But in supposing that there might be unimaginable things, you are imagining the unimaginable. — Banno
I was asking if human evolution will transform us in[to] something that we have no capacity to understand... — Eugen
I wasn't talking about imagining the unimaginable, because if there is something unimaginable by its nature, than nobody would be able to imagine it, regardless of how evolved s/he is. I will give you the same example: if you would get back in time and would meet a barbarian you would be able to explain him about a smartphone and he would be able to understand: you could tell him that is a tool used to communicate with others instantly on large distances, to listen music or to access information. He would have all these concepts. But if you want to do the same thing with an animal, it would be simply impossible. Are we a barbarian or an animal compared with a much much more advanced civilisation?That implies that we imagined the unimaginable; comprehended the incomprehensible.
Maybe a more advanced civilisation would be able to understand things like nothing or infinite?We can imagine a zero, a big fat nothing. Yes, that imagining may be rather fuzzy on closer examination, but so is our conception of everything, or even something.
Humanity has the same basic set of wishes over time: to travel on ground, under ground, on water, on air, in space, other universes; to obtain and access information; to read other minds; to communicate instantaneously with other people from other corners of the world; etc.. So cell-phones, computers, satellites, robots are nothing more than direct accomplishments of these wishes. There can be indirect accomplishments, and here I'm referring to more detailed pieces of technology that doesn't serve as solutions for our ancient wishes, but as solutions for the technologies used to satisfy our ancient wishes (e.g. antennas). There is actually nothing that we're doing today and that its final purpose was not in our ancestors' minds in the form of desire, therefore nothing unimaginable or uncomprehensible for the ancient Romans.We can't imagine the unimaginable, nor comprehend the incomprehensible, for the obvious reason that it has nothing to imagine nor to comprehend. We might, however, have the capacity at time t1 to understand what we will discover at t2, but obviously don't since it is yet to be discovered.
I totally agree with the fact that language and communication was a huge step, but no more than in the sense of giving us the capacity to express in a more clear manner thoughts that had been already present in our minds until we found words. I believe that notions like gods, universe, other universes, immortality have been here since humans were humans. On the other hand, animals don't think about gods and parallel universes.Possibly. It has in the past, so it's reasonable to expect that it might in the future.
I totally agree with the fact that language and communication was a huge step, but no more than in the sense of giving us the capacity to express in a more clear manner thoughts that had been already present in our minds until we found words. — Eugen
I believe that notions like gods, universe, other universes, immortality have been here since humans were humans. — Eugen
On the other hand, animals don't think about gods and parallel universes. — Eugen
"imagining the unimaginable", that is simply a contradiction, isn't it? — John
but can only imagine it in the negative sense of what it is not, i.e. it is not imaginable. — John
So your claim is that we can imagine a class of things, such that we cannot imagine any element of that class? — Banno
Unimaginable by its nature or by our brains' capacity? — Eugen
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