apeiron
Gold Member
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poor mystic said:I think a simple set of arguments involving the irrational destruction of order and implicit loss of energy to a parent society could be mounted. We could start from the judgement that "waste is bad" and carry on from there.
In fact, as I have already argued, a materialistic or naturalistic perspective might have to say the opposite - the purpose of life and mind (bios) is to create waste. Life exists to dissipate energy gradients. This is the basis of dissipative structure theory and the maximum entropy production principle. So waste is in fact "good" if we mean what is most natural to life as a system.
This is counter-intuitive of course. But that is where science shows its strengths.
Having said that, out of control growth/waste can be "bad" for a particular species or ecosystem. Humans, for example, may shortly blow up because of their exponential entropification habits. And this would also be "bad" for the planet's Gaian level dissipation if it knocks the ability to create entropy as a biosphere.
So it is wasting energy at a sustainable long term rate (or in a fashion that ultimately produces the most entropy) which would be "good" for a material system - a dissipative structure.