504:
3501:
3495:
3492:
3486:
3483:
3477:
3474:
3468:
3465:
3458:
3454:
3450:
3446:
3445:
3444:
3443:
3442:
3441:
3437:
3433:
3428:
3427:
3423:
3419:
3418:Captain Quirk
3412:
3409:
3408:
3407:
3401:
3399:
3398:
3394:
3390:
3381:
3379:
3378:
3374:
3370:
3369:80.117.30.221
3366:
3363:
3360:
3359:
3355:
3352:
3349:
3346:
3343:
3342:
3338:
3331:
3329:
3328:
3324:
3320:
3316:
3312:
3308:
3303:
3301:
3293:
3283:
3279:
3275:
3270:
3269:
3268:
3264:
3260:
3255:
3254:
3253:
3249:
3245:
3242:
3238:
3233:
3232:
3231:
3227:
3223:
3218:
3217:
3216:
3215:
3211:
3207:
3198:
3180:
3176:
3172:
3167:
3166:
3165:
3161:
3157:
3153:
3149:
3148:
3147:
3143:
3139:
3135:
3131:
3123:
3119:
3115:
3110:
3109:
3108:
3104:
3100:
3095:
3094:
3093:
3089:
3085:
3081:
3080:
3079:
3075:
3071:
3066:
3061:
3060:
3059:
3055:
3051:
3046:
3045:
3044:
3040:
3036:
3031:
3030:
3029:
3028:
3027:
3026:
3025:
3024:
3013:
3009:
3005:
3000:
2999:
2998:
2994:
2990:
2985:
2984:
2983:
2982:
2981:
2980:
2979:
2978:
2971:
2968:
2967:
2966:
2965:
2964:
2963:
2958:
2954:
2950:
2945:
2944:
2943:
2942:
2939:
2935:
2931:
2926:
2925:
2924:
2921:
2920:
2916:
2912:
2907:
2903:
2896:
2894:
2893:
2889:
2885:
2881:
2870:
2866:
2862:
2858:
2854:
2852:disambiguate.
2850:
2847:
2846:
2845:
2844:
2843:
2842:
2837:
2833:
2829:
2825:
2821:
2820:
2819:
2818:
2817:
2803:
2799:
2795:
2790:
2786:
2782:
2781:
2780:
2776:
2772:
2769:
2763:
2759:
2755:
2754:
2752:
2751:
2748:
2744:
2740:
2736:
2732:
2728:
2725:
2721:
2718:
2715:
2714:
2711:
2710:
2709:
2708:
2707:
2706:
2699:
2695:
2691:
2687:
2683:
2676:
2672:
2671:
2670:
2669:
2666:
2662:
2658:
2654:
2649:
2645:
2639:
2636:
2635:
2632:
2631:
2630:
2629:
2625:
2621:
2609:
2607:
2601:
2599:
2595:
2590:
2585:
2584:
2583:
2582:
2581:
2580:
2578:
2569:
2568:
2567:
2566:
2562:
2558:
2554:
2550:
2546:
2541:
2538:
2537:
2531:
2530:
2529:
2528:
2524:
2523:
2517:
2516:
2515:
2514:
2510:
2509:
2503:
2502:
2501:
2500:
2496:
2493:
2492:
2491:
2480:
2476:
2472:
2468:
2467:
2464:
2460:
2456:
2452:
2448:
2441:
2437:
2436:Immanuel Kant
2433:
2429:
2425:
2421:
2420:
2419:
2418:
2417:
2416:
2407:
2403:
2399:
2395:
2394:
2393:
2392:
2391:
2390:
2389:
2388:
2381:
2379:
2373:
2371:
2367:
2363:
2358:
2354:
2353:
2352:
2351:
2350:
2349:
2344:
2343:
2342:
2341:
2337:
2333:
2325:
2321:
2317:
2313:
2309:
2305:
2304:
2299:
2295:
2291:
2287:
2282:
2281:
2280:
2276:
2272:
2268:
2265:
2264:
2257:
2253:
2249:
2244:
2243:
2242:
2238:
2234:
2229:
2228:
2227:
2226:
2218:
2214:
2213:Immanuel Kant
2210:
2206:
2202:
2198:
2197:
2196:
2195:
2194:
2193:
2186:
2184:
2178:
2176:
2172:
2168:
2163:
2159:
2158:
2157:
2156:
2155:
2154:
2148:
2147:
2146:
2145:
2142:
2138:
2134:
2130:
2125:
2121:
2119:
2113:
2111:
2107:
2103:
2099:
2095:
2091:
2087:
2083:
2082:
2080:
2079:
2078:
2075:
2071:
2067:
2063:
2059:
2052:
2051:
2041:
2038:
2032:
2029:
2023:
2020:
2014:
2011:
2005:
2002:
1996:
1993:
1988:
1986:
1983:
1982:
1977:
1974:
1973:
1972:
1969:
1968:
1964:
1960:
1959:Immanuel Kant
1956:
1952:
1948:
1944:
1943:
1940:
1938:
1932:
1930:
1926:
1922:
1917:
1913:
1912:
1911:
1901:
1897:
1893:
1889:
1885:
1880:
1879:
1878:
1874:
1870:
1866:
1858:
1854:
1853:
1852:
1848:
1844:
1840:
1837:
1836:
1835:
1832:
1831:
1827:
1823:
1819:
1806:
1802:
1798:
1794:
1791:the obvious.
