An ideal ultimate truth? (Origins)

by dhw, Wednesday, May 05, 2010, 15:16 (5098 days ago)

BBella (Under "The Big Bang"): If intelligence was before the BB [...] possibly that intelligence was (and remains) something akin to the biblical word "spirit". This intelligence was without form or matter, similar to what you, dhw, would like to return to in your ultimate reality wish after death [...] Why create physical matter? Why not? Isn't matter just energy vibrating faster (showing my ignorance here)? That wouldn't be creating something from nothing, it would be spirit (non-matter) inhabiting matter possibly in an evolutionary way [...] Possibly that's all we are...spirit intelligence having an experience chained within matter.-Sorry to have truncated your post in this way, but I've picked on what seem to me the salient points, because what you're describing is indeed the ideal I was trying to convey, with the proviso that we retain our individual identity, plus your own added wish that this should be by choice. We're confronted here with a stark alternative: either matter gives rise to intelligence, or intelligence gives rise to matter. You appear to favour the latter, and so perhaps at this point we can go back to that dialogue which you initiated earlier (under Computer "reads" memories, 26 March at 06.52), when you asked what the rest of us would regard as the best possible Ultimate Truth. I don't know if others would view the above version as ideal, but (a) it would be interesting to find out, and (b) perhaps we should consider what evidence there is ... if any ... to support it. -Just in case this challenge leads to further discussion, I'm taking it off the Big Bang thread.

An ideal ultimate truth?

by David Turell @, Wednesday, May 05, 2010, 16:33 (5098 days ago) @ dhw

BBella (Under "The Big Bang"): If intelligence was before the BB [...] possibly that intelligence was (and remains) something akin to the biblical word "spirit". This intelligence was without form or matter, similar to what you, dhw, would like to return to in your ultimate reality wish after death [...] Why create physical matter? Why not? Isn't matter just energy vibrating faster (showing my ignorance here)? That wouldn't be creating something from nothing, it would be spirit (non-matter) inhabiting matter possibly in an evolutionary way [...] Possibly that's all we are...spirit intelligence having an experience chained within matter.-
The above relates closely to what I have been presenting. I have always started with an observation made by my philosophy professor, a Ph.D. and a Baptist minister. Mind and matter are two aspects of the same. "Mind is energy on the inside and matter is energy on the outside". The Universe is pure energy. Matter is what we experience, but it is energy all the same. The UI is energy, and can be called 'spirit' as bBella does. If we presume that there has always been energy, then 'spirit' has always been eternal. It doesn't answer the famous question, why is there anything instead of nothing, but it establishes a first cause. Our brain creates consciousness, a thinking intellect not directly from brain matter but from energy within brain matter. Why does this sound strange to us: We cannot appreciate energy when we observe matter. This computer desk is wood, but filled with energy I cannot appreciate. It is just wood, but it isn't. This is why quantum theory is so counter-intuitive, and we can only see the surface of the 'wall of uncertainty'. It we could get to the other side we wouldn't be so confused. Try using this concept as you think about God.

An ideal ultimate truth?

by dhw, Friday, May 07, 2010, 21:35 (5096 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Our brain creates consciousness, a thinking intellect not directly from brain matter but from energy within brain matter. Why does this sound strange to us: We cannot appreciate energy when we observe matter. This computer desk is wood, but filled with energy I cannot appreciate. It is just wood, but it isn't. This is why quantum theory is so counter-intuitive, and we can only see the surface of the 'wall of uncertainty'. If we could get to the other side we wouldn't be so confused. Try using this concept as you think about God.-Perhaps we can leave God out of it just for the moment and concentrate instead on humans as a kind of stepping stone to God. Just as the universe may have started from a singular event, so do we, and the question for me is which comes first ... matter or intelligence? BBella's suggestion and your confirmation that all matter is energy appears to dissolve frontiers between the physical and the spiritual, but I don't see how we can do without this distinction. When the physical sperm fertilizes the physical egg, a new physical being comes into existence. Clearly, if you and BBella are right, a new "spiritual" being comes into existence at the same time, and to understand this, I need something a little more precise than "energy within brain matter". Do you think the brain matter PRODUCES the energy, or is it a CONDUIT for the energy? If it's the former, our consciousness is entirely our own, right from the beginning, and it will die with the brain; if it's the latter, does the brain tune into some external consciousness from the moment of birth? And if it's merely a conduit, how do we get our individual identity, since our consciousness is so integral to who we are?

