My guess is that he would have concluded, as Einstein & Penrose have, that QM is an incomplete physical theory (à la "Schrödinger's Cat") because it is incompatible with deterministic, local reality (re: EPR paradox, Bell's Theorem) because Spinoza is a strict determinist and realist.I wonder what Spinoza, and many of us philosophers would have made of quantum physics. — Jack Cummins
One benefits by dispensing with 'substance dualism' and superstitious connotations of the (non-explanatory) 'supernatural'. The primary disadvantage of a 'Godless' philosophy is that one must struggle with – to overcome – despair / nihilism / scientism. Philosophical naturalists, like classical atomists and Spinozists for instance, rationally avoid these disadvantages.One question may be what are the benefits and disadvantages of throwing the idea of 'God' aside in philosophy?
Why "consider" this when "God's truth" about "quantum physics" is not revealed in ANY of thousands extant sacred texts? :eyes:What we want is the truth; seeing quantum physics as God's truth is something we need to consider. — Athena
How is the "distance" between me and the cup closed so my thoughts about the cup are really about that over there called a cup? — Constance
Many religious believers speak of faith. I am uncertain of the basis of faith as opposed to rational understanding and its relationship to the everyday existential aspects of faith, and fear, in human life. — Jack Cummins
What we want is the truth; seeing quantum physics asGod'struth is something we need to consider. — Athena
Language may not capture the full nature of the divine or numinous experience. The silence of meditation experiences may capture this, as does those who speak of mystical experiences. Of course, understanding in the rational sense is important, but it is limited. This is with or without the notion of God. The emphasis on the limits of language and silence were spoken of by Wittgenstein. He did not speak of God and it may be that the idea of God symbolises that which lies beyond the realm of knowledge. — Jack Cummins
Quantum Field Theory is by far the most successful truth in the history of science, its scientific model very well showing what goes on.
The quantum 'vacuum' has a base zero-point energy that is never zero and a base zero-point motion that is never zero. Philosophically, we would also conclude that Nothing and Stillness wouldn't have prayer of being so. — PoeticUniverse
Why "consider" this when "God's truth" about "quantum physics" is not revealed in ANY of thousands extant sacred texts? :eyes: — 180 Proof
I am dumbfounded by the religious folks clinging to their mythology despite how much our understanding of reality has changed. — Athena
Yet physically, an optical disk is very different from paper which is very different from a sound wave, which is very different from sound waves. The physical substrate does not seem to matter much. It is the information (form) that matters, and arguably this is "immaterial" in a number of senses. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You seem to be suggesting that our memories could be copied to another form and re-attached to our souls after death.
Sure, this is logically possible, but it's an ad hoc hypothesis that lacks supporting evidence. If this is something that occurs, I wonder why the deity bothers at all with brain-storage of memories, and why she fails to help out dementia patients with access to this resource.
Are you familiar with any of the physicists who suggest that information is ontologically basic and that matter and energy emerge from it? — Count Timothy von Icarus
That said, some semioticians advocate for pansemiosis, and it really depends on how attenuated you are prepared to allow the concept of 'interpretant' (not to mention 'mind') to become. — Janus
I don't think it can be, for the brain 'paints a face' on the cup as the noumena becomes phenomena.
One time I saw a fire burning at the base of a far away road sign; a closer look showed it to be some ribbons dangling and waving in the breeze. — PoeticUniverse
The question then goes to how phenomena sustains the positing of noumena. — Constance
As a pansemiotician, it is heartening that physics has arrived at this dichotomy of information-entropy. — apokrisis
As far as I understand in biosemiotics it is the membrane which is the basic interpretant. — Janus
Is there any way you can make "Information is physical in being the global holographic horizon on the Cosmos" understandable to me despite my being math-challenged? — Janus
Qualia are the brain's own invented language? — PoeticUniverse
Put plainly, consciousness and its appearances is PRIOR to any idea of a physical brain. The true ground for all existence is consciousness. — Constance
A holomorphic function is something else. It is a function that is "holistic" in the sense that it uses a number base that is more complex than the reals. Instead of counting points, you are counting something else like rotations. — apokrisis
Did you mean to use 'holographic' rather than 'holomorphic'? — Janus
by making an observation? — Wayfarer
So, the consciousness implements our reality and its experiencing, through qualia-appearances; it is the messenger - whose message seems to be existence and being. Even though it is movie-like, its happenings are identical to what would go on if all events were what we would call 'real': if there is no qualia gas in the qualia car, then the qualia car won't quaila run.
An implementation difference that makes no difference to the message itself is truly no difference, but is still of interest to those who want to know the mechanics of our reality. — PoeticUniverse
When two particles are entangled, no one can really say which one is which. But when the particles are further constrained by the decoherence that is some further act of measurement, then each is fixed by that new context, that new point of view. — apokrisis
Connection is in essence uninteresting. It results in the hot and maximally featureless vacuum. But mix in disconnection as a contrast and now you can have a world made of definite things. The world that we really want to know in terms of how it got here. How it could have evolved and have such a robust classical structure. — apokrisis
I've wondered whether that is just hype, given that it seems that all that's being said is that knowing the spin of one particle we are close enough to observe will tell us what the spin of the entangled particle is no matter how far away it may be. So, it seems we would not be deriving the information from the far away particles but from the proximate one. — Janus
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