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Indivisibility

Re: Re: Re: In summary

lifegazer said:
No it hasn't.
Sensations are both an internal experience and an internal creation.
An entity is not obliged to feel 'pain' when it is immersed in fire. It chooses to do so. So it creates the sensation of pain for itself.

Again, false dictotomy, you still fail to address the possibility that the entity is "born" with the ability to sense pain. In fact, for us humans, there is a gene that controls the sensation of pain to a degree. Depending on this gene, you feel more or less pain in response to a particular stimulus. You cannot choose this more or less response, your are born with it. If I could genetically engineer a human that had no ability to experience pain, what would that say to your philosophy?
 
RussDill said:
Matter exists as part of our universe, our reality.
Correction: Matter is the definition we give to localised concentrations of sensed-light.
Matter is no more or less a thing that any other interaction within our universe (ie, fields). We just perceive it to be a solid "thing" made up of something.
Exactly. Note how you are defining the universe that we are sensing. Note how scientific knowledge refers directly to what we sense.
Becasue of the way our universe is structured, a probability curve describes what a particle *is*.
"A probability curve represents our understanding of where a particle will go - not what it is."
If you can describe something with a language, does it not exist? Does the tale of mody dick exist?
Tales are intangible, as is language itself. What exists and our understanding of what exists, are not the same.
Occording to you, the great Mind has given up self, and forgotten mind and became lifegazer.
The Mind hasn't become lifegazer... The Mind merely thinks that it is lifegazer. Thinking that you are something is not the same thing as becoming that thing.
The mind has left things behind in order to do this.
Only Self knowledge. Knowledge is intangible. Nothing tangible is "left behind".
Therefore, it is external to lifegazer.
lifegazer doesn't exist. He is a sensed-thing. He doesn't possess the mind but is embraced by it.
God is not external to anyone since nobody exists except God.
"My argument applies to the reality of things "out there", beyond the mind's sense of them. Your reality is sensed-reality and your physics is of sensed-reality: "in here"."

You misunderstand, your argument is based on notions of reality that are 2400 years old and do not truly reflect reality.
I don't think philosophers were talking about quantum-physics 2400 years ago, do you?
They could have been though! Why? Because the realisation that the Mind is a primal-cause leads to the conclusion that the energy of the Mind must be fundamentally non-determinable.

It is your arguments that don't reflect "reality" because I have yet to hear you acknowledge that the sensed-universe is not real in itself.
Please, explain what property of QM has anything to do with non-spatiality.
Try quantum nonlocality.
http://www.cosmopolis.com/topics/quantum-nonlocality.html
Extract:-
Our "local realistic" view of the world assumes that phenomena are separated by time and space and that no influence can travel faster than the speed of light. Quantum nonlocality proves that these assumptions are incorrect, and that there is a principle of holistic interconnectedness operating at the quantum level which contradicts the localistic assumptions of classical, Newtonian physics.

Imo, this is reflective of the essential non-spatialness of 'awareness' in which all perceived quantum-events take place.
Every element of QM I've seen relates directly to spacetime. QM would not exist if it was non-spatial, the equations of QM are described in spatial form.
You're talking about sensed-space there Russ.
QM also has absolutely nothing to say about awareness, QM could not care less if self aware beings existed, or did not exist.
Particle/wave duality and observer importance are well documented.

I need a break.
 
lifegazer said:

I don't think philosophers were talking about quantum-physics 2400 years ago, do you?
Not relevant because you are not talking about quantum physics today. You are talking about what you think QM is. Your concept of matter is closer to that of the atomists who were found 2400 years ago. Things have moved on a bit since then.
 
Wudang said:
Not relevant because you are not talking about quantum physics today. You are talking about what you think QM is. Your concept of matter is closer to that of the atomists who were found 2400 years ago. Things have moved on a bit since then.
My concept of matter is that it does not exist. Period.


Quantum physics is a study of the mind's own non-determinable energy.
Physics is the study of "in here".

Quantum physics does not relate to a world "out there".

Scientific understanding of sensed-matter created by the mind is completely irrelevant when discussing the potential reality of "things" external to awareness.
Anybody who brings his physics book to the table in regards my OP is completely ignorant of these facts.

All we have is rationale my friends. Nothing else. And we must elevate that rationale above the limitations of what the sensed-world can tell us if we want to contemplate a world "out there".

Things "out there" either have concrete extension of being through 4 dimensions, or they do not exist... and there is no "out there".
It's as simple as that.
 
No matter how many times you copy and paste your teal false assertions, they remain false assertions.