An ideal ultimate truth?

by David Turell @, Saturday, May 08, 2010, 01:37 (5096 days ago) @ dhw


> Perhaps we can leave God out of it just for the moment and concentrate instead on humans as a kind of stepping stone to God. Just as the universe may have started from a singular event, so do we, and the question for me is which comes first ... matter or intelligence? BBella's suggestion and your confirmation that all matter is energy appears to dissolve frontiers between the physical and the spiritual, but I don't see how we can do without this distinction. -We have to use the fact that energy and matter are two forms of the same thing. there is no way around it.-> 
>When the physical sperm fertilizes the physical egg, a new physical being comes into existence. Clearly, if you and BBella are right, a new "spiritual" being comes into existence at the same time, and to understand this, I need something a little more precise than "energy within brain matter". Do you think the brain matter PRODUCES the energy, or is it a CONDUIT for the energy?-A newborn baby is not very conscious. He is not aware that he is aware. That develops later. Our consciousness is at a quantum level, and comes from energy produced by the brain, which is why we cannot 'grab hold' of it, to use a Texas term.-
>
> If it's the former, our consciousness is entirely our own, right from the beginning, and it will die with the brain; if it's the latter, does the brain tune into some external consciousness from the moment of birth?-We just don't know. Consciousness appears as the brain develops. If I am right that the consciousness is a quantum entity behind Heisenberg's wall of uncertainy, but arising in the brain, then the 'Zeno effect' in this following article may keep our consciousness in existence after we pass on and our soul becomes timeless.-http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20627596.200-quantum-wonders-the-hamlet-effect.html

An ideal ultimate truth?

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, May 08, 2010, 17:33 (5095 days ago) @ David Turell


> > Perhaps we can leave God out of it just for the moment and concentrate instead on humans as a kind of stepping stone to God. Just as the universe may have started from a singular event, so do we, and the question for me is which comes first ... matter or intelligence? BBella's suggestion and your confirmation that all matter is energy appears to dissolve frontiers between the physical and the spiritual, but I don't see how we can do without this distinction. 
> 
> We have to use the fact that energy and matter are two forms of the same thing. there is no way around it.
> -Or we could begin by explaining that in a way similar that ice is the solid form of water, matter is a "solid" (glosses over lots of details) form of energy. -> > 
> >When the physical sperm fertilizes the physical egg, a new physical being comes into existence. Clearly, if you and BBella are right, a new "spiritual" being comes into existence at the same time, and to understand this, I need something a little more precise than "energy within brain matter". Do you think the brain matter PRODUCES the energy, or is it a CONDUIT for the energy?
> 
> A newborn baby is not very conscious. He is not aware that he is aware. That develops later. Our consciousness is at a quantum level, and comes from energy produced by the brain, which is why we cannot 'grab hold' of it, to use a Texas term.
> 
> 
> >
> > If it's the former, our consciousness is entirely our own, right from the beginning, and it will die with the brain; if it's the latter, does the brain tune into some external consciousness from the moment of birth?
> 
> We just don't know. Consciousness appears as the brain develops. If I am right that the consciousness is a quantum entity behind Heisenberg's wall of uncertainty, but arising in the brain, then the 'Zeno effect' in this following article may keep our consciousness in existence after we pass on and our soul becomes timeless.
> -The uncertainty principle isn't a "wall." It's "real" statement is mathematically dense, but it says that you can't know both the position and the velocity of a quantum object to an arbitrary precision. How you can possibly rationalize a basis of consciousness from this mathematical law means that you *must* be making an overarching series of generalizations divorced from the actual meaning of the theorem. At the level of how chemical actions occur (our brain) we aren't dealing with quantum phenomenon in the sense I've described in quantum computing. They're alot more predictable. Heisenberg's only action here is in determining positions of electrons. -> http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20627596.200-quantum-wonders-the-hamlet-effect.html

