Justhuman wrote:Kurieuo wrote:What is "meaning", and by that I mean an "ultimate meaning"? What properties does ultimate meaning have? Once one understands and/or agrees about what ultimate meaning is, then whether particular worldviews have it can be more easily discussed.
I will say here, that it is largely agreed so far as I'm aware and read philosophically speaking, that there is no real ultimate meaning to be had for us if when God is removed from the picture, if their is no telos (i.e., end goal for us), if we all will die, if noone will be around to remember.
Why introduce that "ultimate"? You are upgrading it to a level which automatically and inescapably includes "God". What's the difference between 'meaning' and 'ultimate meaning'?
Am I upgrading or are you downgrading? Matter of perspective isn't it.
People can assign meaning to anything. Buddhists seek/find some meaning in just looking at a rock or structure. Does that mean meaning exists? Well, yes, for the Buddhist who thinks such.
I'm sure no one here questions that people can find meaning in just about anything. So then if you're arguing that people (i.e., Materialists) can find meaning in life, well, we're all in agreement that they can, that you can find your own meaning to life, and that such is probably important to you or else it'd be meaningless.
Ever played a board game that you kind of got bored of half way through? There was meaning in the beginning, built around your enjoyment. But then, when your enjoyment left and the meaning was lost, well, why not just resign? It seems then, there is nothing wrong if someone decides to quit life for precisely the same reason, mere boredom.
Now, if you're assigning objective meaning, that is, "REAL" meaning had regardless of what anyone says or thinks, the kind of "meaning" every Christian on this board would think of when discussing meaning to/in life. If you assign such meaning to life as being:
JustHuman wrote:Everyone has one chance to live his or her live. Take away that chance and that particular life is lost. No second chance.
Realizing that volatility makes each life intensely important and worth while to cherish and carress, more so than the partly immortal 'life' of the theistic universe.
Is that is the meaning to be had - living one's life to the fullest because it's all they will have? If so, why then acts of self-sacrifice are the stupidest thing people can do right? And yet, we all praise and see meaning to the person who forsakes their "cherishing and carressing" their own life. We honour those who fought in wars and the like for any freedoms enjoyed in our countries. Giving up one's life for another is an act of goodness and bravery we tend to respect. Or, if we merely stick to your understanding of life, self-sacrifice is ultimately just an act of complete and utter stupidity!
If you believe such isn't mere stupidity, but self-sacrifice is good and carries much meaning, then I'd say that Theism provides a better foundation for what you intuitively, deep within your human person, tend to embrace (along with many other things like goodness, fairness, justice, purpose in life, volition, a real self, etc). It is definitely a more wholesome worldview than anything Materialism has to offer.