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Replying to theophile in post #18]
ET needs to be reconciled per the OP, not the fate of the universe or the whole of science.

Agreed.
Since you and I agree that ET can be reconciled with CT, that part is done.
But anyways, I'm not trying to take anything off the table. I just don't think the fate of the universe is necessarily the unfolding of natural processes as science would have it.
Q: Are you saying then, that scientists are reading the Data of Nature incorrectly?
Q: Are you also saying that scientists
are reading the Data of Nature re ET correctly?
Nature can be co-opted and our natural fate, whatever it is, can be altered.
Q: Are you referring to the mind of nature re "Nature can be co-opted"
(This is the very promise of science and engineering, and what ST is based on, right? To take charge of natural forces and shape the cosmos as we see fit?)
Exactly my point.
Another clue as to why we might exist within a simulated thing...because of this pattern we see within the structure of that thing we are experiencing.
We appear to agree that a Mind is necessary, and that is why a Mind was created/evolved from out of this process.
Our difference is that I think the essence of the Mind of Creation wasn't really 'created', but is sourced/connected with the mind which created the Simulation being experienced.
So we have two minds involved, The one which you refer to as "God" which you understand was generated by the unfolding of the Universe Itself.
The other, which I refer to as The Creator of the Simulation.
I understand the two Minds are really One Mind - and the Mind evolving
within the simulation is a type of reflection of the Mind which created the simulation.
The journey of the Mind inside the simulation experience refines Its understanding of Self and the closer to the End-Game the Mind becomes, the sharper the image of that reflection becomes.
Even that science or ET see no use in such information, does not mean that such information is without relevance.
There is nothing in CT [Genesis One] which shows us that ST need be removed from the table of discussion, because it is not shown that what you call "extra baggage" is not actually, essential equipment.
Re that, the science of Quantum Mechanics shows us that what scientists thought of as
real, fundamentally isn't.
CT does not say the Universe is
real either.
People have just always assumed that it is.
ST cannot be removed from the table of discussion and if one were to argue that it does not belong, on the grounds that it "adds an unnecessary layer", would have to disagree with the Scientists re Quantum - re fundamental reality.
In that case, any claim re CT which does not accept ST, would be questionable and the extra layer might have to be accommodated in order to make sense of any discrepancy.
I have no idea how humans might change the fate of the universe. But if the current fate is a frozen emptiness, I'm sure at some point we could harness God-knows what forces (you know, dark matter and whatnot) to pull it back together and keep the lights on. Or sure, develop metaverses / simulations that may somehow be sustainable in such a state...
Exactly. Keep the Lights on. [And there was light]
Besides which, "Humans" then, will have to be way different than what they have been or are now.
Given how this can unfold, there is also no reason why we shouldn't suspect that this process has been going on forever. Dark. Light. On Off. 01.
As for God's vision, it's a world filled with life, where all life is flourishing and God can rest. Such a vision is pretty clear in Genesis 1, isn't it, given what we see written there? And it requires a sustained universe (multiverse, metaverse, or whatever 'verse' is most suited to supporting it...).
So as to what God would do in such a stage, again, God would be at rest, take joy in it all, and make sure that life keeps expanding. An eternal affair methinks.
The thing about that is. even that CT and ET says there was a beginning to this Universe, does not mean it was the only beginning which has ever occurred. Essentially other simulations are created and each one ending, begins the next.
In that sense, while ST cannot be discarded, it still would have to adjust accordingly to be seen as the process which occurs re each unfolding, and each process is the product of the Mind which all this must be happening
within, which produces the realities experienced.
It would make sense that such a Mind would create said "things" if the only alternative to that was to put up with the Dark for eternity.
It may even be that a Mind can only ever create Light, just because - whatever it thinks - becomes something it experiences as
real.
Thus, we could remove the idea that there is any Mind
outside of the simulation which created the simulation, because the simulation itself is the same thing as Mind creating it.
One answer might be that such a mind creates another Universe - likely designed based upon information drawn from everything which occurred throughout the evolution of the beginning of the previous one created, to its end.
Yah, I know. The expansion of the universe through metaverses and simulations could very well be an important means to God's end, and this is what has drawn me to ST all along, and wanting to reconcile it with CT. But that would be ST more as means and end, not beginning. It's ST as beginning that I keep pushing back on... CT is the beginning. ST follows as a possibility...
Indeed. We appear to be on the same page...
And that's the main problem I have, if I restate it as such. i.e., your statement here implies previous cycles, so if we go back there must at some point be a cycle where God formed in the first place, where the world wasn't a simulation but just raw, chaotic matter randomly churning things out (i.e., ET), and ST was nothing more than a possibility on a distant horizon...
I think that problem fades away if one accepts that the whole "beginning/End" cycles simply have been and will continue to be, eternal in nature. The Mind has "never not been" the matter that is used to created these Beginning/End
simulations.
In that, no matter if one wishes to create a simulation which enables the Mind to forget that it is The Creator of
things, eventually that Mind meets itself again as being The Creator.
Both CT and ET focus on the idea of there
having to have been a real
beginning, and in that, there is baggage which might not even be necessary.
It's precisely here that I see CT as I've described it coming in and providing the necessary first cycle (and direction) for ST to become a possibility, where God becomes God, acquires the power needed, and then yes, can create worlds or simulations as needed.
As pointed out, there does not appear to be the need to include this layer of belief. The Creator Mind may have 'recreated' Itself for eternity already, and never once repeated any prior Creation.
If we are to include a moment when there was absolutely nothing and there is therefore the necessity to have an absolute Begin-Point, it would have to be the existence of The Mind able to perceive absolutely nothing existed, and then that Mind going about
making something, rather than something spontaneously "becoming" and then somehow accidently creating said Mind.
