I was reading a newspaper and decided to see what's up on WF, and this is what I get...
Whatever, back to the pool...
j/k
Whatever, back to the pool...

j/k
A lot of people here (including me) often make the Appeal to nature logical fallacy. (c.f. just because something is "natural" doesn't make it right) Spreading your seeds in a million vaginas might seem like the most natural thing to do based on how we are hardwired, but is it the right thing?
This is only true if we assume we have all possible knowledge.Love (of all types) are chemical reactions, no more and no less.
This is only true if we assume we have all possible knowledge.
I don't believe that is the case.
The absence of proof is not proof.We have lots of very solid evidence that points to this being true and no evidence that doesn't.
Anybody see the new documentary show on MTV called Catfish?
People fall in love with people over the internet, then they meet them in person.
On the episode last night, the young 24 year old women fell in love with a male stripper with a ripped up body who only sent her 3 pictures of himself, all shirtless. He avoided meeting her in person for over a year until the show's producer finally convinced them to meet. The girl claimed she was "in love" with this man and kept talking about how strong their connection was.
When she meets the guy at his house, he's an average looking guy with a little extra weight and 5 years older than he said he was. Not the ripped up guy with abs he claimed to be.
After a month they now only talk a "couple times a week" but the guy is still hoping that one day they will be in a relationship.
At the end the shows producer introduced her to the real ripped up dude from the "fake" photos through skype, she got all giggly and kept bouncing around on screen all excited. She didn't even know this guy and this was her reaction to meeting him on cam.
This is the only full episode I've seen, but I've caught the end of another one and it was basically the same result. Different physical appearance then what was expected = "love" no longer exists. The producer of the show has a similar story and it ended the same way.
This proves 2 things: 1) "Love" as it is portrayed in society is not real. "Love" is merely based on physical appearance first, and everything else second.
2) The marketing lesson: the desire for "love" is so strong that people are willing to believe someone who sends them 3 pictures and avoids meeting them for over a year is really who they say they are.
"That's odd ... my heart is bouncing out of my chest and my dick is ready for take off when I see this woman. Oh well, it's just chemicals ... I'm not going to try and fuck her".
So no, I have never "been in love" and never will be.
"Love" is a conscious decision, and I don't make it. Loving myself is better.
Love (of all types) are chemical reactions, no more and no less.
I'd love to see some studies where the exact same amount of hormone is released and the exact same response is generated each time.
Which leads me, at least at this time, to conclude that whether we have a soul or not is somewhat irrelevant, because we behave as we do in response to the complexity of our environment which is beyond our capacity to model.