What happens when your whole concepts begin changing.. strange
things like the entire universe becomes small and you have to go out
side its bounds.. Being a soul being what happens if the creation
soul is earlier than than the creation of the universe?
Allan
On Sun, Oct 21, 2012 at 6:09 PM, archytas <nwterry@gmail.com> wrote:
> Science doesn't fascinate me in the way some literature and people can
> generally - I suspect the 'enthusiasm' of the popularisation of the
> subjects. I concur on the predicament element rigs - insightive. It
> seems a mistake to me to try and place god in some scientific-
> dimensional space (though I miss Pat) and I wonder instead whether the
> god-positions people hack out are as baseless as, say, phlogiston - we
> need some new thinking.
>
> Science and critical history have demonstrated much religious text is
> fable. We repeatedly see that image management hides much that is
> foul under 'preaching' - here our current examples would be Jimmy
> Saville, Baby P, priestly paedophiles and Hillsborough (scouting in
> the US etc.) - but I'd say we may be on the brink of realising
> economics is equally vile.
>
> I can imagine spending a few weeks with a group living human-
> constrained lives in a collective of the future. A woman kisses me
> goodbye. She will not see me again because I'm off to a near-space
> terminal built off Alpha Proxima. From there I'm relativity
> travelling to the edge of this universe to undertake genetic
> transformation beyond the gene-splicing that has allowed me to travel
> in space. I see in 16 colours thanks to a shrimp and can enter
> cryostasis thanks to genes from Arctic fish. I interface with
> machines and their learning directly. I can no longer replicate as a
> human - etc. Now I'm off to meet and form a collective with beings
> who perceive much of the world we can only postulate. In traditional
> science fiction these 'dark beings' would be bastards intent on taking
> over the human world. What I don't see is any focus on a future in
> which the rather soppy human-emotional ties are broken - a future in
> which ...
>
> One might ask how the creature I have become would get his jollies.
> One can go the other way in history and ask what religion has actually
> done. We are not inventive enough about god.
>
> On 21 Oct, 14:50, rigsy03 <rigs...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> And some feel science is boring unless it can be translated into
>> everyday life in meaningful ways.
>>
>> On Oct 20, 3:50 pm, archytas <nwte...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> > We travel at 60k plus miles an hour in the solar system and 500K
>> > through the galaxy in our system. I tend to believe we can measure
>> > this kind of thing and that we are always left with questions like
>> > Allan's about before after and beyond. Hitch-hikers' Guide probably
>> > gets to the irony. Quite a few of us discount priests and text-
>> > authority without giving up on spirit. Spinoza remains the clearest
>> > example.
>>
>> > Creation stories end up in infinite regress - scientific and otherwise
>> > - and beg the question of 'what came before that' by positing a
>> > fiction of something that needs no creator or origin. I don't believe
>> > god whipped up the Grand Canyon, but in the limits of our thinking
>> > something whipped up something that led to the evolution of our planet
>> > etc. I tend to think science rather than literature may lead to a
>> > different way of seeing this and surviving until this is possible.
>> > Literature is generally bland and lacks depth - though there are great
>> > moments. I suspect one of the key issues is raised by Gabby a lot of
>> > the time - we need to replace current authority and know the irony is
>> > such attempts just produce the same old business as usual (WB Yeates
>> > was good on this).
>>
>> > The stuff on thermodynamics above is very similar in method to
>> > Einstein and what we might now term Wittgensteinian deconstruction -
>> > trying to find the common elements and mistakes in various competing
>> > arguments and readdress the apparent conflict. Molly has some words
>> > on this too.
>>
>> > On 20 Oct, 20:37, Molly <mollyb...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > > google books had a copy up online, it may still be there. Used book
>> > > outlets like Alibris will allow you to put in the book you are searching
>> > > for and notify you when a copy becomes available for sale by a store that
>> > > uses their service. Other than that, you may find some good articles about
>> > > it with excerpts online. for Einstein fans, it is a favorite.
>>
>> > > On Saturday, October 20, 2012 10:14:03 AM UTC-4, Allan Heretic wrote:
>>
>> > > > how does a person get a hold of the original text..??