It's an order of operations thing, i.e., ET -> CT -> ST, the difference between you and I being that I assume we are still in that first cycle, or in the CT stage of this process flow. I do not (and nor does CT) take for granted the powerful God that ST requires, nor that the world we live in is a simulation (yet).
This means we can bolt ST onto the end of CT, but not onto the beginning. If we bolt it on to the beginning, we assume a God with the computing power that may not have emerged yet and may never emerge because, well, we're already assuming such a God exists, so why pursue it? (To look at it another way, ST means we can already be at rest - or as you put it before, we can 'just play' - whereas I see real work that needs doing to get us there...)
Is that an agreeable reconciliation? I think there is one there if we're careful on how we handle CT in the mix.
I think I have adequately explained succinctly enough to gain a coherent
alternative to the idea that this Universe
has to be the first incarnation of - what will now - forevermore - be - an eternity of Beginnings and Ends.
There is no logical reason as to why one need believe that this particular Universe, is the very first.
This because, we can agree that eventually it will turn out that way anyhow, and future humans would evolve to recognize that even as we create simulations and understand the nature of mind re matter, the relationship will inextricably draw us to such a conclusion - naturally.
There is evil and suffering inside the simulation right? A simulation designed and executed by a Creator who could have built it otherwise? That's theodicy. God needs to explain Godself and account for evil... And that's true whether the world is simulated or made from nothing by God (as traditional CT would have it).
Indeed.
So as for the striking similarities, both ST and traditional CT assume a God with the power to create a world from scratch from the get-go, and that the world we're in is already a simulation. This is where I say that at some point in the regress of past cycles there must be a first cycle of CT as I've been describing it where such a God emerges in the first place. It's not an infinite regress of simulations and God refining God's works, as I feel you would have it, but CT as a necessary first and perhaps even eternal cycle that makes the leap from ET to whatever makes sense to achieve God's end (be it ST or whatever else).
As explained, there is a problem with that particular CT theory in that one is still left to wonder what
caused the stuff of our Universe to unfold in that first place, which is as unresolved as "from or out of nothing" creation theory.
ST places the Mind before the Matter, as the horse before the cart.
The computing power is easy enough to understand if one accepts that said Mind
is that power, and everything else always follows...matter is
shaped according to the sound of the thoughts of The Creator Mind and everything is experienced within said Mind.
This particular incarnation of stuff, allows for experience of something which can be understood by the minds within it, as being 'Good" or "Evil" even that the Nature of the environment may be neither.
In that, I refer to the human-mind tendency to enjoy scary things - but not to the point where these can damage oneself/others...such as a Ghost-Train in a Fair [fear] is designed to achieve.
This particular Universe is that train ride, upon another level, designed to scare would-be gods in the making but also involving ways and means in which those gods in the making can work things out through said process.
There is nothing fundamentally evil about this experience. What evil is seen is simply superimposed by ignorance, even to the point where one might blame some invisible entity for stubbing ones minimus, by purposefully placing the table in one's path.
Essentially, 'evil' is a human invention designed to blame any potential creator for existing.
To find the question to answer, requires one removes the idea that we exist and experience pain and suffering, [alongside joy and happiness] because the one who created it, is a nasty entity.
That is part of The Game re working it out.
It's not that it interferes with my CT beliefs, but that such power needs to be explained in the first place. It's a matter of logic and needing to make sense, i.e., such power can't just come out of nowhere...
Exactly. The power had to have
always existed. The Mind of GOD creates the minds of Gods.
The simulation is inside that Mind. There may be no Mind outside of it, but we cannot logically place the created before The Creator, without explaining how that came about. Logically, even what we call "Matter" must be made of the stuff of said Mind and can be formed any which way the thinking of said Mind, determines.
So whether it's traditional CT's positing of a God with the power to create ex nihilo, or ST's positing of a God with the computing power to build a simulated world, yes, I deny any such God-power as existing out of the gate.
Unless, as explained, there really never has been any beginning point re said mind. Those beginning points only have to do with whatever
current simulation is being produced
by said Mind.
Re that, "things" are simulated. Re that, the 'stuff' which allows things to "become", is essentially the stuff of the Creator-Mind, and thus, has always existed - but are made/shaped into said 'things' and have beginnings and ends, eternally, and can be experienced as real, by minds within it.
So far, our discussion shows that we are not too far apart in our understanding - and I think I have shown that - even given your apprehension for ST - your overall view of "How GOD evolved within the created thing", fits nicely enough with ST, in that ST explains the process you think occurred, better than it simply being an accident of nature.
In that, ST allows for a purposefully mindfully designed thing.
I don't think we're far apart. The issue as I see it is that you would subsume CT into ST whereas I feel that CT provides a distinct and necessary stage for ST to become a possibility in the first place, and that this is the stage we should assume we are in and focus our attention on. i.e., that such a God as ST proposes does not yet exist and that this world is not yet a simulation... We should think and act as if such a state has yet to be achieved, even if it already has.
While I understand your reservations, I think that to have a CT theory based upon the idea that The Mind grew out of the Creation and thus - is not directly responsible for the suffering one experiences by those inside said Creation, one is agreeing with the idea of The Problem of Evil, which your particular CT deals with, and which ET also deals with -
neither of which, may be the best way to deal with said 'problem'.
The thing I ask is whether this
"problem" has actually been established as real or imagined and if not real, then it is an
unnecessary layer to be adding - unnecessary baggage - and thus not appropriate to being attached to any theory, including CT and therefore doesn't belong on the table of this discussion.