How can we speak of likelihood here? As if one had a statistical sampling of other universes that did or didn't end prior to this one? I will concede that if humanity is wiped out, the universe would end, since there'd be no one to perceive it's existence...and humanity being wiped out might be a real threat, though I'd be less worried about universal natural forces doing that than ourselves by degrading into something less than human...JCBFGD said:Okay, you're right, the ultimate end of the universe isn't currently known. It will most likely end, though. And the chances of humanity being somehow wiped out of the universe is pretty high also. It's also nearly impossible for you to be remembered for the entire span of the human race.
As for being remembered, sure - but any memory is a reinterpretation of the thing being remembered anyway, and I wouldn't say that someone remembering you is what's of most importance on the eternal timescale.
I'm not asking you to have faith, I'm pointing out that you already have it in science (I'm not defining faith like you are obviously). Science has certain criteria for what is acceptable in its methods - the things you mentioned (empirical evidence, etc.). However, the basis of the method can't be validated by its own criteria; it has to be founded on certain presuppositions about the world, how much of the world humans have direct access to, etc. Essentially, those presuppositions which found science have to be taken on a form of faith, and that's true for any method you choose. I'm not asking you to ignore science, but I am saying that you shouldn't take it as the last word without exploring other options (that would be closer to the faith in the sense you defined, eh?).Now what sort of other methodology besides science is there? Science is the only thing which actually provides answers with evidence; it makes claims and supports them. You can't seriously be asking me to have a little "faith," can you? Faith is accepting what you're told, without verification, because you lack the will to do anything else. Unless you have a good reason to ignore science in this case, I'm afraid I can't ignore research and mathematics.
Off the top of my head, other methods already in existence would be phenomenological methods, hermeneutics, deconstructionist methods (please google these if you're curious because I'd go over a max character limit explaining them - they are usually grouped under the umbrella of philosophy), etc. However, there's no reason we should limit ourselves to the methods already made for us - we can create novel ones, so long as they are consistent and actionable. Which one is the best we'll have to decide among ourselves (by ourselves I mean humanity).
I agree with all of that, which is exactly why I would not suggest that any *single* human try to provide us with that purpose, but rather that it must be a collective endeavor. If humanity agrees on a purpose, it will become the purpose. It need not be handed down by some external power to become valid for the whole of humanity.And how, exactly, "should" the human race be? There's no point to existence. We have no given purpose. Life is what we make of it. You can give yourself a purpose, sure, but there's been no one to give humanity a purpose; no human can really do that. And anyone who "gives" us a purpose is just giving us a suggestion for our purpose, or, more specifically, their purpose, not the purpose.