Philosophim
Spontaneously appeared? Not possible… it would have been from something. How can something come from nothing please explain. — kindred
Wayfarer
How can something come from nothing please explain. — kindred
it seems that the science of today, by going back in one leap millions of centuries, has succeeded in being a witness to that primordial Fiat Lux ('Let there be Light') when, out of nothing, there burst forth with matter a sea of light and radiation [... Thus modern science has confirmed] with the concreteness of physical proofs the contingency of the universe and the well-founded deduction that about that time the cosmos issued from the hand of the Creator.
Punshhh
The question concerns eternal being as well as far as the argument goes if something can’t come from nothing then something has always existed, timeless and uncaused. If it’s timeless then either it already possessed intelligence or if not then during a fraction of eternity developed it.
Gnomon
The Bible claims to have solved the mystery of existence in the myth of Genesis, along with direct revelations to humans over the subsequent centuries. And mystics claim to "know" that supernatural being personally. Yet, I don't accept the authority of the Catholic Bible, compiled 3 centuries after the death of Jesus. So, the ultimate Cause of the eventual emergence of Intelligence remains an "ontological mystery" to me. But I have my philosophical theories. :smile:We can not truly know the nature of such a being which is intelligent and having always existed so for now it remains an ontological mystery. — kindred
kindred
I have no qualms with the idea of an eternal or divine being, but logically you can't have qualms with something spontaneously appearing either if that's the case. — Philosophim
kindred
kindred
Gnomon
If you are really interested in an amateur philosopher's opinion of the natural evolutionary emergence of Life & Mind, you could start with the original Enformationism Thesis. However, the Introduction to Enformationism blog post*1 might get you up to speed quicker, with somewhat less technical stuff. It's based on Quantum Physics and Information Theory, but from a philosophical perspective, which does not accept ancient Materialism as a modern post-quantum worldview.Sure I would be interested to hear how and why the eventual emergence of intelligence occurred. — kindred
L'éléphant
Does intelligence have an origin, a time when it first appeared or is it like the nature of reality timeless and uncaused ? — kindred
Hoyle proposes that the universe itself possesses intelligence (hence the title!) which engenders life through finely-tuned physical constants (e.g., Hoyle's discovery of carbon resonance). Evolutionary Input: Earthly evolution is not solely driven by natural selection, but by the influx of viruses and bacteria from space, which can introduce new traits or even explain the rapid development of human intelligence. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer
Molecules can evolve and react — L'éléphant
It might sound outlandish, but biological simulations are indicating that those minuscule units of life (cells), which we usually think about as passive machines – cogs blindly governed by the laws of physics – have their own goals and display agency. Surprisingly, even simple networks of biomolecules appear to display some degree of a self
Not only do these findings have implications for who or what we think of as agents – but they also suggest that agency itself could drive evolution.
Punshhh
Yes, I would go further though, in that the physical world is not real, in the sense that it is an artificial construct. It is real to us, because we are part of it, immersed in it. But in terms of existence and the profound philosophical questions about existence, the physical world does not make sense. It brings up and presents paradoxical inconsistencies. In order to overcome these inconsistencies it may be necessary to consider the divine realm, how it doesn’t fall into the same inconsistencies and how it interacts with and sustains the artificial world we find ourselves in.It could also be that it’s both transcendent and immanent having the ability to affect this physical universe including the emergence of life without affecting the non goal nature of evolution itself but providing the initial spark for life to form.
Philosophim
On the other hand you have to scientifically or metaphysically demonstrate how something can come from nothing … which to me seems impossible — kindred
kindred
What created something which has always existed? Nothing. It's untreated without cause. Which means what I am positing is just as likely and scientifically proven as your idea. — Philosophim
kindred
Intelligence has an origin -- it did not exist before RNA and proto-life. I think the disagreement would be over our attitude towards intelligence itself. We judge it emotionally, I guess. So that only mammals, for example, are awarded this name. — L'éléphant
kindred
Now consider nothing, rather than something. In our world, the question has already been answered and the answer is there is something, so there cannot be nothing. But it might not be that simple, this might be just another inconsistency. For example, if the reality is infinite, then maybe there is a nothing, an infinite distance away. Rather in the divine realm there might be something and nothing together, in fact a thing that is neither something, or nothing, a nothingsomething thing. If you think about it, both nothing and something require a ground, or something else by which to be defined as nothing (something that it is not), or something, that it is. Surely we should consider things that don’t have grounds, they are self sustaining, self perpetuating. So in a sense, they define their own parameters. They define their thing, of which they are some. They define their lack of thing, or nothing, of which they are not. — Punshhh
kindred
If you are really interested in an amateur philosopher's opinion of the natural evolutionary emergence of Life & Mind, you could start with the original Enformationism Thesis. However, the Introduction to Enformationism blog post*1 might get you up to speed quicker, with somewhat less technical stuff. It's based on Quantum Physics and Information Theory, but from a philosophical perspective, which does not accept ancient Materialism as a modern post-quantum worldview — Gnomon
Gnomon
I'm not the one saying that Information is fundamental. It's the scientists I quote that say it. You can read their books to get the details. For example, MIT professor Seth Lloyd : Programming the Universe, The Information Edge: Creation and Destruction in Life.If I understand correctly you’re saying that information is the fundamental aspect of reality. Yet this faces an issue of where and how this information be stored in a universe devoid of material or even energy. If you are claiming that it is more fundamental than energy/matter then you must provide ontological grounds for its existence. As far as I understand information must be stored in a medium such as matter or energy. If energy is fundamental and prior to matter/energy then what is it and how can it be stored in a non physical medium, especially if information gave rise to matter/energy in terms of potential. — kindred
Gnomon
That is the question that my thesis attempts to answer*1. Yet it goes on to describe how the power to enform can evolve the Mental aspects of the Material world. The form of Information that I call EnFormAction is best known as Causal Energy, but it also gives rise to malleable Matter*2, and to intelligent Mind : a biological-based information processor.Then how can the non-material (information) give rise to the material ? Are you saying that it doesn’t and all we are is information tricked into believing that we are physical ? — kindred
L'éléphant
Molecules don't do that - organisms do that. Molecules are acted upon by external factors. — Wayfarer
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