Science tells us the order among things. That those things are detected by us via sensations is not in doubt. Whether those sensations are caused, as we observed, by the interactions of matter, energy, and our nervous systems, or whether imposed upon a uni-mind as an illusion, or whether implanted via cables from the great mechanical techno-bunny, science still tells us the order among things. Why insist on this definition? Because these are the only things which exist, as far as we can tell. If all we can detect is what our senses and, by extension, our devices, can observe and infer, then we can know absolutely nothing that does not extend from observation and inferrence. Reason in a vacuum is empty as well - no amount of reason based upon nothing at all can amount to anything at all.

Your OP related to an object. ALL objects which we have any knowledge of, whatsoever, are observed via our sensations. Ergo, since science studies the order among things within our sensations, then science relates to all objects. No object which is beyond our ability to sense or infer via sensation can be known. Perhaps the 'rock' you want to speak of, if there is such a thing as an absolute rock beyond our ability to sense it, is actually indivisible itself. Perhaps it is a 23-dimensional construct which radiates blue light and has animated tentacles. Perhaps no rock exists at all. We cannot, in any way, discuss a hypothetical rock beyond what our senses and science tell us about rocks; so if you ask to discuss a rock, you are either a) invoking science, or b) discussing something whose properties are absolutely unknowable.

we must elevate that rationale above the limitations of what the sensed-world can tell us if we want to contemplate a world "out there".

As near as I can tell, you are asking people to pretend that science knows nothing at all, and to have everyone pretty much guess about what is 'out there'. Without any sensory observation, 'out there' is absolutely unknowable.

Frankly, there are only two options: either our senses are reliable, our inferrences are reasonable, and external things exist which cause our sensations, ultimately; or nothing can be known, whatsoever, beyond our sensations - which reduces those things beyond our sensations to irrelevancy. Either way, same result.

Things "out there" either have concrete extension of being through 4 dimensions, or they do not exist... and there is no "out there".

False dichotomy. Either things out there have concrete extension of being through however many dimensions exist - even if that extension of being is equal to 0 for any given dimension - or we can know nothing about whether anything exists out there or not.

Really - you need to up the quality, young man, or go play in the sand pit with the other solipsists.
 
lifegazer said:
My concept of matter is that it does not exist. Period.


Quantum physics is a study of the mind's own non-determinable energy.
Physics is the study of "in here".

Quantum physics does not relate to a world "out there".

Scientific understanding of sensed-matter created by the mind is completely irrelevant when discussing the potential reality of "things" external to awareness.
Anybody who brings his physics book to the table in regards my OP is completely ignorant of these facts.

All we have is rationale my friends. Nothing else. And we must elevate that rationale above the limitations of what the sensed-world can tell us if we want to contemplate a world "out there".

Things "out there" either have concrete extension of being through 4 dimensions, or they do not exist... and there is no "out there".
It's as simple as that.

Irrelevant. Your understanding of "sensed-matter" then is 2400 years out of date and has nothing to do with QM as explained very clearly by russdill.
 
Wudang said:
Irrelevant.
IRRELEVANT?!!
You're either a fool or just anti-God. Which is it Wudang? Time to unveil the cloak and expose yourself.

Why can't you get it into your skull that scientific knowledge pertaining to sensed-things does not qualify the holder of such knowledge to discuss the nature and possible reality of "things" - beyond the sense of them - within the context of that same knowledge?
Well?
I demand an explanation or I demand that you abstain from further participation. I'm tired of judgement without reason and I'm tired of people overlooking the distinction which exists between sensed-things and real-things. I'm particularly tired of people who will not acknowledge that science is of the "in here".
It all reeks of denial at all costs.
Your understanding of "sensed-matter" then is 2400 years out of date and has nothing to do with QM as explained very clearly by russdill.
The knowledge we have of QM supports the existence of a non-spatial Creator-source with absolute free-will.
The knowledge we have of QM tells us nothing about the reality of matter.

Put your science books back on the shelf and address the OP with reason that acknowledges all this. Otherwise, your rebuttals are lame. End of story.
 
lifegazer said:
Correction: Matter is the definition we give to localised concentrations of sensed-light.

eh, no, sorry, we sense matter in both a lot more direct (touch, smell, taste, hot/cold) and indirect (instrumentation, particle accelerators, etc). Matter is the definition we give to any particle that has mass. (may definition may be slightly off from the high energy physics point of view, someone correct me if I have mispoken).


Exactly. Note how you are defining the universe that we are sensing. Note how scientific knowledge refers directly to what we sense.

Note how *all* knowledge refers directly to what we sense. Even recalling memories is just sensing. Memory in itself is just another sense. Dreaming is also just sensing. It is just as likely that sensations brought to us by memory is lying as sensations brought to us by what we perceive to be reality. Given this, I fail to see how you can hope to prove that we do not exist in a universe governed by the laws of physics, with no great mind involved.


