SailingCyclops wrote:
By definition, consciousness is a biological trait.
If some day, we can engineer a machine to be self-aware, we would have to call it something other than conscious.
Now you're just appealing to semantic arguments. Very specific semantic arguments I might add.
I confess that I'm using the term "consciousness" very loosely and abstractly when considering whether the universe might be a dream in some "Mind of God".
The actual hypothesis is more along the lines of the following"
1. The universe appears to be based on some underlying and apparently preexisting
information. (I feel there are sound reasons to argue for this)
2. So the next obvious question to ask is whether this underlying preexisting
information is dynamic. (In other words, is it active? Does it somehow process? If it is information, and it is being
processed, this implies the
possibility of some potential awareness or intent.)
Obviously it doesn't even imply that absolutely. A computer can process information without awareness. Any 'intent' it may have may simply be found in the algorithm of it's processing program.
None the less, if some
information processing entity gives rise to the universe, the question of whether or not it might have some sort of awareness or intent is certainly a reasonable question to ask.
So this is the rationale behind this thinking.
I'll be the first to agree that "The Mind of God" (if it exists) probably is quite different from what we perceive to be the "Mind of a Human". So in that sense perhaps we will need new words to describe it.
But for now we tend to work with the words we have.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Well, it's the only example we have to judge by. I am not saying it's impossible for some form of consciousness to exist which is not biological, I am simply saying there is currently no evidence for it, nor do we have any idea what such a mechanism would require. In the same vain, I am not stating that god does not exist, I simply don't believe in a god because there is no evidence to support the god theory.
Perhaps it's merely the term "God" that you object to?
I'll be the first to agree that the term "God" has been totally destroyed by various religions that have basically made "God" out to be an unreasonable egotistical bully who truly is anthropomorphically modeled after an immature adolescent who throws temper tantrums over every little thing.
It's no wonder people have such an extreme phobia to the use of the term "God" in light of such ignorant religions.
I'm certainly not suggesting that we are nothing more than a nightmare in the mind of an immature adolescent highly egotistical and human-like mind. Although, I suppose anything's possible.
I'm coming from a totally different mindset of "God". Where God is seen as the underlying mind that basically dreams up reality. And in this sense, we are actually a part of this mind. Not separate individual entities to be judged and cast into eternal damnation by a spoiled brat anthropomorphic childlike God.
So it's true that I'm considering this whole thing from a very mature view of a "Mind of God" that is more in harmony with some of the wiser Eastern Mystical views of what "God" might be like. And even then I confess that there are actually quite a few truly stupid version of the Eastern Mystical view, so I'm basically ignoring those as well.
So I guess I can't really blame people for bulking at the use of the term "Mind of God".
I'm sure that people like Stephan Hawking, Albert Einstein, and other scientist who speak of "The Mind of God" are imagining a truly intelligent version of God and not imagining this mind to be the mind of immature spoiled anthropomorphic and highly egotistical brat invented by people in the Middle East. Both Einstein and Hawking have made it pretty clear that they aren't considering that type of egotistical godhead.
In fact, Albert Einstein referred specifically to Buddhism as being a far better picture of spirituality.
"If there is any religion that could cope with modern scientific needs it would be Buddhism"
I personally feel that Taoism would be a better choice in terms of being less contaminated with anthropomorphism. Taoism might be a better spiritual philosophy in terms of trying to imagine what God Herself is actually like.
However, in terms of a religion specifically for humans the anthropomorphic aspects of Buddhism probably have value for humans in terms of helping them to become more in harmony with the mind of God.
And this "Mind of God" may not even be "personal" beyond the mere fact that it gives rise to our very own personified consciousness. I personally find that to be ironic in a way, because in a very real sense this would make "God" far more
personal than a self-egotistical type of personified God who has his own personality.
So I think much of your concern here may actually have to do with the semantics of using the term "God" at all, simply because of the way this term has been grossly abused by people like the Greeks, Hebrews, and others who have created mythological egotistical very anthropomorphic images of Gods.