1789:
1788:
1787:
1784:
1780:
1776:
1772:
1768:
1755:
1751:
1747:
1743:
1739:participate."
1737:
1734:
1729:
1726:
1722:
1717:
1713:
1709:
1705:
1704:
1701:
1700:
1699:
1698:
1694:
1690:
1682:
1678:
1674:
1670:
1665:
1661:
1660:
1659:
1658:
1654:
1650:
1642:
1638:
1634:
1629:
1628:
1627:
1626:
1622:
1618:
1606:
1602:
1598:
1593:
1592:
1591:
1587:
1583:
1579:
1575:
1570:
1569:
1568:
1567:
1564:
1560:
1556:
1551:
1550:
1543:
1539:
1535:
1530:
1529:
1528:
1524:
1520:
1516:
1512:
1509:
1505:
1502:
1501:
1500:
1499:
1496:
1492:
1488:
1483:
1479:
1478:
1477:
1476:
1472:
1468:
1462:
1461:
1457:
1453:
1445:
1441:
1437:
1432:
1431:
1430:
1427:
1426:
1422:
1418:
1413:
1412:
1408:
1404:
1399:
1388:
1385:
1379:
1376:
1370:
1367:
1361:
1358:
1352:
1349:
1343:
1340:
1335:
1333:
1330:
1329:
1324:
1321:
1320:
1319:
1316:
1315:
1311:
1307:
1306:Immanuel Kant
1303:
1299:
1295:
1291:
1290:
1286:
1282:
1278:
1274:
1270:
1265:
1262:
1261:
1260:
1251:
1247:
1243:
1239:
1236:
1232:
1228:
1224:
1221:
1218:
1215:
1212:
1208:
1205:
1202:
1199:
1196:
1193:
1190:
1187:
1186:
1185:
1184:
1180:
1179:
1178:
1177:
1173:
1169:
1157:
1154:
1149:
1147:
1144:
1143:
1138:
1135:
1134:
1133:
1130:
1129:
1125:
1121:
1120:Immanuel Kant
1117:
1113:
1109:
1105:
1104:
1100:
1096:
1092:
1088:
1084:
1081:
1080:
1079:
1073:
1067:
1063:
1059:
1055:
1054:
1053:
1049:
1045:
1041:
1040:
1039:
1038:
1037:92.86.134.203
1030:
1028:
1026:
1022:
1018:
1014:
1008:
1004:
996:
992:
988:
984:
979:
976:Yes, I guess
975:
974:
973:
971:
967:
962:
959:
950:
945:
944:
943:
941:
936:
935:
931:
927:
922:
914:
912:
911:
907:
903:
895:
893:
892:
888:
884:
876:
874:
873:
869:
865:
857:
855:
853:
849:
845:
841:
831:
829:
826:
822:
818:
814:
810:
801:
799:
795:
791:
787:
784:
780:
776:
772:
768:
761:
756:
751:
747:
742:
738:
733:
729:
722:
720:
718:
714:
710:
701:
699:
698:
694:
690:
685:
677:
675:
674:
670:
666:
661:
656:
655:
652:
647:
645:
641:
637:
630:
628:
624:
620:
616:
612:
607:
606:
605:
599:
595:
591:
587:
582:
581:
580:
578:
574:
570:
566:
553:
552:
548:
544:
540:
537:
535:
529:
522:
518:
513:
512:
511:
506:
505:
501:
497:
493:
489:
485:
480:
476:
466:
462:
458:
454:
453:
452:
451:
447:
442:
441:
440:
433:
427:
423:
419:
415:
414:
413:
412:
411:
410:
405:
398:
397:
396:
389:
388:
387:
383:
380:
377:
373:
367:
362:
361:
357:
350:
349:
348:218.102.218.7
346:translation?