"A probability curve represents our understanding of where a particle will go - not what it is."

I disagree, a probability curve describes exactly what a particle is and hov it interacts. Even in your philosophy this is true, the particles in the book governed by the mind are controlled by the laws of physics, and are thus nothing more than the equations that describe them.


Tales are intangible, as is language itself. What exists and our understanding of what exists, are not the same.

Your view of the word "exists" is far too narrow, something does not need to be tangible to exist. Tangibility, by definition, must refer to something that exists in our own reality. Just because something does not exist in our reality, doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.


The Mind hasn't become lifegazer... The Mind merely thinks that it is lifegazer. Thinking that you are something is not the same thing as becoming that thing.

Only Self knowledge. Knowledge is intangible. Nothing tangible is "left behind".

*exactly*, that knowledge is left behind. Which means it is not part of the lifegazer ego, which means it is external to the lifegazer ego.



lifegazer doesn't exist. He is a sensed-thing. He doesn't possess the mind but is embraced by it.
God is not external to anyone since nobody exists except God.

Ok, then stop talking about internal, because then you have to admit there is an external. Nothing can have an internal without an external. Either reality is a dualism, or it isn't

A sensed thing is not the same thing as an ego. One cannot sense themselves having a different personality. Are you going to try to disprove, "I think, therefore I am"?


I don't think philosophers were talking about quantum-physics 2400 years ago, do you?

No, but your argument at the start of this thread centers around a description of reality that is 2400 years old.


They could have been though! Why? Because the realisation that the Mind is a primal-cause leads to the conclusion that the energy of the Mind must be fundamentally non-determinable.

You have completely coped out on explaining what any of this means...for MONTHS. Its complete senselessness and not even you knows what it means. You have completely avoiding any arguments regarding the statement above, but instead merely repeat it over...and over...and over...and over.... Big, meaningless words and concepts will not help you here. Not even you could have predicted QM because you have absolutely no clue what it is.


It is your arguments that don't reflect "reality" because I have yet to hear you acknowledge that the sensed-universe is not real in itself.

What is real within our own universe is what is tangible. Either we exist within the universe we perceive or we do not. The other option being that we live in a dualism, which is what you are utimately arguing. (unless you want to conceed, and say that yes, we exist within the universe we perceive).

Strange, you bring up physics from time to time, and when it is pointed out that physics do not support your point of view, you claim "but its not really reality, so it doesn't matter". Then why bring up physics in the first place?


Wow, a bunch of babble from uninformed philosophers about quantum entanglement. How about the hard facts behind quantum entangement, rather than the philosophical dreaming:

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qt-entangle/


Our "local realistic" view of the world assumes that phenomena are separated by time and space and that no influence can travel faster than the speed of light. Quantum nonlocality proves that these assumptions are incorrect, and that there is a principle of holistic interconnectedness operating at the quantum level which contradicts the localistic assumptions of classical, Newtonian physics.

Note that no usable information is transmitted, and the effect of entanglement depends on the particles being at the same point in space. You cannot entangle particles that do not have spatial locality (unless you are passing quantum state with previously entangled particles, in which case, they must have locality with those particles).

Yes, many things contridict classical, newtonian physics, and yet, you seem to cling to many concepts of newtonian physics, most notably, in your discussions about relativity.


Imo, this is reflective of the essential non-spatialness of 'awareness' in which all perceived quantum-events take place.

Entanglement has no tie whatsoever to awareness. Sorry. Also, for particles to have their quantum state entangled, they must interact, and that interaction depends on their position in spacetime. No spatialness, no entanglement.


You're talking about sensed-space there Russ.

Ah, once again, you try to use physics to prove something, but when it turns against you, and the arguments become to difficult, you cop out and say it doesn't matter because it is only sensed reality. Either it matters, or it doesn't. Pick one.


Particle/wave duality and observer importance are well documented.

WTF lifegazer, we went over this, quite a few times. Wave/particle duality does not need an observer, it just needs an interaction. As soon as a particle interacts, its wave function is collapsed. By observer in these experiments, what is meant is a sensor, the sensor works by interacting with the particle. The sensor does not need to be hooked to anything for this effect to work.

Please, Please, Please, if you are so insistant that wave/particle duality has some relation to awareness, provide some evidence. Otherwise, throw out QM in your discussions, because it does not agree with you.


I need a break.

Yes, you do, start by reading up:

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-decoherence/

Note specifically on the double slit experiment:

"The disappearence of the interference term, however, can happen also spontaneously, even when no ‘true collapse’ is presumed to happen, namely if some other systems (say, sufficiently many stray cosmic particles scattering off the electron) suitably interact with the wave between the slits and the screen. In this case, the interference term is not observed, because the electron has become entangled with the stray particles (see the entry on quantum entanglement and information)"
 
Wudang said:
Irrelevant. Your understanding of "sensed-matter" then is 2400 years out of date and has nothing to do with QM as explained very clearly by russdill.

