AmadeusD
The fact that it is a standard symptom of schizophrenia ought give pause for thought. — apokrisis
apokrisis
It's also a complete and fundamental misunderstanding of two separate concepts: — AmadeusD
Gnomon
Another interpretation of the "Cosmos Created Mind" is Kastrup's Analytical Idealism*1. discussed this alternative in his thread*2. I'm not sure I fully understand K's "reasonable" and diligently documented update of ancient Idealism. Also, in order to maintain a philosophical line of reasoning, and to avoid getting into Religion vs Scientism diatribes, I prefer to use less dogmatic & divisive terms than "God". But Kastrup is bolder, and more self-assured than I am.The brain-as-receiver model says nothing about any of that, and instead, posits that the arising of consciousness at all is akin to a television receiving signals for any image whatever. Its reasonable, albeit totally fringe and unsupported. — AmadeusD
PoeticUniverse
The "mind of God" refers to a single, undivided, and all-encompassing consciousness that is the foundation of reality. — Gnomon
Gnomon
Sorry. But your notion of a "triad of constants"*1 that add-up to 1, sounds like "handwaving" to me. Not because it's wrong, but because it's over my head, as a layman. Besides, those "fine-tuned" constants*2 are interpreted by some scientists as evidence of an Anthropic Principle*3. Do you agree with that interpretation of pre-set or programmed initial conditions? Do you have a better explanation for the pre-bang existence of mathematical settings that are logically necessary for the emergence of animated matter? :smile:So right there is something exactly the opposite of your handwaving. We have a triad of constants that are in a pure symmetry breaking relation. A unit 1 story as they are all the fundamental units and may as well be set to 1 as “measured values”. — apokrisis
Gnomon
"Undivided-yet-fragmented" may sound like nonsense, unless you are familiar with Kastrup's analogy of psychological Dissociative Identity Disorder (formerly Multiple Personality Disorder)*1. But I would interpret his description of the Cosmic-yet-local mind of God more favorably --- as rational philosophy instead of spooky "woo" --- by using terms like : Holistic, yet composed of Holons*2.The "mind of God" refers to a single, undivided, and all-encompassing consciousness that is the foundation of reality. — Gnomon
- "undivided" but fragments. — PoeticUniverse
Wayfarer
I'm not sure I fully understand K's "reasonable" and diligently documented update of ancient Idealism. Also, in order to maintain a philosophical line of reasoning, and to avoid getting into Religion vs Scientism diatribes, I prefer to use less dogmatic & divisive terms than "God". But Kastrup is bolder, and more self-assured than I am. — Gnomon
Wayfarer
Gnomon
I assume that in Plato's day they just called it Philosophy. Perhaps, you are stating the obvious, that modern versions of Platonic Idealism are not ancient. But I was referring to the general belief that A> Reality is fundamentally Mental*1, or B> that the Human mind's model of reality is as close to true reality as we are likely to know*2.'Idealism' is not ancient. The term first came into use with Liebniz, Berkeley and Kant. In hindsight, it is possible to describe some elements of Platonism as idealist, but it is not a term that was used in Plato's day. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer
I assume that in Plato's day they just called it Philosophy. Perhaps, you are stating the obvious, that modern versions of Platonic Idealism are not ancient. But I was referring to the general belief that A> Reality is fundamentally Mental*1, or B> that the Human mind's model of reality is as close to true reality as we are likely to know*2. — Gnomon
The earlier philosophy of St Thomas Aquinas, building on Aristotle, maintained that true knowledge arises from a real union between knower and known. As Aristotle put it, “the soul (psuchē) is, in a way, all things,” meaning that the intellect becomes what it knows by receiving the form of the known object. Aquinas elaborated this with the principle that “the thing known is in the knower according to the mode of the knower.” In this view, to know something is not simply to construct a mental representation of it, but to participate in its form — to take into oneself, immaterially, the essence of what the thing is. (Here one may discern an echo of that inward unity — a kind of at-one-ness between subject and object — that contemplative traditions across cultures have long sought, not through discursive analysis but through direct insight). — Wayfarer
