Is mind-time different from real time? — frank
The dreams are limited by the energy they are running off. Eventually you will wake up because you need food. — JupiterJess
In my experience it is. I've explained the example of dreams, but there's also the way we experience every day life. Some things are tedious and pass slowly, while other things fly by and you wonder where the time has gone. — Tzeentch
But how far can we compress time in our mind? Can we experience a week in our minds while only sleeping for an hour? Can we experience a year in a minute? — Tzeentch
If there is such a thing as "the mind" then this begs the question Who or What created it? — hks
It's possible a lot of the time compression stuff are cheap mental tricks — JupiterJess
Some thought experiment, Imagine a genius 5 years old kid who lived only with his small family of 3 in a small deserted little cabin in the barren mountain. He knew simple math and simple english, and only exposed to any 5 years old standard experience. Now imagine if 1 night he was dreaming and he can prolong that dream until eternity. What will he dream? Can he dream the sea even though he never saw the sea? Can he dream a pineapple fruit, even though he never saw that fruit, His dream universe will be the same as the universe he once seen. And when all the possibilities are explored and all the data has been used. EIther it will end (black screen?), he wakes up, or everything repeat. — diesynyang
but he would be able to imagine many new things given he has a creative and imaginative mind. And given the nature of dreams, these things may be unbound by physics, time or reality. — Tzeentch
Purple is the mix between red and blue. Why would that be unimaginable? — Tzeentch
that mean all an imagination needs is one or more objects to start inventing math on their own? — Tzeentch
Anyhow, now we are reasoning from a situation where no outside influences have ever entered the brain, which isn't exactly a situation any mind has ever found itself in. — Tzeentch
Purple is the mix between red and blue. Why would that be unimaginable? — Tzeentch
And if math appeared out of there being multiple objects and humans started adding them up, doesn't that mean all an imagination needs is one or more objects to start inventing math on their own? — Tzeentch
Anyhow, now we are reasoning from a situation where no outside influences have ever entered the brain, which isn't exactly a situation any mind has ever found itself in. — Tzeentch
Well, Psychologist and Scientist are STILL arguing that people cannot imagine a new color they haven't seen, even IF the color already exist. (See Google, you might add something to their debate : D) because our brain doesn't work that way. — diesynyang
Are you sure there are ZERO influence in our brain? : D the concept of debate? color? a child? philosophy? — diesynyang
Now, before we start I'd like to say I understand that infinite is a rather loaded term, but I used it to get us into the proper mindset, for the mind is truly expansive, probably more so than we realize. So I would ask of you not to get stuck on the semantics of the topic, but rather explore with me the possibilities of the mind and philosophize how extraordinary (or not) these possibilities are. — Tzeentch
"Cheap" mental tricks or not, if you are experiencing it, isn't it real? — Tzeentch
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