I can't blame you for having a distaste of those mythological paradigms. If you've read very many of my posts you probably know that I renounce those pictures of "God" with no mercy whatsoever.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:I then have valid reasons to believe that a vast quantum supercomputer may very well exist beyond what we even consider to be "physical". ....
All this means is that information may travel faster than the speed of light. To extrapolate beyond that is not supported by the evidence. We must take things one step at a time.
I hesitate to agree with you on this point, in part, because of Richard Feynman's Sum-Over-Histories approach to solving Quantum Equations. This approach works, and I personally have a very deep intuitive understanding of precisely why and how it works (given non-locality as a premise).
So, from my perspective I can actually
see the universe as a whole acting as a quantum non-local analog computer. And so for this reason, it not only makes sense to think of the universe as being a holistic quantum non-local analog computer, but it basically appears to me that this is indeed what it must be for Feynman's sum-over-histories to even work. And they do work. They work amazingly well. So well, it's hard to deny their truth.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:The only place I see it leading to is you jumping to the conclusion that your very limited knowledge of reality is all there is.
Not at all. I am very aware of my ignorance. What I am unwilling to do is to fill that ignorance with unsupported science fiction.
Well, this is again where we may need to part ways. I have reasons for suspecting that reality is indeed being produced by some sort of underlying non-local quantum supercomputing "brain" of some type.
So I actually feel that we do have evidence that such a brain does indeed exist, even if it's nothing more than a property of the universe as a whole.
The universe itself may actually be this brain. In fact, that is the mystical philosophy. The universe is this brain (we call "God", for lack of a better word) simply dreaming.
This actually makes a lot of sense to me, and as I've said, I think there is evidence that points in this direction, with Feynman's Sum-over-histories approach to quantum calculations being perhaps the greatest evidence we have to date.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:We have barely scratched the surface of discovering the true nature of reality. We don't even know for sure how many dimensions we exist in. We thought it was 3 dimensions of space and 1 separate dimension of time, all quite rigid and absolute. Then, not very long ago, we discover that it's actually a single fabric of 4-dimensional spacetime that is extremely malleable in very strange ways. And now we are being told by the Scientific Community to hold onto our seat belts because the universe might actually have 11-dimensions!
Yes isn't that wonderfully fantastic? We are beginning to scratch the surface of reality. It's an exciting time to be alive, and I am sure even more fantastic discoveries will be made in the years ahead. This does not mean however that we have the basis to postulate a cosmic conscious supercomputer god in the cosmos. Not yet anyway!
Well, this is clearly where we disagree. I feel that we do have reasons to make such postulates. We certainly aren't in a position to confirm or deny them at this point. But we are in a position to at least postulate them, and that's really all I'm doing.
I don't see anything wrong with considering this as being a possibility.
And more passionately, I don't see any reason to make out like as if it's "Scientific Blaspheme".
Why should scientists be considered to be fruitcakes or fairy preachers, for simply hypothesizing postulates that are indeed based upon current scientific observations?
I personally think this phobia actually comes from the horribly evangelistic Abrahamic religions. Those religions can be so utterly disgusting that the very mention of the word "God" can make a sane intelligent person's skin crawl and induce nausea to the point where they physical begin to puke.
I can fully understand that justified phobia concerning the term "God".
And so in this sense I don't truly blame anyone who is standing shotgun-ready to blast any God-like Clay Pigeons out of the air before they start to grow wings.
I can fully understand that reaction. Trust me on that one.
Most intelligent scientists don't want to contribute to those insane ancient rumors of egoistical godheads. I don't blame them for that one iota.
But do we really need to toss the baby out with the bath water?
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:And you're going to tell me that we have no reason to believe that conscious could exist without biology?
Currently we do not have any evidence that consciousness can exist apart from a biological system.
Well, like I say, that can be argued. We certainly don't have any direct evidence for any sentient consciousness that has precise anthropomorphic qualities. But I don't see where this is being suggested.
