Einstein described the universe as "finite, but unbounded — Gnomon
Information is both physical (info=energy=matter) and metaphysical (meaning ; ideas ; math). — Gnomon
EnFormAction is my coinage for the Generic Information responsible for the formation of every objective Thing and every subjective Form that evolved from the initial Singularity. — Gnomon
I use that term primarily for its original meaning "adjunct to physics". — Gnomon
...mine [worldview] is fundamentally Philosophical (inference). — Gnomon
You count yourself a logician primarily? — ucarr
No. I'm just an amateur philosopher presenting a non-academic thesis... — Gnomon
Quantum Physicist John A. Wheeler :
It from Bit symbolizes the idea that every item of the physical world has at bottom — at a very deep bottom, in most instances — an immaterial source and explanation; that what we call reality arises in the last analysis from the posing of yes-no questions — Gnomon
Are you conceptualizing Information Singularity as a type of black hole compressing the universe down to a point-source? — ucarr
No. My Singularity is a meta-physical philosophical concept, not a scientific conjecture. — Gnomon
Your use of spacetime as a boundary flies in the face of conventional wisdom about the phenomenal universe such that it has no boundaries. — ucarr
The boundaries I referred to are Space & Time, which are not physical fences. — Gnomon
Einstein described the universe as "finite, but unbounded..." its assumed that he was talking about the physical shape of the universe as a sphere, not as extending into infinity. — Gnomon
The scary part is the possibility homo sapiens will effect its own obsolescence in accordance with evolution by causing an information singularity necessitating appearance of homo superior in order to understand and utilize the higher cognition. — ucarr
Funny, but I don’t see that as scary. I see that as a destiny fulfilled. Yes, all the species that were our ancestors but are now extinct have effected their own obsolescence by breeding something more fit. Superior as you put it. I suppose it sucked in a way for the species now extinct, but I see it as a success. — noAxioms
With respect to what the gravity is doing in the two scenarios, there is no difference. In other words, the cause is the same in the two, but the effect is different due to the same type of cause acting in different situations. — Metaphysician Undercover
Cause and effect are contextualized by ordinality, but the ordinality in this case is defined as atemporal ordinality. That eight is a greater quantity than six is a different type of ordinality, which does not imply temporality. But causation is a different type of ordinality from quantity because the terms of that specific form of ordinality are defined by temporality, before and after, rather than by quantity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay. So, you think cause and effect – even when manifesting simultaneously – must always be understood in terms of temporal antecedence in order to have coherence? — ucarr
Yes. if cause and effect manifested simultaneously we would not be able to distinguish which is the cause, and which is the effect because the temporal relationship of cause/effect, by which we would determine one is the cause, and the other the effect would not exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
The high volume of bacteria is observed to be temporally prior to the reaction (symptoms) therefore affirmed to be the cause. If the two suddenly occurred in a truly simultaneous way, we could not say that one caused the other, the occurrences would be said to be coincidental. And if we try to assign cause and effect to two coincidental occurrences we have no way of knowing which is the cause and which is the effect. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you do not believe me that causation is a temporal concept then do your own research, and find out how the term is used. Then get back to me with what you find. — Metaphysician Undercover
Neither Hume’s Idea of “natural belief” nor Kant’s “concepts of the understanding” are the apodictic and necessary truths sought by metaphysicians. They are abstract theories about the world, whose information content is validated by experiments. — The Information Philosopher
the "action-at-a-distance" of gravity is understood to not be instantaneous. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you think that gravity would only avt [sic] after the person steps ove [sic] the edge? — Metaphysician Undercover *1
The gravitational field doesn't predate the ocean. So, at all times, the ocean currents are under influence of both earth and moon gravitational fields. — ucarr
Obviously gravity is acting on the person prior to falling over the edge. — Metaphysician Undercover
...when a suicide jumps from the bridge, they would hover in the air for a positive interval of time before accelerating towards the ground. — ucarr
I do not deny that one might define causality such that it is not necessary for the cause to be prior in time to the effect. What I've said is that this would render causation as incoherent and unintelligible. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've already agreed that ordinal relations are not necessarily temporal. — Metaphysician Undercover
...some might allow for simultaneity, but as I said this renders causation as unintelligible because then there is no true principle to distinguish cause from effect. — Metaphysician Undercover
Causality is not inherently implied in equations of motion, but postulated as an additional constraint that needs to be satisfied (i.e. a cause always precedes its effect)." — Metaphysician Undercover
Post-quantum physics has equated Information (power to enform) with physical Energy. In which case the future unleashed-singularity could indeed be an explosion of Information. — Gnomon
Are you aware of something similar to an "information singularity" in recorded history (a la Gutenberg)? — Gnomon
The transition from Theological Science to Empirical Science was a significant change of direction, but the Age of Enlightenment took centuries to take full effect. Hardly an explosion. — Gnomon
...the Information Age that began in the early 20th century has rapidly expanded... — Gnomon
making radical changes in socio-cultural phenomena. — Gnomon
...mine [worldview] is fundamentally Philosophical (inference). — Gnomon
I was inferring from current knowledge back to unknown possible initial conditions... — Gnomon