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

An ideal ultimate truth?

by David Turell @, Saturday, May 08, 2010, 20:32 (5095 days ago) @ xeno6696


> The uncertainty principle isn't a "wall." It's "real" statement is mathematically dense, but it says that you can't know both the position and the velocity of a quantum object to an arbitrary precision. How you can possibly rationalize a basis of consciousness from this mathematical law means that you *must* be making an overarching series of generalizations divorced from the actual meaning of the theorem. At the level of how chemical actions occur (our brain) we aren't dealing with quantum phenomenon in the sense I've described in quantum computing. They're alot more predictable. Heisenberg's only action here is in determining positions of electrons. 
> 
> > http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20627596.200-quantum-wonders-the-hamlet-effect.ht... But why not refer to the whole ball of weirdness wax:-http://www.newscientist.com/special/seven-wonders-of-the-quantum-world

An ideal ultimate truth?

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, May 08, 2010, 23:24 (5095 days ago) @ David Turell

Challenge accepted!-First we'll tackle wave-particle duality. I think here, the quote from the page that most pops out is "Both waves and particles might be just constructs of our mind to facilitate everyday talking."-This is because in terms of the mathematics I've been exposed to (Eigenvectors) it isn't easy to clearly state what exactly is going on without some training in mathematics. Is it a wave or a particle? The answer is both. The distinction is artificial. Only when you force a particular observation will it behave only as one or the other. At least to me, this isn't the slightest bit weird. "It is what it is." Again, I don't see how it's possible to base consciousness on that phenomenon. -Then the Hamlet effect you discussed. -Again, we get to discuss collapsing wavefunctions. One of the things that these articles haven't covered at this point yet, is the fact that even though it is technically possible for you to release a ball out of your hand and it will fly up instead of down--it is quite clear that this has never happened. Some of the "weirdness" discussed in here could quite simply be artifacts of the very mathematics being used to discuss them. Yes, observing the system destroys the system, but the more localized a quantum object is, the more deterministic it behaves. When you also take into consideration that an "observation" in these articles also means particle/wave collisions. My lilac out front doesn't turn into a quantum superposition when I'm not looking at it. At a certain point pragmatism must win out over theoretical consequences. -Casimir: A still open question. This is one phenomenon that supposedly strings describe better than Copenhagen. So far--nothing here I haven't already harped about above. -Bomb-Tester: This was new--but so far I fail to see a basis here for a consciousness. -Entanglement: I have a little bit of experience here. I can tell you this: entanglement isn't actually likely to happen at great distances, in fact, it's very difficult to make happen in the lab at all. It IS a quantum property, but it is more of a property that is teased out by experiment and doesn't have any effect on the real world. Though, quantum computing is DEFINITELY making huge plans for this phenomenon. The potential for immediate communications is one of many large technological benefits. -I'm running out of space, but I think this should suffice for now.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

An ideal ultimate truth?

by David Turell @, Sunday, May 09, 2010, 01:50 (5095 days ago) @ xeno6696


> Entanglement: I have a little bit of experience here. I can tell you this: entanglement isn't actually likely to happen at great distances, in fact, it's very difficult to make happen in the lab at all. It IS a quantum property, but it is more of a property that is teased out by experiment and doesn't have any effect on the real world. Though, quantum computing is DEFINITELY making huge plans for this phenomenon. The potential for immediate communications is one of many large technological benefits. -The 2008 Geneva Experiment covered 18 kilometers, slightly more than 10 miles. I know it is thought to be able to cover the whole diameter of the universe.

An ideal ultimate truth?