You can just call me Russ...but Russ was taken.
 
lifegazer said:
IRRELEVANT?!!
You're either a fool or just anti-God. Which is it Wudang? Time to unveil the cloak and expose yourself.

sweet! Wudang, the antichrist! Can I get a cool title too? ...wait, how can god be anti himself?
 
lifegazer said:
IRRELEVANT?!!
You're either a fool or just anti-God. Which is it Wudang? Time to unveil the cloak and expose yourself.
Quit being so melodramatic, you big drama queen.
 
lifegazer said:
IRRELEVANT?!!
You're either a fool or just anti-God. Which is it Wudang? Time to unveil the cloak and expose yourself.

Why can't you get it into your skull that scientific knowledge pertaining to sensed-things does not qualify the holder of such knowledge to discuss the nature and possible reality of "things" - beyond the sense of them - within the context of that same knowledge?
Well?
I demand an explanation or I demand that you abstain from further participation. I'm tired of judgement without reason and I'm tired of people overlooking the distinction which exists between sensed-things and real-things. I'm particularly tired of people who will not acknowledge that science is of the "in here".
It all reeks of denial at all costs.

The knowledge we have of QM supports the existence of a non-spatial Creator-source with absolute free-will.
The knowledge we have of QM tells us nothing about the reality of matter.

Put your science books back on the shelf and address the OP with reason that acknowledges all this. Otherwise, your rebuttals are lame. End of story.

Your argument is irrelevant as you do not have an understanding of QM. This is an established fact and is not in debate.
I have acknowledged umpteen times, as you well know, that I assume, and I use that precisely, that the material world is essentially as it appears.
You are the one in denial as you do not acknowledge that you assume that the external world is not as it appears.
My position is not anti-anything, it is pro-honesty, much like Russ and Upchuch my fellow-spawn. (oops!)
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by lifegazer
IRRELEVANT?!!
You're either a fool or just anti-God. Which is it Wudang? Time to unveil the cloak and expose yourself.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't do it wudang! You could be charged with a misdemeanor, or a felony if you expose yourself in front of a minor.
 
Wudang said:
Your argument is irrelevant as you do not have an understanding of QM. This is an established fact and is not in debate.

Listen good: it wouldn't matter if I knew NOTHING about QM. Why? Because as I said, any scientific knowledge pertaining to sensed-existence is irrelevant when considering the possible reality and nature of "things" beyond sensed-existence.

Whatever it is that I am is the Primal Cause of the sensations it experiences.
Therefore, the energy of this primal-cause has to be essentially non-determinable.
Consequently, the science of fundamental-energy is just a verification of the fact that the creator of the sensations is the primal-cause of those sensations.
My position is not anti-anything, it is pro-honesty, much like Russ and Upchuch my fellow-spawn. (oops!)
666
 
lifegazer said:
Listen good: it wouldn't matter if I knew NOTHING about QM. Why? Because as I said, any scientific knowledge pertaining to sensed-existence is irrelevant when considering the possible reality and nature of "things" beyond sensed-existence.

...which would mean QM is irrelevent to your argument...which would mean you are just wasting electrons.


Whatever it is that I am is the Primal Cause of the sensations it experiences.
Therefore, the energy of this primal-cause has to be essentially non-determinable.
Consequently, the science of fundamental-energy is just a verification of the fact that the creator of the sensations is the primal-cause of those sensations.

Still spewing useless crap without any attempt at defining it I see.
 
RussDill said:
...which would mean QM is irrelevent to your argument...which would mean you are just wasting electrons.
I was talking about the argument in the OP. But as I said as an aside, QM proves the existence of a primal-cause.
Still spewing useless crap without any attempt at defining it I see.
Which word didn't you know?
 
lifegazer said:
I was talking about the argument in the OP. But as I said as an aside, QM proves the existence of a primal-cause.

See, if you understood QM, you'd understand that QM actually points to there being no primal-cause, in fact, QM is not compatible with the notion of a primal-cause.


Which word didn't you know?

I've already laid out my set of questions in regard to "Whatever it is that I am is the Primal Cause of the sensations it experiences.
Therefore, the energy of this primal-cause has to be essentially non-determinable. "
 
RussDill said:
See, if you understood QM, you'd understand that QM actually points to there being no primal-cause, in fact, QM is not compatible with the notion of a primal-cause.
Energy has a source.
Non-determinable energy has a source with free-will.
A source with free-will is a primal-cause.
 

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