...his [universeness] empirical stance labels questions of Origins as Religious, whereas I view such explorations as Philosophical. — Gnomon
I came to an Information Singularity of my own, where space-time faded away into infinities. — Gnomon
I assume that Plato followed a similar line of reasoning, and concluded that Reality is bounded by space-time. — Gnomon
But then, whence space-time & energy-laws. So, he postulated a transcendent (eternal ; infinite) Source of Enforming power (Logos - in Ideality) as an answer to the Open Question of "why something instead of nothing". But that kind of pioneering reverse-reasoning (into the a priori unknown) is not allowed by Empirical doctrine (from known to knowable). — Gnomon
the Open Question of "why something instead of nothing". — Gnomon
This seems to be the most popular viewpoint regarding the 'pivotal' moment of the development of an ASI. Folks like myself and I think 180 Proof, think that it's just as possible, that a developing/growing ASI that achieves self-awareness, would be benevolent towards all lifeforms, especially lifeforms with the sentience level of humans. — universeness
No, if the gravitational field is the cause of the tides, it predate the tides, not necessarily the oceans. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you instead acknowledge that before creation of the material universe, cause and effect were temporally sequential whereas, in the wake of said material creation, cause and effect are not always sequential? — ucarr
...cause and effect are always sequential by definition... — Metaphysician Undercover
I've already agreed that ordinal relations are not necessarily temporal. — Metaphysician Undercover
For me, the term 'information singularity' or 'technological singularity,' is more about a 'moment of very significant change.' The terminator movies 'might' be a respectable example. From the moment 'skynet' was switched on, human existence was utterly changed. ASI,(artificial super intelligence), is the main candidate for such a significant moment. — universeness
I will describe my statement as an historical conjecture: the information singularity at point of explosion pushes sentience across a threshold whereupon a "quantum leap" upward into a new, higher gestalt of cognition gets underway. This new level of understanding and conceptualizing could be expected to transform the phenomenal universe through the agency of sentients.
The scary part is the possibility homo sapiens will effect its own obsolescence in accordance with evolution by causing an information singularity necessitating appearance of homo superior in order to understand and utilize the higher cognition. — ucarr
Here, I am discussing, what YOU think is emergent due to all human actions, based on their varied manifestations of intent and purpose... — universeness
'Information reaching critical mass,' seems to me to be a fair connection to the popular concept of an 'information singularity' or a 'moment of very significant change,' so If that's the imagery you are invoking, then I understand it. — universeness
I don't think a parallel between the moment 'elementary particle formation' occurred and when gnostic radiation (I assume, you mean something like 'the moment when knowledge was first exchanged between hominid or any species of life), offers much, as one happened way way way before the other. — universeness
Okay. Time predates God. And God created the material universe.
So, time before God was metaphysical and there were no material things?
Okay. God can only act within time.
So, outside of time God cannot exist? — ucarr
I think my answer to all this is generally yes. But I don't know what you mean by saying time is "metaphysical". If you mean that it's an object of study in metaphysics, then I agree. — Metaphysician Undercover
3. As an actual cause, it is impossible that God is outside of time.
4. Therefore time as well as God must be prior to material (physical) things, and is not material (physical). — Metaphysician Undercover
We know through observation and induction that each and every material thing has a cause. The cause of a material thing is prior in time to the existence of that material thing. Therefore there is a cause prior in time to all material things. — Metaphysician Undercover
So God exists and acts within time is your main premise? — ucarr
For that part of the argument. However that God exists and acts within time are conclusions drawn from the preceding part, which we already discussed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Did ↪universeness actually refer to an "information singularity", or is that your interpretation of his intention? — Gnomon
How much credence do you give to the idea that we are heading towards an 'information/technological singularity? — universeness
...your description of a "cognitive explosion of information..."sounds like a creation event... — Gnomon
Were you making a religious statement, or a philosophical conjecture, or merely referring to an empirical scientific fact? — Gnomon
Where did you get the idea of an "information big bang" and "cognitive explosion"? I googled those terms and came-up empty. I'm not familiar with such "common big bang language" — Gnomon
I got nothing about an original Big Bang burst of Information or a "cognitive explosion", that resulted in the creation of a physical universe from pre-existing rational causal power-to-enform (LOGOS?). — Gnomon
...trying to parse what god can and cannot do, or where God resides and in what form is pointless and subject to the paucity of human understanding. If the laws of physics get in the way of a person's understanding God then they're not doing it right... — Tom Storm
You would need to clarify further, what you mean by 'parallels the big bang.' — universeness
It seems to me that an objective truth about all humans is that we seek new information. — universeness
We have altered the Earth in many significant ways. Can we do the same to the solar system and far beyond it? Is that an objective truth about what is fundamental in our nature to do? — universeness
To what extent do you think that human beings are 'information processors?' — universeness
Our ability to memorialise and pass on new knowledge from generation to generation seems to have 'the potential' to affect the 'structure and purpose of the contents of the universe.' — universeness
In the future we will...Act as a single connected intellect and as separate intellects. — universeness
