Darkmatters, you seem to be suggesting that being able to break something down into its component parts somehow challenges its complexity, which really isn't the case. Complexity arises when many simple things come together and take some kind of form or pattern. Simply acknowledging this in no way diminishes that complexity. |
|
Ok, one quick last attempt from me and I'll quit. |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-11-2013 at 11:24 PM.
Sageous, my own belief system conforms exactlly with what you are saying. Many may be offended, but here it goes. 1) the nature of the world is a dream/ thought energy taken form. All the basic e=MC2 stuff. The rules are clearly defined regarding local gravity and such, but it is dream based. Old concept, a bit like the matrix. 2) One thing that can exist is an animal life form composed of nothing but chemical reactions. The reactions can appear like personality, likes, fears, and so on. Humans in this case can be such an animal. The animal is simply a construct of physics, but capable of intelligent behavor and personallity. 3) A seperate thing also can exist. It is the same as your 'sentience'. It appears to develop some how in animals. It can also be born into them. The idea is some humans are reincarnated entities, who choose (are forced/karma) to incarnate in the physical world. They can carry some element past death and start with a new body. Perhaps some may even take up residence in a body that is older, explaining the sudden development of 'sentience' or 'an entity.' |
|
Right, and I made the point earlier that although there are plenty of things in the universe that seem to be more than physical, they are grounded in the material world. You don't seem to be arguing against the point that everything must have a material base in order to exist. But you keep saying that these things must be more than the some of their parts, which has implications you don't seem to be considering. If we look at the law of conservation of energy, it tells us that energy and matter can't be created or destroyed, only reused. You basically can't get more out than you put in. So to say that something can be more than the components that make it up, seems to violate some of the most fundamental laws of physics. |
|
A quick cut and paste from wikipedia,,,... The law of conservation of energy, first formulated in the nineteenth century, is a law of physics. It states that the total amount of energy in an isolated system remains constant over time. The total energy is said to be conserved over time. For an isolated system, this law means energy is localized and can change its location within the system, and it can change form within the system, for instance, chemical energy can become kinetic energy but it can be neither created nor destroyed. |
|
Last edited by Sivason; 06-12-2013 at 12:52 AM.
I don't know why you keep using terms I never used like More than physical or Transcending the physical. All I've said is that thoughts are not physical, not that they're more. |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-12-2013 at 01:10 AM.
Yep, you can tell we could just go back and forth with this, repeating all the same stuff. For the sake of our sanity, it's probably best to leave it there. But as you said, we agreed on one definition, so at least we accomplished something. |
|
Last edited by HeavySleeper; 06-12-2013 at 01:57 AM.
Touche!! Well said Heavy Sleeper!! (Um - which one of us is offering his hand, and which one walking away? Lol!!) |
|
|
|
I finally decided to look up free will online (not just the definition) and see what people have had to say about it in the past. Just from a quick Wiki browse it looks like my arguments are similar to Kant's: |
|
Indeed, had some of the best discussions back then. |
|
^ Before human reasoning there were no engines, no phones, no internet, and no knowledge of DNA. |
|
You misspelled dutchraptor |
|
And no Shakespeare, no Kant (or Neitsche, given tthe thread's context), no Decartes, no Plato, no Tesla, no Marconi, no Hendrix, or, (shifting gears) no farms, no plumbing, no electricity, no nukes, no quantum mechanics, no chance whatsoever of having a conversation like this at all, etc., etc., etc... the list of just the new ideas and the names of their holders could fill this thread, and still be incomplete. |
|
Last edited by Sageous; 06-12-2013 at 07:29 PM.
@ Dutchraptor - Was it you who said that? My bad! Your name takes a lot more neuron-firings to remember than Xei... |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-12-2013 at 07:31 PM.
So, I have a question for anyone supporting the strictly material nature of all things. How do you benifit from the belief, and what inside you causes you to settle with one belief, disallowing the likelyhood of concepts like a soul? |
|
Last edited by Sivason; 06-12-2013 at 08:22 PM.
I'm agnostic, and I feel the rudiments behind it suits to my curiosity on things like this. Even if people have strong emotional gluing on what some other person said in their book, and treat it like a bible, I merely take the person's ideas as supplement of what I'm striving for. It's simply to make a progressive endeavor of adding more awareness to options available to me. I would be more than happy to find my own set of principles that makes me feel at ease or gives me solace and stability in this life. However, I don't want to have my emotions so glued on to them when I can explore much more. It's one thing to be minimalist and not want to commit, but it's another for people to be intolerable and have something absolute and irrefutable so far up their asses. As an agnostic, I see it as not being a defeatist and surrendering to a collection quotes from some set of people made in a book and just copping out from adding on to your own foundations. |
|
Last edited by Linkzelda; 06-12-2013 at 09:16 PM.
I suspect the answer is the same for all materialists - basically that there's absolutely no evidence for anything like a soul, plus no need for it to exist in order to help explain how the universe works, plus it's pretty clear that pre-scientific beliefs about such things were devised by people who wanted comfort in the face of uncertainty, at a time when we weren't able to find more reliable answers through scientific investigation. The fact that a certain belief system gives comfort is nice, but it's kind of a security blanket pulled over the eyes. It's more about making people feel good or allaying their fears, rather than discovering what the actual facts are. Science is a way to examine things in a search for truth, by first stripping away those beliefs that can't be proved and that don't seem likely according to what is known about the universe. |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-12-2013 at 09:33 PM.
I don't strictly support the material nature of all things, I am agnostic as I believe that nothing can be said with absolute certainty. |
|
To add on to that, I agree that the type of upbringing we were built upon is hard to climb over, especially when we usually don't consider what it would be like to have a Jewish upbringing, a Muslim upbringing, a Buddhist upbringing and so forth. I would figure that if a person was just questioning themselves and using comparative analysis for things like this, they would start realizing the rest of the concepts you stated from what I quoted you from. |
|
Thanks for those answers. I still would like to hear from anyone else who views the world this way. The comment about simplifying things sounds familiar. I have always felt some forms of Christianity and others offer simplisity as the main benefit (not after life, just here and now benefit) as in, 'here is the only important truth' learn this and you are golden,,, p.s. it is short and easy. I mean no offense in this. I honestly think most people like the idea of life and the universe being simplified. |
|
Last edited by Sivason; 06-13-2013 at 01:17 AM.
Although I don't strictly believe in determinism I'll go ahead and answer, since I do partially believe in it. I'm sort of a borderline determinist and materialist. |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-13-2013 at 05:05 AM.
Bookmarks