Author Topic: The Illusion of Self  (Read 50810 times)

Nearly Sane

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #175 on: December 23, 2016, 12:54:45 PM »
How silently, how silently
The wondrous gift is given!
So God imparts to human hearts
The blessings of His heaven.
No ear may hear His coming,
But in this world of sin,
Where meek souls will receive him still,
The dear Christ enters in.


Just listened to Dylan's Christmas Album - Christmas in the heart

For the first time I was struck by these profound words from the last verse of the last song on his album.  In just these few words, so much is said.
I feel the same about the great moving words


When I am sad and lonely
When all hope is gone
I walk upon High Holborn
And think of you with nothing on

SusanDoris

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #176 on: December 23, 2016, 01:39:11 PM »
2.   By bringing up religious beliefs when they have not been mentioned, it shows that your approach is not one based on getting to the truth of the matter. It is to avoid anything that could potentially lead to a religious explanation for a cause.
Which words imply not wanting to get to the truth?
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Therefore, let me explain again what the quintessential problem is.
i.e. what you believe to be the problem.




The Most Honourable Sister of Titular Indecision.

wigginhall

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #177 on: December 23, 2016, 01:55:24 PM »
I think at least one of you needs to define what you understand by 'soul' otherwise each of you will be arguing for and against your own personal concept which is not fully shared with the other.

It's all well and good to define the soul - and there are plenty of variations available, e.g. Aristotle, Descartes, the Catholic Church - but we need to go further and find someone who can demonstrate its existence, and its workings.   Otherwise, we are in the land of pure assertion.

I was thinking this about anti-matter yesterday, about which no doubt people feel incredulity.  But scientists are not content with defining it, they have been doing research on it, and trying to track anti-matter particles, with some success.

I suppose this is difficult with something immaterial, but then how do you know it's there? 

They were the footprints of a gigantic hound!

Walter

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #178 on: December 23, 2016, 02:51:06 PM »
It's all well and good to define the soul - and there are plenty of variations available, e.g. Aristotle, Descartes, the Catholic Church - but we need to go further and find someone who can demonstrate its existence, and its workings.   Otherwise, we are in the land of pure assertion.

I was thinking this about anti-matter yesterday, about which no doubt people feel incredulity.  But scientists are not content with defining it, they have been doing research on it, and trying to track anti-matter particles, with some success.

I suppose this is difficult with something immaterial, but then how do you know it's there?
sometime ago I was reading about the BIG BANG and it said it could have happened many many  times before but all was annihilated almost immediately However during the last big bang there was a slight imbalance between matter and anti matter and when all the annihilating had finished the resulting extra mater that remained was left to form what we call the universe.
aren't we lucky!

Walter

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #179 on: December 23, 2016, 02:54:57 PM »
I feel the same about the great moving words


When I am sad and lonely
When all hope is gone
I walk upon High Holborn
And think of you with nothing on
I like it, is it all your own work?

Nearly Sane

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #180 on: December 23, 2016, 03:01:07 PM »

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #181 on: December 23, 2016, 03:12:01 PM »
SOTS,

So in Reply 154 I posted a series of rebuttals and corrections, all of which you’ve ignored in favour of response just to a footnote about why you may keep misrepresenting what emergence actually entails.

Oh well.

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Your response really does lay bare your prejudices for all to see.

By “your response” you’re referring just to the trivial bit about why you may behave as you do I guess – oh, let’s test your claim in any case then.

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1.   You’ve brought up my religious beliefs when I have not mentioned them. Furthermore, you’ve made assumptions about them when you don’t even know what I believe and why! If religious belief is a factor then what is the factor for Jack Knave (who is not a theist), who was also challenging aspects of what is claimed on the Karma thread?

No, I merely suggested your religious beliefs as a possible motivating factor for your misrepresentation and rejection of the facts. If you do it for other reasons though, then fair enough.

And by the way I made no assumptions at all about what you may believe and why. If you insist on lying about things like this, can I suggest for your benefit that you at least try to do it less blatantly?

Quote
2.   By bringing up religious beliefs when they have not been mentioned, it shows that your approach is not one based on getting to the truth of the matter. It is to avoid anything that could potentially lead to a religious explanation for a cause.

No, it was merely to suggest a possible motive for your behaviour. “The truth of the matter” was discussed at length in the body of Reply 154, but you just ignored all that.

Quote
3.   You evaded all of the issues raised in my previous post. No surprise there. Anyone reading your post would think I am against the notion of emergence!

Please stop lying – it’s just boorish. What I actually did was to rebut them point-by-point – pretty much the opposite of evasion.

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Therefore, let me explain again what the quintessential problem is.

By the “the problem” would I be right in thinking that you’re about to highlight again your problem of understanding?