345:
337:
333:
330:
326:
325:
324:
321:
320:
317:
310:
309:
306:
305:62.25.109.196
302:
299:
295:
291:
288:
284:
283:
280:
275:
271:
262:
260:
259:
255:
251:
239:
234:
230:
229:
228:
227:
226:
225:
224:
223:
219:
215:
204:
203:
202:
201:
198:
194:
190:
187:
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3307:homeostasis
2734:discussion.
2680:—Preceding
2445:—Preceding
2056:—Preceding
1765:—Preceding
1721:Italic text
1574:Italic text
1058:Heyitspeter
1011:—Preceding
921:Four causes
838:—Preceding
807:—Preceding
765:—Preceding
663:checking...
563:—Preceding
457:Markbassett
391:intention).
250:Markbassett
214:174.7.56.10
189:Markbassett
148:Markbassett
93:—Preceding
34:Laurensjean
2789:eudaimonia
1985:References
1332:References
1146:References
966:tsbertalan
883:Sanitycult
534:pure being
446:--Geoffrey
314:copyright.
3430:Fixed. --
3416:Huh???
3084:Pfhorrest
3033:article.—
2987:though.--
2675:amor fati
2606:intention
2561:intention
2378:intention
2286:elsewhere
2183:intention
2118:intention
2098:therefore
1937:intention
1708:this edit
1482:this edit
1285:intention
1235:intention
1197:to a man
1099:intention
924:please.--
800:Daphne-3
737:Teleology
719:Daphne-3
665:Redheylin
621:, a term
615:cosmology
517:this link
500:Karl Marx
492:Aristotle
475:teleology
263:Confusing
118:Xavexgoem
3241:WP:UNDUE
2694:contribs
2682:unsigned
2594:morality
2459:contribs
2447:unsigned
2432:hedonism
2209:hedonism
2106:Herewith
2070:contribs
2058:unsigned
1955:hedonism
1873:contribs
1826:contribs
1779:contribs
1767:unsigned
1302:hedonism
1211:morality
1116:hedonism
1087:morality
1013:unsigned
840:unsigned
821:contribs
813:Daphne-3
809:unsigned
790:Daphne-3
779:contribs
771:Daphne-3
767:unsigned
732:(XXG)!)
709:Daphne-3
627:Big Bang
565:unsigned
238:produce.
114:Be bold!
95:unsigned
3199:Science
3156:Bdongol
3134:Bdongol
3114:Bdongol
3050:Bdongol
3004:Bdongol
2930:Bdongol
2902:Bdongol
2723:humans.
2100:has no
2090:Because
1673:Zaspino
1647:one. --
1633:Zaspino
1582:Zaspino
1436:Zaspino
1242:Zaspino
1044:Evercat
755:Physics
644:central
611:physics
600:Physics
409:Ryguasu
360:ifs-ffm
68:here.--
3068:end.--
2549:morals
2366:morals
2171:morals
2102:morals
1925:morals
1807:Review
1663:them?)
1506:1) In
1273:morals
1200:, men
746:really
689:Wardog
521:Ungtss
510:Ray K
279:Bilz0r
139:janaka
3432:Faust
3365:Bye.
3169:one.—
3132:Well
2828:Faust
2686:Faust
2657:Faust
2651:: -->
2571:what?
2545:maxim
2451:Faust
2362:maxim
2312:Faust
2271:Faust
2233:Faust
2167:maxim
2094:maxim
2062:Faust
1921:maxim
1843:Faust
1771:Faust
1733:moral
1689:Faust
1669:moral
1649:Faust
1617:Faust
1555:Faust
1519:Faust
1467:Faust
1452:Faust
1417:Faust
1403:Faust
1269:maxim
1168:Faust
750:as if
741:telos
586:Wophi
488:drive
382:HELP
274:drive
16:<
3453:talk
3436:talk
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2604:(or
2559:(or
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682:The
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329:both
316:Rats
254:talk
218:talk
193:talk
152:talk
122:talk
116::-D
103:talk
74:talk
59:talk
38:talk
3311:not
2882:.--
2442:.
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902:ADM
336:not
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