Everything we see and experience is transposed. We don’t see a color. We perceive it as such, but really it’s the absence of the color in the spectrum. — Brianna Whitney
Cold is the absence of heat.
Dark is the absence of light. Substance is perceived by the space around it’s form,
These things function through laws of entropy.
If you assume metaphysics is true...
...and expand from there, you’ll stumble on odd laws of our world.
Be willing to kill it if it no longer serves purpose or starts driving you over the edge crazy.
Real or not, it’s a waste of brain space if it doesn’t serve a purpose.
"And just because there’s a metaphysical explanation for why and how it happened doesn’t make it any less amazing". — Michael Ossipoff
I remember a few incidents when I was younger when I was suddenly shocked that there was anything at all. — ff0
I was also shocked by the specificity of what was. 'It is exactly this way and no other. There are three weeds at this Northeast leg of the park bench. That particular plane with its particular passengers flies overhead.'
These days I have a better argument for brute facticity, and yet it's rare to feel wonder as I did once.
I'm biased towards brute facticity because it makes the world new.
But I also think it's logically necessary
"Time is short. It isn’t the usual state of affairs". — Michael Ossipoff
I know what you mean, but in a way it is the only state of affairs.
If you look at a green Christmas tree light, it looks green, because either it's emitting green light, or because its colored glass is absorbing all the visible wavelengths but green, or absorbing at &/or around green's complementary wavelength,(Magenta.. Green and Magenta are complementary to eachother.) — Michael Ossipoff
but cold is perceived as a separate sensation of cold — Michael Ossipoff
Well, we perceive a substance by itself. It's primarily the object itself that you perceive. But sure, — Michael Ossipoff
Entropy governs some events in thermodynamics. — Michael Ossipoff
You’re rude. — Brianna Whitney
Yes, the question "Why is there something instead of nothing" is an often-asked question.
Michael Faraday answered that question in 1844. I couldn't find details of what he said, but what I found agrees with the metaphysics that I've been proposing. — Michael Ossipoff
Anyway, the metaphysics that I've been proposing answers that question, in terms of systems of inter-referring inevitable abstract facts. — Michael Ossipoff
Kenneth Patchen wrote, "In general, why is everything so specific?"
As we were discussing, the particular way that this world is, is one of infinitely-many ways that the infinitely-many worlds are. There are infinitely-many of them, and ours is one of them. — Michael Ossipoff
All that's logically-necessary for our universe is a system of inter-referring abstract facts. Because those facts are inevitable, there's no brute-ness — Michael Ossipoff
So time isn't the only state of affairs. In fact, timeless sleep predominates, although of course sure, we aren't there yet, and won't be for a while. ...either at the end of this life, or (more likely) after a sequence of lives. — Michael Ossipoff
The world that you were born in likely had something to do with the person that you were. — Michael Ossipoff
"If you look at a green Christmas tree light, it looks green, because either it's emitting green light, or because its colored glass is absorbing all the visible wavelengths but green, or absorbing at &/or around green's complementary wavelength,(Magenta.. Green and Magenta are complementary to eachother.)" — Michael Ossipoff
It’s reflecting a color and absorbing the rest. It is the other colors, it’s separated at the area we see as color. — Brianna Whitney
Dark is absolutely the absence of light. Do we agree there, at least?
My point here is that what we perceive isn't necessary what is.
...you might get the possibility of space as an object, and the object lack of space.
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"Michael Faraday answered that question in 1844. I couldn't find details of what he said, but what I found agrees with the metaphysics that I've been proposing." — Michael Ossipoff
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As I've argued, I don't find the idea of an answer in general plausible. If there is something because of X, then X itself is either the brute fact or itself unexplained.
.Anyway, the metaphysics that I've been proposing answers that question, in terms of systems of inter-referring inevitable abstract facts. — Michael Ossipoff
.But (I must ask again) are the people you love inevitable abstract facts?
.This criticism doesn't apply to your sense of a sort of benevolent God, because that's a general sense that life and the world are good.
.I can't accept automatically that there are infinitely many worlds.
.On the other hand, the billions of lives I have nothing to do with are plurality enough. But your attempt to answer the why with what I'd call theology…
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“All that's logically-necessary for our universe is a system of inter-referring abstract facts. Because those facts are inevitable, there's no brute-ness” — Michael Ossipoff
I can't agree. The question would be 'why are they inevitable?'
.I guess we could call the bruteness subjective. I don't believe that so-called fundamental explanations can get the job done --on principle, according to how I understand explanation. The totality is untouchable in this sense.
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“So time isn't the only state of affairs. In fact, timeless sleep predominates, although of course sure, we aren't there yet, and won't be for a while. ...either at the end of this life, or (more likely) after a sequence of lives.” — Michael Ossipoff
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But it only predominates abstractly and quantitatively. We don't experience this sleep.
.The world that you were born in likely had something to do with the person that you were. — Michael Ossipoff
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