Quote
On the Karma thread, the poster Enki asked a key question: what makes one system adaptive and another non-adaptive where emergence is concerned? The question was asked three times (#546, #560, #581). Each time you responded (#552, #562, #584) you evaded the question by describing what adaptive and non-adaptive systems are. So let the examples and analogies illustrate!

So yes I would be...

If you want to discuss that you can, though you don’t seem to understand the question you’re trying to frame. Are you trying to ask what qualitatively it is about some systems that gives them the property “adaptive”, or are you trying to ask what causes some systems to become adaptive while others do not?

Either way though it’s completely irrelevant to the thrust of the point, which is that adaptive systems manifestly exist and moreover they exist with no top down designer being necessary to make it so.

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In an adaptive system, that which causes it to be adaptive is already present.

Wrong again. It’s the interactions between the constituent parts that give rise to complex adaptive emergent properties – the constituents themselves have none of those characteristics and nor can they be "present" unless the interactions between them occur.

Look, it’s really not my job to educate you about this. I’ve pointed you to reading material several times now but if you don’t want to bother with it and prefer instead to keep making the same mistakes there’s not much more I can do to help you.

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In all of the examples where living organisms are involved, life is already present. In your SIMS analogy, human beings were responsible for the game, so the simulated life in that game (a characteristic for the adaptive system from which any emergence occurs) has its ultimate cause as a result of the computer coding of human beings! So guess what? Your own analogy ends up illustrating why an external cause is needed and suggests possible characteristics of that cause!!

Whoosh!

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Despite all this, you continue to peddle the hypothesis that an adaptive system can result in organic and/or inorganic matter coming together for life to emerge when all of the analogies and examples show that life is present in order for it to be adaptive.

Trouble is, “all this” is just another restatement of your failure to understand the phenomenon, and yes – the hypothesis is that life can emerge from non-life because that’s what all the evidence and reasoning suggests. You seem to think that there’s some kind of mystical special status for the term “life”. Yes it’s a useful definition for creating a barrier from one state to a different one (though not early so clear-cut as you may think – are viruses alive for example?) but there’s no special magic there. Life itself could be described as the point at which non-adaptive systems become adaptive for example as layer of complexity builds upon layer of complexity.
 
Then again, you’d probably have known that had you read something of the subject before presuming to critique it.

By all means come back when you have some grasp of the basics though, and I’ll be happy to talk to you again then.
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Walter

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #182 on: December 23, 2016, 03:27:00 PM »
One of Adrian Mitchell's

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrian_Mitchell
I don't think I've read any poetry since leaving school, English lit. almost did my brains in  :o

ekim

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #183 on: December 23, 2016, 03:45:08 PM »
It's all well and good to define the soul - and there are plenty of variations available, e.g. Aristotle, Descartes, the Catholic Church - but we need to go further and find someone who can demonstrate its existence, and its workings.   Otherwise, we are in the land of pure assertion.

I was thinking this about anti-matter yesterday, about which no doubt people feel incredulity.  But scientists are not content with defining it, they have been doing research on it, and trying to track anti-matter particles, with some success.

I suppose this is difficult with something immaterial, but then how do you know it's there?
Yes that is the difficulty in discussing the various words associated with religions and how they apply to humans.  Your question in a way illustrates it as it implies a subject 'you' a verb 'know' and an object 'it' and invites an investigation into discovering what 'it' is as we would for any matter/energy form.  Organised religions seem to have built on this and have created images or symbols to represent 'it'.  Mystics of many of the religions however invite the individual to 'know' the subject 'I' by 'being' it rather than conceptualising it and there are a variety of methods to help overcome the obstacles preventing it, the most important obstacle being the egotistical 'self' composed of its variety of desires and fears.  There are a variety of symbols representing this, like crossing a river, walking on the water and flying the magic carpet.  Unfortunately it's validity cannot be demonstrated objectively, the individual has to demonstrate it to himself by 'walking the walk rather than just talking the talk'.

wigginhall

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #184 on: December 23, 2016, 04:37:25 PM »
Yes that is the difficulty in discussing the various words associated with religions and how they apply to humans.  Your question in a way illustrates it as it implies a subject 'you' a verb 'know' and an object 'it' and invites an investigation into discovering what 'it' is as we would for any matter/energy form.  Organised religions seem to have built on this and have created images or symbols to represent 'it'.  Mystics of many of the religions however invite the individual to 'know' the subject 'I' by 'being' it rather than conceptualising it and there are a variety of methods to help overcome the obstacles preventing it, the most important obstacle being the egotistical 'self' composed of its variety of desires and fears.  There are a variety of symbols representing this, like crossing a river, walking on the water and flying the magic carpet.  Unfortunately it's validity cannot be demonstrated objectively, the individual has to demonstrate it to himself by 'walking the walk rather than just talking the talk'.