How much credence do you give to the idea that we are heading towards an 'information/technological singularity? — universeness
A cause... cannot be outside of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
1. Logic produces the conclusion that there must be a cause prior in time to all material (physical) things. — Metaphysician Undercover
the conclusion that there must be a cause prior in time to all material (physical) things. (?) — Metaphysician Undercover
1. (Continued) This cause cannot be material (physical) because it is prior in time to material (physical) things. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we wanted to speak of something prior to time, we would have to use terms other than temporal terms to describe this sort of "priority". We might say "logically prior to" for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
This cause cannot be material (physical) because it is prior in time to material (physical) things. — Metaphysician Undercover
1. (Continued) Theologians call this "God" — Metaphysician Undercover
2. If time is the product of physical activity then God must be outside of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
3. As an actual cause, it is impossible that God is outside of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
4. Therefore time as well as God must be prior to material (physical) things, and is not material (physical). — Metaphysician Undercover
If we wanted to speak of something prior to time, we would have to use terms other than temporal terms to describe this sort of "priority". We might say "logically prior to" for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
...we have an inductive principle that there is a cause prior to every material thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does the following train of thought reflect your thinking: Since time predates God and God created the material world of physics, time must be something other than physical. — ucarr
No, that's backwards, you need to reverse it. We have the physical world first, as our source of evidence. We see that something preexists each and every material thing as the cause of existence of that thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
...I can't imagine the possibility of anything uncaused... — Metaphysician Undercover
But I don't know what you mean by saying time is "metaphysical". — Metaphysician Undercover
I would say "God is self-caused" is incoherent because it would mean that God is prior to Himself in time, and that seems to be contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
If God is actual, time must predate God, because any act requires time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why have you replaced my word, "matter" with "substance"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Any act requires time to occur. — Metaphysician Undercover
that God is prior to time... is inconsistent with the idea of God having actual existence... — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you perhaps talking about, say, an interaction between two hypercubes? — ucarr
No, definitely not, that kinda stuff is above me pay grade mate, but look at the underlined term in your sentence. — Agent Smith
:up: You seem to be on the right track given what I know. — Agent Smith
I'm afraid I don't understand where the paradox is in 4D hypercubes. — PhilosophyRunner
A very stretched metaphor, at best; not an equivalence. — Banno
Russell's paradox lead to further developments in logic, not to its demise. — Banno
Striking resemblance to paraconsistent logic I must say. However, wouldn't the analogy work better if we take two things rather than one thing doing weird stuff in spacetime? — Agent Smith
You got it! Yes. That's the gist of my argument. — ucarr
:lol: I'm not sure how exactly though. — Agent Smith
I see how paradoxes can extend logic, contrary to how they were traditionally viewed, as destructive to logic. — Agent Smith
You got it! Yes. That's the gist of my argument. — ucarr
So back to my original question, what are dimensions doing in set theory? What is a dimension here? — Banno
...the set of all sets not members of themselves. — ucarr
...what we find is... matter with form... — Metaphysician Undercover
By this line of reasoning, destroy but one wheel and forevermore the wheel can never reappear. — ucarr
Each object, wheel in your example, is unique, with a proper identity all to itself, as indicated by the law of identity — Metaphysician Undercover
By materialist principles the concept of "time" is tied to the activities of material things. If material things are moving, time is passing. Therefore under this conception of "time" there is no time without material things. God however, being the creator or cause, of material things, must be prior to material things and is therefore "outside of time" according to this conception of "time". That of course appears to be incoherent, to have something (God) which is prior in time, (as the cause of time), to time itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
But this just demonstrates that there is a problem with the materialist conception of "time". When "time" is tied to the material existence of things, in that way, the possibility of time which is prior to the occurrence of material things is ruled out. Then the actuality (form) which is necessarily prior to material objects as the cause of their existence, is rendered unintelligible, as "an act" without time is incoherent. — Metaphysician Undercover
...when we talk about material objects we are talking about matter with form, and form is what is created and destroyed. — Metaphysician Undercover
form is what is created and destroyed — Metaphysician Undercover
"God is self-caused" is incoherent because it would mean that God is prior to Himself in time, and that seems to be contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
You can’t refute god, simulation, etc, or anything metaphysical really. — Darkneos
There’s a set of assumptions you have to make about the world, without which you can’t do any thing. — Darkneos
What are dimensions doing in set theory? — Banno
What are dimensions doing in set theory? — :sad: Banno
I don't think we know enough about reality or the universe to know that all things have causes or even what causality amounts to. — Tom Storm
...the emotional need for universal narratives that can save humans and make sense of everything constantly overwhelms us. — Tom Storm