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Sunday, May 09, 2010, 18:50 (5094 days ago) @ David Turell


> > Entanglement: I have a little bit of experience here. I can tell you this: entanglement isn't actually likely to happen at great distances, in fact, it's very difficult to make happen in the lab at all. It IS a quantum property, but it is more of a property that is teased out by experiment and doesn't have any effect on the real world. Though, quantum computing is DEFINITELY making huge plans for this phenomenon. The potential for immediate communications is one of many large technological benefits. 
> 
> The 2008 Geneva Experiment covered 18 kilometers, slightly more than 10 miles. I know it is thought to be able to cover the whole diameter of the universe.-My point was that it's a phenomenon that doesn't happen naturally. We have to build elaborate devices in order to do this.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

An ideal ultimate truth?

by dhw, Monday, May 10, 2010, 13:14 (5093 days ago) @ David Turell

This thread has arisen out of BBella's question concerning what we would regard as the ideal ultimate truth. My own response, after a few refinements, is that the bodiless self would survive death, and maintain its personal identity in a world filled with the spiritual pleasures of life ... without any suffering and without a God ... and free to choose at any time to sacrifice its identity, perhaps by taking on a new form. I don't know to what extent others would regard this as an ideal, but I have suggested that we should consider what evidence there is, if any, for at least part of this dream scenario.-Clearly a key element is once again the nature of consciousness. I'll have to leave David and Matt to do battle over quantum theory, and I can do no more than comment on their possible conclusions. David has argued that "we can only see the surface of the 'wall of uncertainty'. If we could get to the other side we wouldn't be so confused." Matt says that the uncertainty principle isn't a wall, but I'm happy for the sake of discussion to accept the metaphor and to ask: what evidence is there that on the other side we have disembodied consciousness? -Matt has offered a very helpful comparison between ice as a solid form of water and matter as a solid form of energy. We know that when ice melts, it reverts to water. But when my brain matter is rotting in the ground, what evidence is there that it will turn into the same energy that forms my present consciousness and, by extension, my present identity? David argues that the 'Zeno effect' MAY keep our consciousness in existence after we pass on. The tentativeness of the auxiliary seems appropriate to me, particularly in the light of a quote I found in a Wikipedia article on the 'Zeno effect': "The case for quantum biology remains one of 'not proven'. [...] as yet no clear-cut example has been presented of non-trivial quantum effects at work in a key biological process." This suggests to me that quantum theory is a long way from resolving our confusion. -As science unravels the ever increasing complexities of life's mechanisms, its findings may well be interpreted as providing evidence for design, but I can't see it doing the same for the ideal of a disembodied human intelligence. However, as we've stressed over and over again on this forum, what constitutes evidence need not be confined to the realm of science. I would have thought that any positive evidence is far more likely to be found in the realm of personal experiences. I'm talking here of mysticism, the so-called "paranormal", the unfathomable intricacies of our emotions, thoughts and ideas, the equally unfathomable impact of the arts, and especially music. Like David and Matt, I remain sceptical about the different claims of the many religions, but that doesn't mean they aren't based on a common truth. In all of these human activities, there appears to be an intuitive link to some kind of spiritual dimension that can't be explained by matter or solidified energy or whatever other description you want to give to the physical cells of the brain. It may be (only "MAY") that intersubjective ... as opposed to purely subjective ... experiences provide a more reliable guide to the UT than the objective findings of science.

An ideal ultimate truth?

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Monday, May 10, 2010, 20:04 (5093 days ago) @ dhw