Again, this probably has to do with the very term "Mind of God"
If you're thinking of Zeus, Thor, Yahweh, Jesus, Apollo, etc, then yes, the "Mind of God" implies an egotistical being who has the very same types of wants, needs, emotions, and frailties of any mere moral human. Then no, there is no evidence that any such egotistical Gods exist.
But if you're thinking of the term "Mind of God" in a Taoistic sense (assuming you understand this type of pantheistic philosophy), then the evidence for this type of mind is almost overwhelming. You don't even need science to realize that it's true. And in light of science, and especially Quantum Mechanics and Feynman's sum-over-histories the evidence that it must be true is almost overwhelming at that point.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:I think computer scientists would argue with you on that one as they are hoping to create conscious brains using silicon chips some day. What happens to biological consciousness as being special when they succeed?
When and if CS develops a machine and claims it to be conscious, we will have to re-examine our definition of consciousness. Our current definition is specific to human brains.
Well, like I say, in this case you're just arguing semantics.
If you reserve the word "consciousness" to only refer to the cerebral experiences of humans,
by definition, then of course we couldn't use that same term to apply to any "Mind of God",
by definition.
But that's nothing more than an argument of semantic. All you're doing there is insisting that we use a different word to label any "consciousness" a mind of God might actually have.
That's an argument of pure semantics. You're just demanding that we use a new label. That's hardly an argument against the actual essence of the concept.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:And if they can make a rocks think, then who's to say the universe hasn't already made thinking rocks somewhere out there in the universe?
Great science fiction, but there is no basis to make such a supposition. Again, I see no mechanism which would allow a rock to think.
Well I'm using "rock" to refer to silicon computers.
Silicon is a rock. Or at least sand.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:Moreover, if you're a hardcore secular atheist, then surely you're aware that we are nothing more than an advance form of primate. We are barely monkeys living on a planet, and we are still in our infancy. We are "The Planet of the Baby Apes".
Why should we conclude that our current understanding of reality is so incredibly complete that we can start ruling things out that don't seem to match up with our extremely limited knowledge of reality.
We don't rule things out exactly, we build on what we know and learn a bit more with each new discovery. We don't fill our ignorance with gods or cosmic supercomputers.
No, but we do make postulates and hypothesis based upon what we do know. And I personally feel that we have sufficient evidence to support such hypotheses. I've already given the example of quantum mechanics and the observation of sum-over-histories. This is evidence that non-local analog computing is indeed going on. So that much appears to be well-established to me. To ask if this non-local analog computing could possibly represent some sort of cosmic mind seems to me to be a very natural question in light of this evidence.
SailingCyclops wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:I think you're perfectly correct when you suggest that we will need to agree to disagree. Because you're acting like we already know it all. Whereas I'm taking a completely different perspective on that. As far as I'm concerned human discovery of reality is in it's extreme infancy.
No. I am content with admitting my ignorance about the vast majority of cosmic reality. It's ignorance which drives discovery. However, if we postulate that god-did-it, or that some supercomputer is at the heart of all reality, we will remain forever ignorant.
But I'm not suggesting that this is the "answer" to any other problems. I'm not proposing this as a "solution" to anything. I'm merely considering that this might actually be the foundational truth of reality.
Who knows? Maybe it is?
And maybe it's not.
It's just a hypothesis and postulate for a theory worthy of further exploration is all I'm saying.
Divine Insight wrote:What if humans happen to live as long as the dinosaurs? What if we continue on for another 195 million years. Do you think that those people are going to still be sitting around believing the limited knowledge we have today?
If our species survives as long as the dinosaurs did, I am certain that the knowledge of that day will make us look like cockroaches in comparison. But that does not give us license to propose fantastic theories without any evidence.[/quote]
Ok, perhaps I need to redraw the scientific hierarchy map them.
Here you go:
The atheistic view of science
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Happy now?