I think personal experience is fine; however, theists such as AB seem to suggest that that is evidence, which I doubt.   After all, what about all the people who have different or contradictory experiences - is this evidence also?   There are people who will swear that they have been abducted by aliens - so do we just believe them? 

I've always been interested in the ego/self distinction, which is found in all kinds of religions and non-theistic ideas (e.g. Jung), but again, it's personal to you or him or her.

For some reason, which I still don't get, some Christians claim objective truth for their beliefs.   
They were the footprints of a gigantic hound!

Alan Burns

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #185 on: December 23, 2016, 07:10:47 PM »

For some reason, which I still don't get, some Christians claim objective truth for their beliefs.
There is only one truth.  You may reach it through objectivity or subjectivity, depending on your personal attributes.  But the most important thing is that you find it.
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

Walter

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #186 on: December 23, 2016, 07:38:57 PM »
There is only one truth.  You may reach it through objectivity or subjectivity, depending on your personal attributes.  But the most important thing is that you find it.
did you find it AB? I would hate to think you've been misled .

Gordon

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #187 on: December 23, 2016, 08:08:30 PM »
There is only one truth.  You may reach it through objectivity or subjectivity, depending on your personal attributes.

If there is only one 'truth' and if this 'truth' depends on personal attributes, as you suggest, then it can't be objective since we don't all have the same attributes - and subjective 'truth' sounds awfully like an oxymoron.

Quote
But the most important thing is that you find it.

Even if you thought you had, how would you check you weren't mistaken?

Alan Burns

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #188 on: December 23, 2016, 09:06:21 PM »
If there is only one 'truth' and if this 'truth' depends on personal attributes, as you suggest, then it can't be objective since we don't all have the same attributes - and subjective 'truth' sounds awfully like an oxymoron.

Even if you thought you had, how would you check you weren't mistaken?
You will know when you find it
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

Sebastian Toe

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #189 on: December 23, 2016, 09:07:31 PM »
There is only one truth.  You may reach it through objectivity or subjectivity, depending on your personal attributes.  But the most important thing is that you find it.
I found it. It is that there is no such thing a a God given soul.
That's the truth.

I find it personally incredulous that you cannot see this obvious truth.
Maybe you need to reinvestigate you methods?
"The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends.'
Albert Einstein

Gordon

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #190 on: December 23, 2016, 09:13:55 PM »
You will know when you find it

Very trite - but since 'know' implied knowledge more is needed than personal conviction: after all, one might be wrong.

So, what knowledge (as opposed to personal conviction) do you have that we can review?

Alan Burns

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #191 on: December 23, 2016, 11:09:15 PM »
Very trite - but since 'know' implied knowledge more is needed than personal conviction: after all, one might be wrong.

So, what knowledge (as opposed to personal conviction) do you have that we can review?
I know this is difficult to comprehend for non believers, but you will know when God makes Himself known to you.  It will be a conversion experience which you can't comprehend until you receive it.  I am not talking from personal experience in this, but from lots of personal witness stories from those who have discovered God in their lives.
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

SusanDoris

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #192 on: December 24, 2016, 07:33:18 AM »
#191
Oh dear, another of those suffocatingly, cotton-woolly posts that, when reading, make me feel as if I'm wading through treacle, or candyfloss!!
The Most Honourable Sister of Titular Indecision.

torridon

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #193 on: December 24, 2016, 07:49:34 AM »
I know this is difficult to comprehend for non believers, but you will know when God makes Himself known to you.  It will be a conversion experience which you can't comprehend until you receive it.  I am not talking from personal experience in this, but from lots of personal witness stories from those who have discovered God in their lives.

That rather undermines your own claim to 'know', if you are merely reporting second hand testimony.  There are many who claim to have been abducted by aliens; that doesn't license me to say I know they have been so abducted.

ekim

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #194 on: December 24, 2016, 11:02:38 AM »
I think personal experience is fine; however, theists such as AB seem to suggest that that is evidence, which I doubt.   After all, what about all the people who have different or contradictory experiences - is this evidence also?   There are people who will swear that they have been abducted by aliens - so do we just believe them? 

I've always been interested in the ego/self distinction, which is found in all kinds of religions and non-theistic ideas (e.g. Jung), but again, it's personal to you or him or her.

For some reason, which I still don't get, some Christians claim objective truth for their beliefs.
I don't think personal experience can be claimed as evidence for somebody else, particularly as such an experience can be misinterpreted or retrofitted to a preconceived  religious persuasion.  Being abducted by aliens or possessed by demons or visited by angels is more or less a subject/object experience.  The mystic's experience tends to be more a transformative experience of the subject 'I', which, if so inclined, he/she will wish to share with others.  Part of the problem in doing so is that the language that is used is usually mythos not logos e.g. the Kingdom of Heaven is like the raising agent in flour which causes the whole to rise i.e. it is expansive and enlivening, and it cannot be pointed to as it is within you. As I said before, the next thing is to provide a method for others to hopefully experience the same, which usually entails 'self' sacrifice in some form.  The reason for this, I suspect, is that the experience is empowering and if that power flows into a self/ego it inflates it and all the associated temptations rise up.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #195 on: December 24, 2016, 01:52:49 PM »
AB,

Quote
I know this is difficult to comprehend for non believers, but you will know when God makes Himself known to you.  It will be a conversion experience which you can't comprehend until you receive it.  I am not talking from personal experience in this, but from lots of personal witness stories from those who have discovered God in their lives.

