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Obvious Leo wrote:Leo, I'm trying to get a handle on your theory. You seem to be saying that complexity naturally occurs. But the theory of entropy, which all physicists seem to accept, says that in any closed system, disorder always increases. Their explanation for the complexity we see around us is that this is a localized increase in organization, while the overall disorder in the universe is decreasing. Now I'll admit that the entropy theory has never been obvious to me, because it would require the universe at the time of the big bang to be more organized than the universe is at present, which seems weird. Perhaps the physicists' definition of disorder is such that the early universe was very organized, even though that's at odds with the common sense understanding of disorder.Quotidian wrote: why is the Universe just such a way, that self-organizing systems - organisms - can arise within it?Because it cannot be otherwise. The universe didn't have to organise itself in the way it did but it had to become more complex. This is a fundamental law of complexity because this is simple cause and effect. Simple systems become more complex and this process cannot stop until the whole process starts all over again. Life on earth didn't have to bring forth homo sapiens but if the right conditions obtain it must become more complex until a single species emerges at the top and becomes the uber-predator. This is absolutely mandated by the complexity paradigm and then the evolution must stop. It stops because the the uber-predator has seized control of the whole network and the future can no longer be self-organising. The future becomes designed.
Leo wrote:there can be no question that Buddhism is teleological, and therefore reductionist by definition. Life can have no purpose any more than the universe can have a purpose. Purpose is a construction of the human mind and thus only minds can have purposeWe really need to get straight what the meaning of 'reductionism' is. Basically it is explaining something complex in terms of its simpler components. In the case of biology, biological reductionism nearly always appeals to genes, evolutionary theory, and lately neurological sciences to argue that even though humans appear to be willing, intelligent subjects, what they really are is 'nothing but' {a species of hominid/expression of the selfish gene/a 'moist robot'} - in short, something other than, and simpler than, an intelligent human subject (or, God forbid, a soul.) Something that basically those in lab coats can, in principle, understand and explain.
Obvious Leo wrote:With any luck an autopoietic philosophy will put the free will arguments to bed forever. You could be a pig-headed bugger and not respond to the cells' request. You could literally die of thirst solely by an act of will. Organisms without brains don't have this option. If water is available the cells will get it.
Belinda Wrote: Natural selection causes living species to become more complex within the demands of their environments.We must realize that there is a possibility that there was never a beginning; again complexity is caused by ignorance as a result of a lower vibration state of mind. What is complex to you now is simple to you when you live in your highest vibration state. The secret is to view or remember that all dispersed mind is one mind. The confusion is caused by the nature and existence of duality which is present for the sole purpose of studying nature, studying the one mind.
Wilson Wrote: Says that in any closed system, disorder always increasesI would like to correct something which is often repeated, what we see as disorder is actually not disorder but natural potentials. We see them as disorder because based on our ignorance. Chaos is actually organised when viewed with a higher mind, when viewed with a 3rd density awareness it is seen as disorder.
Belinda wrote:Obvious Leo, I am puzzled by your assertion that the universe is becoming more complex instead of more disorganised. Natural selection causes living species to become more complex within the demands of their environments. But individuals use energy to sustain their complex organisations and eventually they revert to their simpler component chemicals, even inorganic individuals such as lumps of sandstone become disorganised by the workings of the superior energy of water. There seems therefore to be tension between forces of organisation and forces of disorganisation.That the universe as a whole is becoming more complex is unquestionable. At the big bang it was nothing more than a dense ball of ionised plasma. It contained no matter whatsoever, only energy. Matter emerged very quickly but this was very simple matter. Almost all of the matter in the early universe was in the form of hydrogen atoms only, the simplest form of matter. There was some helium and also a very small trace of lithium, which are the 2nd and 3rd most simple atoms. Some of this matter formed into stars and the stars formed into galaxies. Within galaxies stars go through a cyclical process called stellar evolution where diffuse clouds of gas coalesce into stars which can explode when they exhaust their fuel and the contents of these stars are blasted out to form new clouds. These clouds contain the more complex atoms which form within stars during this process. It takes at least 3 cycles of stellar evolution before a galaxy can contain the entire suite of atoms in the periodic table, and stars with planetary systems cannot form until this time. Depending on the masses of the stars so formed this can take 5-10 billion years. This is a very brief summary because stellar physics is a very detailed science of its own. As you can see the universe has evolved more and more complex structure. There are no exceptions to this. Every galaxy in the universe has done this, as far as can be determined. Planetary systems can host life which can evolve into minds and minds are the most informationally complex entities in the known universe. Our universe has been steadily evolving for 13.8 billion years.