>> > > > Allan
>>
>> > > > On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 3:10 PM, Molly <moll...@gmail.com <javascript:>>wrote:
>>
>> > > >> The Einstein "The World As I See It," originally began as his ponderance
>> > > >> of something greater than science, and acknowledgement of spirit in action.
>> > > >> The original edition is the best, as his editors put together texts with
>> > > >> lectures for him under the same name, and those books have an entirely
>> > > >> different flavor.
>>
>> > > >> From my view, "knowing" is not the end of it, but the beginning.
>>
>> > > >> On Saturday, October 20, 2012 8:09:19 AM UTC-4, gabbydott wrote:
>>
>> > > >>> Honestly, Vam, I don't think that it was Einstein's lack of knowledge
>> > > >>> that made him pose such a daft (in the sense of limited) question. I read
>> > > >>> this as a description of the state of occidental science at his time - the
>> > > >>> conflict between the ontological and the constructivist explanatory models
>> > > >>> of the nature of knowledge.
>>
>> > > >>> On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 8:41 AM, Vam <atewa...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > > >>>> You spoke of Einstein, about his " only " interest being whether God<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God> had
>> > > >>>> any choice in manifesting the universe and this observed creation.
>>
>> > > >>>> My own suggestion is that if we do not know enough we will always think
>> > > >>>> along those lines.
>>
>> > > >>>> To the uninitiate, the desktops of today would seem to be thinking
>> > > >>>> entities ...
>>
>> > > >>>> *So, do we know enough ?*
>>
>> > > >>>> <https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-EBJSz8MhWQU/UIJGzwpvR3I/AAAAAAAAB0...>
>>
>> > > >>>> On Saturday, October 20, 2012 6:36:45 AM UTC+5:30, rigsy03 wrote:
>>
>> > > >>>>> I took a course on the Snow-Leavis(1959-1962) controversy in the
>> > > >>>>> mid-'70's. Perhaps we should then conclude scientists do not
>> > > >>>>> understand humanism? Other works involved included various essays and
>> > > >>>>> books by Aldous Huxley ("Literature and Science") and Bronowski
>> > > >>>>> ("Science and Human Values"). Not sure that "incomprehension and
>> > > >>>>> dislike"(Snow) between the two groups has changed at all when
>> > > >>>>> considering the gap between rich and poor nations, smart weapons, etc.
>> > > >>>>> as science and militarism promote the self-interest of various
>> > > >>>>> nations/
>> > > >>>>> political theories and practices. Should we quibble that Nazi
>> > > >>>>> scientists propelled the USA moon landing? At least the moon survived.
>>
>> > > >>>>> On Oct 19, 1:37 pm, archytas <nwte...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > > >>>>> > The below is rather long, but physics is returning to some of the
>> > > >>>>> > ideas of James Maxwell. My dog is named after him. Years ago, we
>> > > >>>>> > were told their were two cultures ( CP Snow) - one knew the 2nd law
>> > > >>>>> of
>> > > >>>>> > thermodynamics and the other did not (literary types). The 2nd law
>> > > >>>>> > involved was a straw man. The following, as Max needs his walk, is
>> > > >>>>> > paraphrased from last week's New Scientist.
>>
>> > > >>>>> > A few decades after Carnot, the German physicist Rudolph Clausius
>> > > >>>>> > explained such phenomena in terms of a quantity characterising
>> > > >>>>> > disorder that he called entropy. In this picture, the universe works
>> > > >>>>> > on the back of processes that increase entropy - for example
>> > > >>>>> > dissipating heat from places where it is concentrated, and therefore
>> > > >>>>> > more ordered, to cooler areas, where it is not. That predicts a
>> > > >>>>> grim
>> > > >>>>> > fate for the universe itself. Once all heat is maximally dissipated,
>> > > >>>>> > no useful process can happen in it any more: it dies a "heat death".
>> > > >>>>> A
>> > > >>>>> > perplexing question is raised at the other end of cosmic history,
>> > > >>>>> too.
>> > > >>>>> > If nature always favours states of high entropy, how and why did the
>> > > >>>>> > universe start in a state that seems to have been of comparatively
>> > > >>>>> low
>> > > >>>>> > entropy? At present we have no answer, and there is an intriguing
>> > > >>>>> > alternative view.
