 Originally Posted by tommo
Not even gonna bother with your post sageous, when you start to get pissy, you already know I am right.
He's not being pissy within his posts, the fact that you're contradicting things with how we presumably never learn from something we already knew, and yet stated there's wonder and joy that we can find something from what we know = contradicting and impossible to discuss about. It's just that when you haven't even come to terms that what you stated was just implausible, that is why there are points he doesn't want to cover.
It's not that you won or that he gave up, your concepts (parts of them) aren't enticing enough for him to invest time into. It's not his fault, it's just you presuming everything he doesn't respond to you is him being a defeatist. If it keeps ending up like this with you having some cognitive bias on what he's trying to do when discussing with you, you should expect an apathetic response (or no response) in return.
 Originally Posted by sivason
How does this apply to the first person in an aboriginal people discovering/inventing a basic principle such as irrigation or the wedge? Obviously some person at some point put such things together that no one before had seen.
Looking at it at face value, it does make sense that we can't just pull things out of nowhere and expect something great or new to happen. To me personally, it feels almost tedious to just view things in an observational reality where one just sees a group of people putting two and two together to make faster and more efficient results with a conflict or making a tool. And I feel that it's almost natural for me to have a tendency to shift that habits or memories could tie into genetics or just how people respond to a solution and it becomes ingrained into their psyche for the next generation. And a question such as yours seems fitting to just use something like Natural Selection to give implications of discovery.
So if you were to apply the question with Darwinian Theory (evolution by natural selection):
- Like Sageous mentioned with herding and humans collaborating (but I won't be directing this towards him), it seems practical that on a biological scale, people offering their experiences (when trying to solve a problem like Irrigation or The Wedge example you mentioned Sivason) will increase their chances of surviving and being able to create offspring (I know that's obvious, but Biological standards has restrictions in going further than that). But digging deeper into that, applying something Social to just Biological standards is tedious, so how people try to make presumption on how people make discoveries, it's a mix of them trying to define it in biological terms and social terms. So when trying to answer a question like this biologically, it can only be used as a basis to shift into other theories. And because of our limitation of how aboriginal people worked exactly to discover and design things, we're forced to create models of realities based on the evidence.
So if you were to apply the question with something like Social Exchange Theory:
- - It seems that collaboration amongst peers is a necessity in discovering anything new or what people lost sight of the opportunity to realize. There are going to be those few group of individuals that have better cognitive attributes that allows them to process and collect the experiences of others and make a discovery of design such as the Irrigation and the Wedge, but either way, these are the type of people that can just let other people mine and experiment, come back in a group, and then they make a solution. These same people still rely on the experiences of others, and it's something like this where even fathoming something like Free-Will (when trying to be at their time full of uncertainty and not ours that's has more to work around with ) doesn't make sense to me. Because if people, who have their own psyche and state of consciousness, if we're attempting to collect information from them to add on to our own, we are relying on an external source: the people around us that we collaborate with.
If that's not a means of external source, then the individual is seeing things with a Solipsistic mindset.
But right now in this day and age, we don't really have to rely on face-to-face discussion with people, we can just use something like the Internet, or just Books with people's own mindsets and predispositions about things to add on to what we know. So it's easy for people to presume they have free-will because the external factors like actually having that face-to-face discussion isn't needed, instead, it's just based on the Individual's ability to use retrospect, hindsight, and just basic experimentation to discover things themselves. But 100,000 years or more before that, I doubt those same aboriginal people would think they had Free-will without relying on each other; they would have to balance on giving and taking in order to make ends meet and survive. Whether it's them making markings on caves on ways to prevent other generations from making the same mistakes (like avoiding panthers, jaguars, etc.), or just having some medium to write on, we still rely on other people's insights; give and take, give and take, and add on to make things easier.
And even if someone who's more intelligent and competent in learning about their existence, they are limited by what their mind filters and accepts, so the idea of Free-will seems implausible because of the fact that if we naturally are gregarious beings, we rely on others, which are an external source. It depends on how people look at it though. And trying to see things in an objective view (which is difficult) with our minds having its own stabilization aspects, Free-will doesn't seem to be the right word to use, so instead, it feels practical to just see it as the "Originality" that I believe Darkmatters mentioned (if I remember correctly).
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Just one more thing to mention, like the people in this thread talked about with Originality getting more difficult or almost impossible to have, it just means that you have think about how it would be to be an Aboriginal person that has to Scavenge and Take risks to find new solutions. People who say it's impossible for people to make new inventions and such is a clear reflection that they don't want to venture further, or what they would think would be "over-analyzing" the situation with topics like this.
Anyway, that's just my input for that question Sivason.
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EDIT:
I agree with Darkmatters that the discussion is pointless in a way because honestly, these are all just "if" and implications. And people who read someone' interpretation, they'll just naturally predict and get the core idea. And with others who have to spend their time clarifying things on the "tone" and such of a person's post, discussion gets nowhere. And even what I stated, I already know people already get the idea, but hey, at least we're trying.
However, for discussions to be aimed where people generally agree doesn't make for practical discussion. It's just more of "Oh, okay, so that's how you see it." It's just to have some insight in our minds, but we don't really have to live by it.
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