On the quantum arguments, it seems to me that the different effects found depend on the type and degree of the experimenters' interference with the system. It is not simply a matter of 'looking' - which normally means shining a light, i.e. a beam of photons, on the subject. To get the Buridan's Ass effect, where the quantum system cannot decide what to do, seems to require particularly delicate 'looking' if I've understood the article correctly.-dhw writes interestingly: "This thread has arisen out of BBella's question concerning what we would regard as the ideal ultimate truth. My own response, after a few refinements, is that the bodiless self would survive death, and maintain its personal identity in a world filled with the spiritual pleasures of life ... without any suffering and without a God ... and free to choose at any time to sacrifice its identity, perhaps by taking on a new form. I don't know to what extent others would regard this as an ideal, but I have suggested that we should consider what evidence there is, if any, for at least part of this dream scenario."-I'm intrigued however as to what dhw considers to be "the spiritual pleasures of life". I know he likes music and cricket, but I would have thought that these would require a material substrate for the sound vibrations, produced by the vibration of catgut or of reeds or of the human larynx, or the impact of leather on willow, to impinge on the material ear drum, and be sensed my the material nervous system. If there is no matter in the spiritual realm how are these pleasures of life to be experienced? Are they all made of "spirit stuff" whatever that is? (Maybe ectoplasm?) If so why is this spiritual stuff more spiritual than matter?-I take the view that spiritual experiences like music are dependent on matter and are thus also materialistic experiences. Once our matter decays we can no longer have any spiritual existence. We are no more.

--
GPJ

An ideal ultimate truth?

by dhw, Tuesday, May 11, 2010, 12:11 (5092 days ago) @ George Jelliss

GEORGE: I'm intrigued however as to what dhw considers to be "the spiritual pleasures of life". I know he likes music and cricket, but I would have thought that these would require a material substrate for the sound vibrations, produced by the vibration of catgut or of reeds or of the human larynx, or the impact of leather on willow, to impinge on the material ear drum, and be sensed by the material nervous system. If there is no matter in the spiritual realm how are these pleasures of life to be experienced? Are they all made of "spirit stuff" whatever that is? (Maybe ectoplasm?) If so why is this spiritual stuff more spiritual than matter?-Before I answer, I would like to repeat part of my original response to BBella's question about our ideal ultimate truth. On 27 March at 15.22 under Computer "reads" memories, I wrote the following: "I would like to retain my identity, to be with the people I love, and continue the activities I enjoy. These would include access to literature, music, sport and chocolate, though how on Earth ... or wherever else ... this would be possible without a body, I really don't know. (Sex is another obvious victim of bodilessness.)" George's question is therefore one that ought to be put to someone who actually believes in an afterlife, but I'll try to answer it all the same, because I too find it intriguing. -With much reluctance and sadness, I've already given up hope of enjoying cricket, chocolate and sex in the next world. I can see no form of indulgence without the aid of my lost body. But my compensation is that I think I could still have access to love, friendship, conversation, music, literature, art, philosophy, memory etc.....This would be provided by the consciousness/energy/spirit/soul that may survive the death of my body. What form of access? Well, how do you think the deaf Beethoven "heard" his 9th Symphony, or Schubert his Great C Major, which was only discovered and performed after his death? How does a writer "see" and "hear" his characters? How do we feel emotions, summon up language, work out ideas, recall the past? If consciousness is not the product of the physical cells but is merely contained by them, the energy which in this discussion we are calling "spirit" may provide all these activities independently of the body. Freed from the physical container, it may be able to tune into and communicate with countless other "spirits" and their thoughts in an endless process of exchange.-The nearest most of us come to this form of communication and perception is probably through dreams. These are often so real that we're sorry (or relieved) to wake up and find they're pure imagination. Enhance that faculty for vivid, non-materialistic "reality", and you have the means of enjoying the spiritual pleasures. You might add extra-sensory perception, psychic experiences, the paranormal to the list of pointers to a non-materialistic world. Do I believe in them? No. Do I disbelieve in them? No. You conclude: "Once our matter decays we can no longer have any spiritual existence. We are no more." You may be right. I have no idea. All I'm offering here is an answer to your question how these pleasures might be experienced if you're wrong.

An ideal ultimate truth?