>>
>> > > >>>>> > Perhaps because of such undesirable consequences, the legitimacy of
>> > > >>>>> > the second law was for a long time questioned. The charge was
>> > > >>>>> > formulated with the most striking clarity by the Scottish physicist
>> > > >>>>> > James Clerk Maxwell in 1867. He was satisfied that inanimate matter
>> > > >>>>> > presented no difficulty for the second law. In an isolated system,
>> > > >>>>> > heat always passes from the hotter to the cooler, and a neat clump
>> > > >>>>> of
>> > > >>>>> > dye molecules readily dissolves in water and disperses randomly,
>> > > >>>>> never
>> > > >>>>> > the other way round. Disorder as embodied by entropy does always
>> > > >>>>> > increase. Maxwell's problem was with life. Living things have
>> > > >>>>> > "intentionality": they deliberately do things to other things to
>> > > >>>>> make
>> > > >>>>> > life easier for themselves. Conceivably, they might try to reduce
>> > > >>>>> the
>> > > >>>>> > entropy of their surroundings and thereby violate the second law.
>> > > >>>>> > Such a possibility is highly disturbing to physicists. Either
>> > > >>>>> > something is a universal law or it is merely a cover for something
>> > > >>>>> > deeper. Yet it was only in the late 1970s that Maxwell's entropy-
>> > > >>>>> > fiddling "demon" was laid to rest. Its slayer was the US physicist
>> > > >>>>> > Charles Bennett, who built on work by his colleague at IBM, Rolf
>> > > >>>>> > Landauer, using the theory of information developed a few decades
>> > > >>>>> > earlier by Claude Shannon. An intelligent being can certainly
>> > > >>>>> > rearrange things to lower the entropy of its environment. But to do
>> > > >>>>> > this, it must first fill up its memory, gaining information as to
>> > > >>>>> how
>> > > >>>>> > things are arranged in the first place.
>>
>> > > >>>>> > This acquired information must be encoded somewhere, presumably in
>> > > >>>>> the
>> > > >>>>> > demon's memory. When this memory is finally full, or the being dies
>> > > >>>>> or
>> > > >>>>> > otherwise expires, it must be reset. Dumping all this stored,
>> > > >>>>> ordered
>> > > >>>>> > information back into the environment increases entropy - and this
>> > > >>>>> > entropy increase, Bennett showed, will ultimately always be at least
>> > > >>>>> > as large as the entropy reduction the demon originally achieved.
>> > > >>>>> Thus
>> > > >>>>> > the status of the second law was assured, albeit anchored in a
>> > > >>>>> mantra
>> > > >>>>> > of Landauer's that would have been unintelligible to the
>> > > >>>>> 19th-century
>> > > >>>>> > progenitors of thermodynamics: that "information is physical".
>> > > >>>>> > James Joule's 19th century experiments with beer can be used to
>> > > >>>>> > illustrate this idea. The English brewer, whose name lives on in the
>> > > >>>>> > standard unit of energy, sealed beer in a thermally isolated tub
>> > > >>>>> > containing a paddle wheel that was connected to weights falling
>> > > >>>>> under
>> > > >>>>> > gravity outside. The wheel's rotation warmed the beer, increasing
>> > > >>>>> the
>> > > >>>>> > disorder of its molecules and therefore its entropy. But hard as we
>> > > >>>>> > might try, we simply cannot use Joule's set-up to decrease the
>> > > >>>>> beer's
>> > > >>>>> > temperature, even by a fraction of a millikelvin. Cooler beer is, in
>> > > >>>>> > this instance, a state regrettably beyond the reach of physics.
>>
>> > > >>>>> > The question is whether we can express the whole of physics simply
>> > > >>>>> by
>> > > >>>>> > enumerating possible and impossible processes in a given situation.
>> > > >>>>> > This is very different from how physics is usually phrased, in both
>>
>> ...
>>
>> read more »
>
> --
>
>
>
--
(
)
|_D Allan
Life is for moral, ethical and truthful living.
I am a Natural Airgunner -
Full of Hot Air & Ready To Expel It Quickly.
--

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