Just kneel and pray at your bed before going to sleep. That donkey will come around.. — Haglund
For which the donkey with the Golden Coin Donkey god would come in handy! — Haglund
Do you believe in the asininuous donkey shitting gold pieces? Could be... — Haglund
Ah! I see what your primal fear is now. You fear there is more than the universe.. — Haglund
I don't wanna get uploaded in that file! The chips might explode — Haglund
The creatures in heaven got it figured out damned well! — Haglund
The gods are eternal, mysterious, a riddle. — Haglund
Don't you involve god(s) in your question? What difference does it make if you push creation back to an infinitely far away past? — Haglund
It can be explained by the imprint of a previous ending of a previous universe — Haglund
The evidence for the evolution of species is strong enough to be fact in my opinion and I think that is a majority opinion, in the absence of equally strong evidence of an alternate origin.Darwinian evolution is a theory — Possibility
What do you mean by 'variable?' There is more variety in dog type or bird type than human type.we evolved into the most highly variable organism, enabling us to maximise awareness, connection and collaboration. — Possibility
as are:The idea that we evolved to be the best at species-level ‘survival — Possibility
Which further supports 'best at species level survival.' You provide support for this 'ridiculous contrivance.'enabling us to maximise awareness, connection and collaboration. — Possibility
Yet you offer no alternate view of why the god posit was initially formed. If not from human primal fear then from what human thought processes/needs, do you suggest god formed from? or do you think it was in direct communication with the ancients?I’m saying that you’re assuming this is how the god posit was first suggested, when there is no evidence to confirm this. — Possibility
Sure, and saying we should therefore focus on building machines rather than fashioning writing implements or training horses would be presumptuous, don’t you think? — Possibility
I agree.That’s right - science requires humanity not just as a conscious observer, but a self-conscious, ethical participant. — Possibility
Not a viewpoint I share. We are creatures that ask questions, that is our prime directive. We are incapable of stopping our need to question, in my opinion. We must be wise, yes, we must tread carefully and consider the consequences of what we do and why we are doing it but we must not become too afraid to do anything. If taking a chance is the only alternative to stagnation then I vote for taking the chance. I would be content to die in pursuit of new knowledge but I would also be devastated if others died because of my decision to take the chance and I would have to live and die with that decision but I would still understand why I made it. No one has ever said life is always easy.When we pursue science for it’s own sake, we tend to pursue our own destruction. And when we pursue it purely for our current interests, we whittle away at our future. — Possibility
I agree, this would be a wise approach.Science is as destructive when carelessly handled as it is useful. There is a framework needed here — Possibility
So you are basically a pessimist then? or at least as far as the possibilities offered by transhumanism go. I don't agree.transhumanism doesn’t appear to be it.
Transhumanism doesn’t account for the inevitable hierarchical distinction between self-interest and philanthropy, let alone between ‘some’, ‘most’ and ‘all’ humans. Nor does it hide its anthropocentric priority. It harks back to the wide-eyed enthusiasm for Humanism, and all the marketing hype that hits us right in our primal fear, promising the world... — Possibility
Ok, pardon granted. You have the right to vote against.In other words, talk as if loving but act as if living, and pretend you offer the ‘best’ of both - just like every other religion. You’ll pardon me if I don’t buy it... — Possibility
we just need confidence in the accuracy of our next move. That’s all we’ve ever needed. — Possibility
Because then it could be explained by science. In principle. — Haglund
Ok. How would a physicist investigate those physical properties? — Jackson
No he doesn't believe in inflation — Haglund
The problem is how to put the bang in that low entropy future. The energy balance doesn't fit. — Haglund
So am I yet I don't accept god as the answer. How come I can do that if god is so essential/fundamental to any meaning or reason in life as you suggested earlier. The burden is on you to explain anomolies such as me in your god posit.I'm always looking for what it all means and why we're here — Haglund
gives a kind of liberated feeling — Haglund
Because it's not intelligent. It needs intelligence, call it intelligent design, to create the spark. The spark can't explain itself. I think there are zillions of these sparks — Haglund
What definition of God makes it a physical entity? — Jackson
But a big bang doesn't need concentrations of photonic energy. It needs concentrations of inflationary energy. — Haglund
Those come in at the cause of the unintelligent spark. What brought virtual particles into existence? — Haglund
But theism is far MORE in giving meaning and reason for existence and life. — Haglund
Like providing meaning or reason. — Haglund