Belinda wrote:There seems therefore to be tension between forces of organisation and forces of disorganisation.I think you answered your own question, but clearly order wins out since no exception to this law has ever been observed. This tension you refer to is often called "the edge of chaos". Complexity from chaos is a mathematical fact.
Felix wrote:That's the same point I brought up, Belinda....The infinite regress is metaphysical ********, as is the notion of a first cause. It also contradicts physical law in the form of the first law of thermodynamics. However you are dead right. The energy content of the universe is finite and thus this cosmic evolution must end. It ends with a big bang and then does it all over again. It has done this eternally and will continue to do this eternally.
Obvious Leo said his philiosophy is based two basic premises, which are: (1) The universe is everything that exists, and (2) All effects are preceded by causes. Re: the second premise, don't we have the problem of an infinite regress of causes? This problem remains if you say the Universe is eternal and cyclical rather than transient, because the causal chain and inclination towards complexity would end at the Big Crunch/Big Bang.
Chaosnature wrote:In your dying of thirst analogy what is the cause and what is the effect?The effect is death and the cause is dehydration by an act of will. If somebody wants to suggest that a human being cannot will this then the burden of proof lies with them. That causation operates top-down and bottom-up is unarguable but I'd love to see somebody try.
Quotidian wrote:I have noticed that whenever anything from classical philosophy is brought up you tend to lapse into profanities.I write in my own language and make no apology for it. Furthermore I hold to the a priori assumption of my entire culture. If it looks like ******** it probably is.
You might consider looking at that.
Obvious Leo wrote:Quotidian. You explain your existence as part of a plan and I explain mine as a part of a process. Which of us is reductionist?Regards Leo
Leo wrote:You explain your existence as part of a plan and I explain mine as a part of a process. Which of us is reductionist?Earlier, you said 'there can be no question that Buddhism is teleological, and therefore reductionist by definition.'
Obvious Leo wrote: Quotidian. You explain your existence as part of a plan and I explain mine as a part of a process. Which of us is reductionist?Regards Leo
Quotidian wrote:What 'plan' have I referred to? Where I have I said that I explain my existence as part of a plan?Quotidian.
As the thread begins with a criticism of 'reductionism', it is important to say exactly what that means. That is not peripheral, it is central, and you haven't answered that question.
-- Updated August 6th, 2014, 10:58 pm to add the following --
As to the statement 'the universe is all there is', it is quite meaningless. Many eminent scientists nowadays propose that 'this universe' is one of trillions. Generally speaking, the assertion that 'cosmos is all there is' (which is Carl Sagan's catch-phrase) is simply an assertion that all that is real, is what can be discovered through microscopes and telescopes.
-- Updated August 6th, 2014, 11:02 pm to add the following --
As to the statement that 'all effects are preceded by causes', that nowadays is generally taken to mean 'physical causes', i.e, the kinds of causes that are amenable to quantification and scientific analysis. When it comes to many of the factors that govern human affairs, whether they are historical, social, cultural, or other, the relationship between cause and effect is often difficult or impossible to discern and are thus not a matter for scientific analysis.
Leo wrote: I made it clear that I can only discuss my philosophy within my own defined axioms and if you can't do this we have nothing further to say to each other on this matterYou have a lot to learn if you can only debate a topic within a confined template that you have designed for yourself. Philosophy has no boundaries.
Leo Wrote: There is nothing to be believed in this philosophy and it is not founded on belief. The effect is easier to analyse as you would know.Leo, please do not try and define philosophy as if you where the founder of philosophy. Belief is a system that leads impeccable philosopher to investigating, once the belief is investigated and answers discovered the belief is then upgraded to knowing. So do not strike out belief from a philosopher process
Chaosnature wrote: ...struggled very hard to make sense of those two statements made "'the universe is all there is'" for one did not make sense to me too."The universe is all there is":
Is this not what we are still debating? That such statement can also be classified as reductionism. By quoting that the universe is all there is; you are implying that the universe has an outside to it and has boundaries and therefore something else houses the universe l o l, you shot yourself in the foot Leo.
Secondly,
Cause, what is the cause?
If you can answer that then we are still in the 3rd density reality which means there is something greater than cause so to speak.
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