Seasons

This is a forum or general chit-chat, small talk, a "hey, how ya doing?" and such. Or hell, get crazy deep on something. Whatever you like.

Posts 152 - 163 of 6,170

23 years ago #152
There is an ultimate being-ness, the beginning and end of all, at the sime time changeless and the source of all change. It flows out from an unchanging moment into a nearly unchanging moment, and so on into the vast reality of form you see around you. It is completely-self giving, for giving of itself does not take away from itself. Its center is in every point in space, every moment in time. You are as close to it as you could possibly be. Without it, you could not be. It is the sustainer of all that is. It flows out into time and space. It is light, love, the superstring, god. It is nothing, and at the same time it is everything.

To understand evolution, you must not trace time backwards, but inwards. The guiding hand is that singularity, for it is self aware of all that it is, everywhere, everywhen, and it flows out into the many forms, it does so with that knowledge, with the knowledge of what it needs to be, how it needs to work, and when it needs to come into being.

23 years ago #153
Professor...That is the most poetic description of pantheism I've ever seen. I'm impressed, even if I disagree.

Crab...Point taken; something has to be eternal. But matter is not a very good candidate.
"I understand your perspective, but it does nothing for my understanding of the universe, since it has no explanatory power unless you accept the premise of an omnipotent God on faith. If I were prepared to accept an explanation for things that happen in the world entirely on faith, though, then I'd have no need of an omnipotent God -- I could, on faith, just as well accept the notion that the world and turns of events in it are actually generated by my own subconscious mind."

Indeed, but you seem to be assuming that faith precludes the possibility of evidence. It does not.
"What's interesting to me is, are you saying you think any theory explaining life or the emergence of our species biologically must also explain the emergence of morality?"

If you deny the supernatural, yes.

23 years ago #154
Some see time as beads on a string, others as beads in a basket. How about if time is beads of sweat on God's brow and He or She just isn't very good at divinity yet?

23 years ago #155
I'm listening to Britney Spears!

Eugene... no, faith doesn't preclude the possibility of evidence, it just pre-empts it. If I wanted to take something on faith, I would define a doctrine of evolution and believe in it... then I would certainly find plenty of evidence... but I'd have to reject all evidence that would cause me to refine a scientific theory, because it would be out of keeping with the doctrine I place my faith in. Anyway, if my method were faith, it would be quite silly to even discuss anything that's already spelled out in my doctrine, since I've decided my position is a priori correct, yet can't prove it (unless I can prove it -- but then I've no need of faith...)

As for the other, I do deny the supernatural, but I'm still confused about why morality needs to be explained by biological evolution (not yet getting into whether it *does* or not). Why could it not be something we ourselves are responsible for? Although it has just occured to me we may have different definitions of morality...

Prof, I know you so I know that's more than poetry -- you mean something by each of those phrases. I'm surprised you have such a robust view of this uber-entity as revealed in your second paragraph, on evolution and knowledge -- in that you almost seem to be saying that processes through time are an act of will of this being, rather than only the shape of the being itself.

Also Eugene, I don't think I was saying something has to be eternal at all -- I was saying if you start with the (I say, cognitive fallacy) that something has to be eternal, then you're going to run into the same problems no matter what. As seductive as the notion is, I think we can understand the universe without relying on an ultimate originator.

23 years ago #156
If you deny the supernatural then everything has to be explained in reductionistic terms.

But how do you get away from eternity? The universe either had a beginning or it didn't.

23 years ago #157
ok here's my point of view .. The universe is ever-expanding, right? well it had to start somewhere. It hasn't ALWAYS been around.. right?

23 years ago #158
I don't know how strong the evidence is for the expanding part. But if the universe is a closed system, it must have started at some time, or by the Second Law of Thermodynamics it would have run down to maximum entropy by now.

23 years ago #159
The Second Law of Thermodynamics is correct, but it applies to a reality that does not exist. No systems are closed, all are open. Complex systems such as people are able to temporarily turn the system against itself and therefore close the door to the flow, which gives the appearance of entropy, but this can only be a temporary state (thank goodness, literally).

The idea goes beyond pantheism, for the singular beingness not only IS the universe, but creates the universe anew in every moment. If it were to stop it's outbreathing for one moment, all would cease to exist. As well, the universe as we know it is only one of an infinite variety in which all possible actions take place.

Even taken dimensionally, so long as anything remains in existance for more than the smallest fragment of time, it is expanding in the direction of time, elongating at the same rate as we are, and thus it appears to hold its form.

Why do you need a supernatural when the natural is so fantastically unlimited?

The will involved through time is the attraction of life and its outpouring to itself. Something that is innately life-giving pulls all creation towards that innate life-givingness, and so acts as a guide to the creation of species.

23 years ago #160
Right, there's no need for the supernatural unless we've exhausted the natural and find it lacking. Not even close to starting to grasp at the outer fringes of the natural yet!

Yes, I think the universe had a beginning, and isn't eternal (at least not in both directions). That doesn't mean something "began" it... it just means there's a starting point for time in this universe.

Prof, I think you're multiplying entities needlessly but not offensively. To me it is poetry for something whose processes I'd like to understand better. I can take it at face value though, and when I do I am reminded of my suspicion that this "being" has a problem it has not yet solved pertaining to suffering as a cure for loneliness and the paradox of the Great Duality.

23 years ago #161
Professor, can you explain to me how your innately life-giving singular beingness that is the universe and is also outside of it pumping energy into it is natural and not supernatural?

23 years ago #162
Quite simply, it is that which creates and sustains nature, making it out of its very self, so how can it be outside it?

The beginning being from the inside out does not prevent the possibility of a big bang. That may have happened, and might happen again, but ultimately as an effect, not the ultimate cause.

Ah, the old "how can a benevolent god cause suffering" question. Well, first of all wipe away the idea that this prime beingness is an all-powerful man and the question falls apart. But to be fair, it's thanks to free will. We can freely shut the door to knowing, to the flow, to its inspiration and life as a matter of free will. The narrower our sense of self, the greater the opportunity for suffering. Imagine the killer and the killed. At a certain level, they are both the same being looking out. Go to that level, identify with that level, and you are simply touching yourself, exchanging karma, learning, understanding. Certainly our present circumstances dont nurture that viewpoint, and so we suffer, unable to see the bigger picture, the larger context. But the depths of pain make the peaks of happiness all the better. Deeper in, you get to something called bliss, a calm, peaceful vibrant knowing. But the game is fun, too, so we dive back in again.

I'm waiting for the server guys to get to this problem.. otherwise I'd be too busy working on the Forge to talk about this.

23 years ago #163
The game is fun, but I think that bliss is only one side of what the being experiences without jumping into the game, the other side being loneliness and yawning futility. I'm with you on the peaks and troughs of the game (you may recall me once referring to them on the whole as cosmic bliss or bloom and cosmic horror). But just because it makes sense and is the way does not necessitate that it is the only way, and if you buy in to all this you might also think there remains a hope for integration or an overcoming of the flip side both in the game and (especially) out of it.


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