And your idea of quanta is not backed by those physical rules and realities. It's a nice Sci-Fi concept, but It is not backed by physical reality.
— Thanatos Sand
No more and no less sci-fi than any interpretation of Relativity or Quantum. I am referring to real phenomenon (memory, life, intelligence, evolution) but giving it a different substrate than what one is user to. For example, the brain doesn't house memory, the brain reveals memory just as a TV doesn't house TV programs it only reveals them. My paradigm is actually very straightforward and realistic.
Of course there are rules, the principle of thermodynamics and rules of Gravity among them. It's why our planes can fly and our cars can drive. I'm not being snarky here, but I suggest you check out a book of basic Physics. — Thanatos Sand
Your "memory as fabric of the universe" theory a perfect example. So, since your theories transcend and are not supported by the natural laws of physics, they are supernatural.
— Thanatos Sand
Not at all. It simply makes memory persistent and we have plenty of evidence of this in innate and inherited traits as well as habitual movements.
There is nothing new here. It is an explanatory model that can create new opportunities for research and conceptual development. As I showed in another thread, there is already scientific evidence for a holographic universe.
Of course there are rules, the principle of thermodynamics and rules of Gravity among them. It's why our planes can fly and our cars can drive. I'm not being snarky here, but I suggest you check out a book of basic Physics.
— Thanatos Sand
If you haven't observed that science is constantly changing (yes, even gravity) than there is nothing more to say. We have two different life experiences.
Science may change in correcting it's errors; — Thanatos Sand
Science may change in correcting it's errors;
— Thanatos Sand
I guess this is one way to frame it.
In any case, there is nothing much more to discuss. Different life forces at play.
My assumption is that if a small child is familiar with the past events of another life, the child learned that information in the traditional way of being told as opposed to the information streaming in a paranormal way. It's a fairly safe assumption really. — Hanover
Care to share Lacan? — Banno
Spacetime is a thing made up of space and time. — litewave
Activity outside of spacetime doesn't make sense to me. — litewave
It's like if a person describes the precise way a victim were killed and locates the body without having apparent access to that information, I'd not call that person a psychic, but instead a suspect. — Hanover
↪TheMadFool Karma can make sense without reincarnation to the extent one believes they will reap what they sow within this life. That is, I should expect the pain I exact on the world to be returned to me before I die.
Karma can make sense without reincarnation to the extent one believes they will reap what they sow within this life. — Hanover
Samsara and Karma are coherent because
1. It explains away the problem of evil which plagues Abrahamic religions
2. It fits well with the general notion of causation
However, one key element for Samsara/Karma to be meaningful is the continuation of the soul. Otherwise 1 and 2 would be undefined. Buddhism is just a long-winded version of the maxim ''you reap what you sow''.
↪TheMadFool But it still doesn't make sense since you have people suffering for what someone else did years, maybe millennia ago. And none of us are replete with memories of those past misdeeds to guide us, so Karma is a great way of making people on the losing end of exchanges or events feel the winners will get theirs, particularly the nastier ones.
Samsara and Karma are coherent because
1. It explains away the problem of evil which plagues Abrahamic religions
2. It fits well with the general notion of causation
However, one key element for Samsara/Karma to be meaningful is the continuation of the soul. Otherwise 1 and 2 would be undefined. Buddhism is just a long-winded version of the maxim ''you reap what you sow''. — TheMadFool
How can anyone love you if they don't know you because you've hidden from them? How can you love yourself if you've hidden from yourself, because you live in denial?
Do you think that comfort and fortune beings happiness, rather than boredom and restlessness? Do you think that a calm and uneventful death brings one more joy than a violent one?
Wisdom is about living a good life, a healthy life. Whether man made or not, it doesn't render it ineffective.
↪Hanover
↪TheMadFool Karma can make sense without reincarnation to the extent one believes they will reap what they sow within this life. That is, I should expect the pain I exact on the world to be returned to me before I die.
Except we know they don't. Many horrid people who do terrible things die happy with everything they want, while many excellent people endure great suffering they did not deserve. Also, mass deaths counter the notion of Karma in life, as not only does not everyone in a plane crash or those being gassed in the Holocaust not deserve what they got, they can't possibly deserve the exact same thing. No two people do the exact same things in life.
↪Wosret You have no idea what makes other people happy, and if your statement was correct, you couldn't even judge what makes you happy. Also wicked and good are moral concepts of human, not natural, creation. And even if we use them, many good people die miserable, like those dying in the gas chambers, watching their loved ones die too. And many wicked people die happy, loved by many, surrounded by family and good fortune. That's not all about materialism, and I never said it was. And many of those dying happy lied and cheated to get there. — Thanatos Sand
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