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Wednesday, May 12, 2010, 22:00 (5091 days ago) @ dhw

dhw asks: "Well, how do you think the deaf Beethoven "heard" his 9th Symphony, or Schubert his Great C Major, which was only discovered and performed after his death? How does a writer "see" and "hear" his characters? How do we feel emotions, summon up language, work out ideas, recall the past?"-I would say that a composer has a simulation of a music room in his head, and a writer has a simulated stage or simulated world peopled by his characters. This is all in our memory and available for us to draw out and manipulate. But this is all within a material structured brain. When we imagine or dream we are drawing impressions out of our memories and replaying them, with variation, on the screen of our retinas or on the vibrating hairs of our inner ears.-If somehow we can exist bodiless in a "spirit realm" but still have mental activity then this is rather like the "brain in a vat" idea.-Further to the above thoughts, and returning to the discussion of "identity", I would say that we also have a simulation of ourselves in there. This is what we call "I". It is just like any other fictional character we may make up, or our memories or simulations of people we have known. We augment and revise it from time to time depending on our experiences, or our ideas of what we want to be. Probably we have several different ideas of ourself, sometimes conflicting.

--
GPJ

An ideal ultimate truth?

by dhw, Friday, May 14, 2010, 08:41 (5089 days ago) @ George Jelliss

GEORGE: I would say that a composer has a simulation of a music room in his head, and a writer has a simulated stage or simulated world peopled by his characters. This is all in our memory and available for us to draw out and manipulate. But this is all within a material structured brain. When we imagine or dream we are drawing impressions out of our memories and replaying them, with variation, on the screen of our retinas or on the vibrating hairs of our inner ears.-I find this a little hard to follow. It's clear, of course, that no-one can create anything without first learning and then remembering, and we draw on and manipulate our experiences when we produce a work of art. But what is this "replay" on the retina or the vibrating hairs? Writers do not literally "see" or "hear" characters move or speak, and composers do not literally "hear" the melodies, harmonies and instruments, and no original work of art can be drawn from memory! What you rightly call a simulation does not involve the senses directly. The plain truth is, we do not know how people imagine these sounds, stages and worlds, because we do not know how the imagination works. You are, of course, entitled to believe that somehow there must be a physical explanation, and you may well be right, but please don't kid yourself that you know what it is.
 
GEORGE: Further to the above thoughts, and returning to the discussion of "identity", I would say that we also have a simulation of ourselves in there. This is what we call "I". It is just like any other fictional character we may make up, or our memories or simulations of people we have known. We augment and revise it from time to time depending on our experiences, or our ideas of what we want to be. Probably we have several different ideas of ourself, sometimes conflicting.-For the most part I agree. We can only know ourselves and others through experience, and with each new experience we may find out something new. There is an almost infinite potential of identities, because there is an almost infinite potential of experiences, but although some aspects are certainly within our control, unquestionably there are others which are not. I don't think each of us has an infinite potential of, say, intelligence, artistic creativity, practical sense, sporting ability. I do not believe that I could ever have been an Einstein, a Beethoven, a woodwork teacher, a Bradman. As regards what I AM, there are aspects of myself that I most definitely have not made up. I'm not going to draw a character sketch of myself here, but I have certain qualities and defects which assert themselves even when I wish they wouldn't, and I'm sure you and everyone else will have had the same experience. So although I agree that there is simulation, that we do change, that we do have different ideas of ourselves and others, and these may even be conflicting, there is generally a core that we ourselves and others who know us well can identify as essential features of the "I". Admittedly even these may change, e.g. through disease or accident or circumstance, and I would be intrigued to know from someone who really does believe in an afterlife just what identity actually survives in such cases. But like most of life as we know it, I would say identity is part fact, part fiction, part mystery.
---

An ideal ultimate truth?

by David Turell @, Friday, May 14, 2010, 13:14 (5089 days ago) @ dhw


>I would be intrigued to know from someone who really does believe in an afterlife just what identity actually survives in such cases. But like most of life as we know it, I would say identity is part fact, part fiction, part mystery.-Both my son and I believe. My son is gone and I can't ask him, but he imagined that he would be a bundle of energy, his soul, that was recognizable to folks he knew. Communication would be telepathic, just as it is in NDE's. His identity, therefore continues, as does thought and communication. He was contemplating death when he described his thoughts about afterlife. Optimistically I hadn't given it much descriptive thought at the time, but I've come to the conclusion that what he imagined is about what I expect.

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