That doesn't provide a reason to live. At least, not for me — Haglund
But at least He is regressed to an infinite distance. — apokrisis
It doesn't matter what explanation you propose. It never will. Someone will always just move the needle back and say, "But what caused that?" Ironically, this needle also applies to a God. "What caused a God to exist? — Philosophim
But, due to the nature of a first cause, it could be a simple particle appearing. — Philosophim
The point is: Don't get excited and think this will change theist's minds. Theism is about far more than science and logic — Philosophim
If the current matter in the universe turn to photons in the future, the energy of the photons dilutes more and more. The universe will not contain any energy anymore. Time still continues but there is nothing left anymore to create a new universe from. — Haglund
I don't see what gods have to do with this. — Haglund
If they are the fundaments, there ain't something to explain them — Haglund
The fact that Peterson didn’t seem to get that the tiles were not actual tiles but part of a mathematical problem made me feel embarrassed for him — I like sushi
Anyway, always a delight to listen to Penrose. — I like sushi
Have you read ‘Cycles of Time’? The way he explains matrixes is utterly breathtaking! Makes something so abstract almost tangible — I like sushi
You have said this many times already. That god comes from nothing but primal fear. That's not true. I know it's not so for me. Well, maybe fear of thinking that science has the answers. That's a bed time story all the same. "Don't worry child, the big bang made it all for you. Although it knew nothing, the stuff back then was completely ignorant, it still brought itself into existence — Haglund
what caused the stuff and rules it obeys into existence? — Haglund
but why strings and dimensions exist in the first place is not answered by string theory — Haglund
You do realise that all of this is interpretation. Even Darwinian evolution and this notion of ‘survival of the fittest’ are constructed according to assumptions (fears) and preferences (desires). — Possibility
There is no ‘of course’ about it. — Possibility
We like to think/hope that science and transhumanism will enable us ALL to gain control over death, but this is no less a bedtime story than religion is. — Possibility
Science is motivated by answers to questions and pays zero attention to humanity when left to its devices. And frankly, transhumanism smacks of self-interest masquerading as philanthropy, tbh. — Possibility
In the end, I think all these interpretations of who we intend to be as humans point towards a fundamental question we need to ask ourselves: if it came down to a choice between living and loving, which would I choose? And if the answer is ‘it depends’, then perhaps we still have need of god, after all - if only as as a framework for our understanding. — Possibility
I don't know what kind of individuals are you referring to. — Alkis Piskas
(If you had the same knowledge in both fields as I do, you would most probably say the same things.) — Alkis Piskas
Interesting that you cite ‘human primal fears’ as the basis of a need for god - where do they fit into your list of ‘human mind, the scientific method, and empiricism’? — Possibility
hahaha! :lol: — L'éléphant
I have I heard about "uploading" the brain or the mind to a computer hundreds of times. It sounds totally ridiculous for someone
So, I believe that if someone originates a discussion regarding this subject, he should know well these things. I mean, esp. in here. Because, outside "in the world", one can hear a lot of nonsense — Alkis Piskas
knows what a mind and a computer are and how they work. — Alkis Piskas
You and I have absorbed about 2500 years of scientific thought in a half lifetime — Haglund
In what format are they thinking of uploading the mind? .docx? or .exe? .jpg? — L'éléphant
I hope so, we can then throw it in jail forever for abandoning its responsibilities for so long.God will show himself. In time. — Haglund
I don't know, need more time. If you give your god more time to appear then give your fellow humans more time to figure out the origin story of the Universe. At least we can appear to each other, which is more than your puny gods seem able to do.But then, from where comes the stuff used in the explanation? — Haglund
Dawkins claims to be 99.9% certain that no gods exist. Then what about the 0.01%? To be certain that if they exist he didn't say he was sure 100%? So he can always say "You see? I told you! I was right! I said there was a chance!" — Haglund
Hi Universeness. To further our conversation: — Watchmaker
I personally think that an Eternal, self existing Mind, that is the very essence of Being, is far more parsimonious — Watchmaker
the mere fact that it happened, that consciousness and self awareness (identity) emerged from the cosmic soup, means that the materials needed already existed (which is obvious, right?) — Watchmaker
I can't see any reason as to why consciousness would have necessarily sparked unless it is eternally entwined in the fabric of space time, perhaps a space/time/consciousness continuum, if you will. — Watchmaker
So then the solution to this would be individual stalls with toilets, sinks, mirrors, etc. But this also has an economic impact as well. — Paulm12