What I find curious about this kind of thing is not so much that you have a strong opinion about something and some very bad arguments you think should make others think you’re right about that. That’s fine – the rest of us can treat you as just another person with just another strong opinion and no logical bridge of any kind to suggest that you’re right any objective sense.

Rather it’s that you seem to have no arguments or method of any kind to verify to yourself that you’re right.

We know that many people believe in many “truths” just as deeply as you believe in yours, yet you privilege your experience above theirs for some reason.

We know that very deep and strong emotional responses can be triggered by all sorts of factors other than the object the subject thinks has caused it, yet you seem entirely indifferent to finding a process that would eliminate those possibilities so you’d at least have some sort of basis to claim “truth”.

We know that religious beliefs are almost entirely cultural – people believe in the god(s) most proximate to them in place and time – and sure enough, so do you apparently entirely untroubled by you just happening to be in just the right place at the right time for the right god to make himself known rather than, say, a Roman or an Aztec god (in which doubtless you’d have believed just as fervently).

And yet none of these things concern you it seems. Are you not even slightly curious to find a method of some kind to validate your personal religious belief?

I know I would be if I were in your shoes.
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Enki

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #196 on: December 24, 2016, 03:07:25 PM »
From SwordOfThe Spirit's post 171:

Quote
On the Karma thread, the poster Enki asked a key question: what makes one system adaptive and another non-adaptive where emergence is concerned? The question was asked three times (#546, #560, #581). Each time you responded (#552, #562, #584) you evaded the question by describing what adaptive and non-adaptive systems are. So let the examples and analogies illustrate!

Actually that was Ekim, not me, who asked that question.
Sometimes I wish my first word was 'quote,' so that on my death bed, my last words could be 'end quote.'
Steven Wright

ippy

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #197 on: December 24, 2016, 06:27:42 PM »
Ok Gordon. It's a big planet. Give me one example of anywhere in the world I can go to observe something being caused by nothing. Then I'll lose my incredulity. Fair enough?

Until then, I'll stick to my understanding of Newton's laws and observations from the natural world...

Easy Sword go on to YouTube Get the lecture of Jim Al Kalai's about the migration of the European Robin, (Our Robin doesn't migrate).

You will find the method these Robins use to navigate their migration route fits your caused by nothing bill. No pun intended:re bill.

The quantum physics I hear and read about seems to me to have so many things involved with it that don't have any apparent cause, it's also very difficult to understand, Jim Al just about reaches me, you'll probably recognise him when you see him and like most rational thinkers he's a humanist.

ippy

 

Alan Burns

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #198 on: December 24, 2016, 10:26:40 PM »
AB,

What I find curious about this kind of thing is not so much that you have a strong opinion about something and some very bad arguments you think should make others think you’re right about that. That’s fine – the rest of us can treat you as just another person with just another strong opinion and no logical bridge of any kind to suggest that you’re right any objective sense.

Rather it’s that you seem to have no arguments or method of any kind to verify to yourself that you’re right.

We know that many people believe in many “truths” just as deeply as you believe in yours, yet you privilege your experience above theirs for some reason.

We know that very deep and strong emotional responses can be triggered by all sorts of factors other than the object the subject thinks has caused it, yet you seem entirely indifferent to finding a process that would eliminate those possibilities so you’d at least have some sort of basis to claim “truth”.

We know that religious beliefs are almost entirely cultural – people believe in the god(s) most proximate to them in place and time – and sure enough, so do you apparently entirely untroubled by you just happening to be in just the right place at the right time for the right god to make himself known rather than, say, a Roman or an Aztec god (in which doubtless you’d have believed just as fervently).

And yet none of these things concern you it seems. Are you not even slightly curious to find a method of some kind to validate your personal religious belief?

I know I would be if I were in your shoes.
You obviously do not know God.  If you did, you would see things in a totally different light.
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

ippy

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Re: The Illusion of Self
« Reply #199 on: December 25, 2016, 11:14:30 AM »
You obviously do not know God.  If you did, you would see things in a totally different light.

It's so unlikely anyone knows god that you might just as well dismiss the whole idea of a god or gods, other than being indoctrinated into the idea when young there's hardly any good enough reason to take it up in the first place.

Just a thought if conning people was impossible there wouldn't be any such thing as a con artist.

ippy