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| Forum Description: The eternal questions await your answer...
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05-10-2004, 12:29 PM
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#1
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Hip Forums Supporter
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 135
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Observable reality
Is something only real if it is observed? Even if we allow that other intelligent
life exsists somewhere out there, the vast majority of our surrounding
universe is unobserved. No one is there to see it. Is it's exsistance
real without observance? Must there be a higher level of exsistance
beyond this if only for there to be the capacity to observe all that is there.
And, I know what you're going to say, God is there to observe everything.
But if God is the only observer, what verification is there of this observation
taking place. With monotheism there is no corroborating witness. What is
the point of a universe that is not generally, multiply observed? The universe
could be like a movie ghost town with fake fronts and nothing behind and it
wouldn't make any difference, would it?
__________________
One man gathers what another man spills.
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05-10-2004, 01:18 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: London
Posts: 992
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I read a paper recently, it was by a guy who has studied Quantum physics for 30 years. Even though this is the case I do doubt the scientific credibility of him. Still it's an interesting thoery.
"Science has know for a long time that the world isn't really solid. It consists of atoms, with so much space between that the only thing that stops one object from passing through another is the energy field of moving electrons. Then they discovered that the atom isn't really solid, it has a tiny nucleus, with electrons in wide orbit around it. The actual amount of solid matter is so small that if the earth was condensed into neutronium, which means that all the electrons collapsed into the nuclei of each atom, it would be about 1cm across. Then it was discovered that even the nucleus wasn't even solid. It consists of protons and neutrons, with much spacing in between, and these particles are furthur divided into quarks, with more space in between."
Now here's the interesting bit:
"The quarks can be furthur divided into neutrinos. It was then discovered that not only are the quarks made of neutrinos, but the space in between is also made of neutrinos, but vibrating at a different rate. The only difference between substance and nothing is the vibratory rate of the neutrinos. When the scientists experimented to see why the neutrinos would become one thing one moment and something else the next, they discovered that neutrinos always become what they are expected to become. So they have confirmed what mystics said all along; that matter is an illusion created by our consciousness. The wave-particle duality model shows us that these particles are waves until they are observed. Observation localises the waves into particles. The whole universe is nothing but a wave pattern that we make real with our awareness."
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05-10-2004, 02:06 PM
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#3
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Hip Forums Supporter
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 135
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That is damn interesting.
IMHO, the only shot we have for an afterlife is if this
is an illusion. Either a recreation or learning experience
from another reality. We are sent to earth to learn about
time, lets say. It could be teaching us how to better focus
on the now. Of course if now is all there is, it's a busy place
to be.
__________________
One man gathers what another man spills.
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05-10-2004, 02:36 PM
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#4
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High Plains Drifter
Join Date: May 2004
Location: The Wine-dark Sea
Posts: 1,089
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IMHO it may be a mistake to think of our individual minds as separate from the universe. I think that we are part and parcel of the existence of the universe. Why is it we concern ourselves with an afterlife when there is so much to concern ourselves with in the "now?"
Our "being" as individuals allows each of us a unique point of observation in the time-space continuum, and I don't think we have devoted nearly enough time analyzing (or appreciating) just how important each of our points of observation are. The complexity of our individuality is a thing which we take for granted instead of the true wonder which it really is.
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05-10-2004, 03:49 PM
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#5
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: a small green planet in a distant galixy
Age: 61
Posts: 10,358
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well i don't believe exitence requires observation. i believe i may have been unobserved several times in my (this) life and my experience of them is contiguous with the rest of my existence. i do not appear to have ceased to exist during them.
this is one reason i refuse to reject out of hand the possible existence of the none tangable, but do seriously question its resemblence to anything widely believed about it, or that such deffinicians as they attempt to impose on it begin and end other then in speculation
i can see where we are all part of the same wave pattern though
that IS interesting
if we knew how to use that we might all be gods
or the same one one god as the case might be
i wonder what the limitation is that protects us from doing so
this goes along with my speculation that this world is not so much a hell as a nursery
and we are all infant gods, learning how to crawl, perhapse not yet safe to let out of our cribs
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my nation is the imagination
=^^=
.../\...
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05-10-2004, 03:53 PM
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#6
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: London
Posts: 992
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When you are unobserved you are not unobserved, you were observing yourself.
Blessings
Sebbi
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05-10-2004, 07:55 PM
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#7
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er... what's the time?
Join Date: May 2004
Location: a flying circus
Posts: 169
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I think what needs to be considered is that, if we don't observe something, it doesn't matter whether it exists or not.
From a physics point of view, the only things that I could ever possibly care about are those that have somehow influenced me in the past (actions that I have, directly or indirectly, felt the results of), or those that I myself will influence in the future. From my point of view, the existence of everything else is the same as if it didn't exist.
__________________
Most people would sooner die than think; in fact, they do so.
- Bertrand Russell
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05-11-2004, 10:54 AM
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#8
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Hip Forums Supporter
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Chicago, IL
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by sky_pink
I think what needs to be considered is that, if we don't observe something, it doesn't matter whether it exists or not.
From a physics point of view, the only things that I could ever possibly care about are those that have somehow influenced me in the past (actions that I have, directly or indirectly, felt the results of), or those that I myself will influence in the future. From my point of view, the existence of everything else is the same as if it didn't exist.
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Well, if things are significant because they have influenced you, then we are
back to the whole universe. The big bang leading in domino effect to earth,
evolution and finally you posting the above. And indeed many things we
never encounter have a profound effect on us. You may have never met the
person who introduced your great grandparents which led to your grandpa
which led to your dad which led to you. But you didn't see that person and
have no idea how real or not they are.
Observable reality from a personal point of view is a really small circle. The
range of your eyeball. Even on the edge of the Grand Canyon that is a small
area relative to the universe. Unless there is a higher state of being, most
of all there is floats meaninglessly in vacumous space or at the bottom of the
ocean. What a dumb ass reality this is if the majority of it is hidden, lifeless,
unfullfilled and meaningless.
__________________
One man gathers what another man spills.
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05-11-2004, 11:19 AM
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#9
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Member
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 438
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by sky_pink
I think what needs to be considered is that, if we don't observe something, it doesn't matter whether it exists or not.
.
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Very true. The whole world may be an illusion, but what is the point of dwelling on that possibility? Thinking concretely, assuming the earth is real and other people are real seems the most reposnsible thing. When everyone assumed only heaven and God were real then they didn't try and protect species and the environment. Even now it is religious extremeists who deny the realiaty of global warming. What we have here, can sense and interact with, this is our world and we need to get on with saving it rather than trying to escape to some 'bigger' reality.
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05-11-2004, 04:20 PM
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#10
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er... what's the time?
Join Date: May 2004
Location: a flying circus
Posts: 169
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Woog
Well, if things are significant because they have influenced you, then we are
back to the whole universe. The big bang leading in domino effect to earth,
evolution and finally you posting the above. And indeed many things we
never encounter have a profound effect on us. You may have never met the
person who introduced your great grandparents which led to your grandpa
which led to your dad which led to you. But you didn't see that person and
have no idea how real or not they are.
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That's not entirely true, we're not back to the whole universe. Look at this:
The fastest way anything that may concern me, any information can go is the speed of light. So, if something happens so far away (and the Universe is pretty big) light cannot reach me, it's something outside this "light cone". The light cone is my universe, it's my whole past and future, but there are many things in the Universe that are not inside it.
__________________
Most people would sooner die than think; in fact, they do so.
- Bertrand Russell
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