apokrisis
Do you agree with that interpretation of pre-set or programmed initial conditions? — Gnomon
Gnomon
Again, I had to Google your abstruse terminology to break it down into more commonsense concepts that an untrained amateur philosopher can relate to. For example, I can imagine "symmetry-breaking" as an event characterized by change from static balance (nothing changes) to dynamic dis-equlibrium (directional change occurs). But then, if you add "spontaneous" to the mix, it describes an event that occurs suddenly & without warning, like a Cosmos-Creating Big Bang with no pre-history. Hence, inexplicable and not accessible to Reason. It must be taken on Faith.I’m arguing not for pre-set material conditions but for Platonic strength structural necessity. The argument is that reality can only exist with a certain dichotomous or symmetry-breaking organisation. — apokrisis
apokrisis
Plato's notion of Cosmos from Chaos, in which Cosmos is imagined as timeless nothingness, but with simple un-actualized — Gnomon
180 Proof
bert1
Gnomon
Timaeus*1 observed that, in the real world, "nothing happens/changes without a cause". So he seems to assume that even the ever-changing Real world must have had an Ideal origin : a hypothetical god/urge/impulse with creative powers. That seems to be the presumption behind most of the world's religions. Except that the God is typically envisioned more like perfect order & absolute power, instead of "confused everythingness".The Timaeus sort of gets it. The basic idea is that rather imagining the Cosmos as either a sudden creation event or as an eternal existence, it arises as an evolving structure where form is being imposed on a chaos. It all starts from a confused everythingness - so confused in its expression that it amounts to a nothing. It lacks any orderly structure. And then that structure starts to appear. — apokrisis
180 Proof
This story makes more sense – is more consistent with quantum cosmological evidence (as well as e.g. Spinoza's, Epicurus' & Laozi's spectulations) – than any of the other cosmogenic alternatives.So the Real World is an "evolving structure" that has existed forever, cycling but never beginning or ending. — Gnomon
It's not an "alternative"; (metaphorical) BBT might be just (our) observation-limit of the most recent phase-transition (i.e. symmetry-breaking event 13.81 billion years ago) in the "cycling" "evolving structure" of the universe.Does that sound like a reasonable alternative to the current scientific evidence thatspace-time[false vacuum collapse] suddenly explodedfrom a mathematical pointinto a complex [spacetime]?
Well, that's a pseudo-problem at most (i.e. faux-epistemological fodder for woo-of-the-gaps idealists), so it's not even "irrelevant". :yawn:Does forever causation make the Hard Problem of human consciousness irrelevant?
PoeticUniverse
The result is a powerlaw curve. A doubling~halving trajectory that begins with a hot bang and ends with the coldest and emptiest whimper — apokrisis
Gnomon
Scientists don't know what Energy & Fields are in substance, but only what they do in causal relationships between material objects. To avoid misleading, when I use the Quantum Field or Universal Gravity as analogies to the Cosmic Mind notion, I try to make clear that these "forces" are not "objective" and observable, but rationally inferrable from observed processes.This is why expressions such as “cosmic mind” are inherently misleading when taken to denote some objective existent, as if it were on par with scientific concepts like fields or forces. — Wayfarer
apokrisis
This story makes more sense – is more consistent with quantum cosmological evidence (as well as e.g. Spinoza's, Epicurus' & Laozi's spectulations) – than any other cosmogenic alternatives. — 180 Proof
apokrisis
Scientists don't know what Energy & Fields are in substance, but only what they do in causal relationships between material objects. — Gnomon
bert1
Wayfarer
Scientists don't know what Energy & Fields are in substance, but only what they do in causal relationships between material objects. To avoid misleading, when I use the Quantum Field or Universal Gravity as analogies to the Cosmic Mind notion, I try to make clear that these "forces" are not "objective" and observable, but rationally inferrable from observed processes. — Gnomon
So my point is that what we know about the Big Bang should act as a constraint on our metaphysical claims. — apokrisis
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