On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 10:18:09 -0500, jak1...@webtv.net (Jack McKinney) wrote on
"Dreamed Up Reality":
>To be fair, this subject is too hot to handle for most people, for it
>would mean the end of life as we currently know it....
That will happen anyway. The old stories, though needed
to remain 'human', are being replaced.
The cultures collapsed several years ago, they have been deteriorating since, at some time they will disintegrate.
'Humans' may go extinct. From dust to dust and dust in between,
a matter of perspective. 'Humans' are not important at all,
thus the situation simply doesn't care.
And :
www.newscientist.com " What is reality?"
This week's special issue is a user's guide to the ultimate question of
existence. In eight articles, we explore how to define reality, what it could be
and whether it exists. Does particle physics have the answer, or is mathematics
the ultimate reality? Is the universe all inside your head? And how can we be
sure we're not living in a simulation? -----------------------
--
Frederick Martin McNeill
Phone: 858 206-3517
Poway, California, USA
Email mmcne...@fuzzysys.com
***************************************
"Problems cannot be solved at the same level of awareness that created them."
~ Albert Einstein "The difference between death and taxes is that death doesn’t get worse every time Congress meets." -- Will Rogers
**************************************
There is strong evidence that this is much more than just a simple
theory...
Book Review of 'Dreamed Up Reality'
By Dirk Vander Ploeg - 1 year 1 week ago Schizophrenic Idealism
By Bernardo Kastrup
The philosophy of idealism, defended through the ages by great minds
like those of George Berkeley, Immanuel Kant, Georg Hegel, Gottfried
Leibniz, and John McTaggart, entails that all reality is ultimately just
a conscious experience. In other words, unlike realism which postulates
an external, objective world 'out there' triggering our perceptions
idealism postulates the existence of nothing but our conscious
perceptions themselves. As such, idealism is a much more parsimonious
and cautious worldview. Yet, somehow, realism has come to completely
*dominate* the worldview of our culture.
Most of us hardly question the assumption that there is a reality 'out
there' independent of our minds; that is, that nature would still go
merrily on even if nobody were looking. Leaving aside the *scientific*
evidence to the contrary, one wonders why realism has come to be
synonymous with our culture's collective intuition of reality.
The problem is that most people, when considering the hypothesis of
idealism, hardly think it through consequently. And in pondering just a
half-baked, 'schizophrenic' version of idealism, contradictions arise
that seem to render it untenable. This is not a sign of lazy thinking or
stupidity on the part of any one of us; it's a side-effect of the
*cultural fog* we live immersed in. You see, in meditating about
idealism most of us still unconsciously retain some key assumptions of
realism. It is these hidden, unconscious assumptions that give rise to
the contradictions, not idealism itself. For instance, we tend to retain
the assumption that minds are inside brains. And then, given that brains
are clearly separate from one another, a contradiction arises. After
all, if reality is only in the 'mind' (meaning, only in the brain), how
come we all share the same reality? That doesn't seem possible; reality
must be external to minds so we can all look at the same reality from
the perspective of different brains. There seems to be no other possible
explanation for the fact that we all seem to share the experience of a
common reality.
Therefore, idealism must be a fallacy. The argument above is malformed
and wrong. It judges idealism while assuming key features of realism.
Namely, it assumes that minds are inside objective structures of an
external reality: brains. But according to idealism there are no such
things as objective structures in a reality external to mind; instead,
it's all in the mind.
So the mind is not in the brain; it's the brain that is in the mind. The
dream is not in the body; it's the body that is in the dream. As such,
bodies and brains can be seen as space-time anchors for a certain
point-of-view taken by mind within a kind of palpable, continuous dream.
The fact that brains are separate from each other in the canvas of such
dream says absolutely nothing about the limitations of mind as far as
coordinating a dream shared by its many points-of-view in a very
consistent manner. When an idealist says that 'it's all in here,'
pointing at this head, he is at best expressing himself metaphorically
and, at worst, being unconsciously inconsistent with his own position.
To a true idealist, reality is not in the head; it's the head that is in
the mind.
Ultimately, the dichotomy idealism-versus-realism may be no dualism at
all. To say that everything is a construct within a mind is not to deny
any of the qualities of experience: the concreteness, solidity, or
continuity of things. This form of monistic idealism does not deny
physics insofar as the latter entails models for predicting how things
behave empirically; it only denies some of our ontological assumptions
about how our experience of such behaviors comes into being. In other
words, monistic idealism questions only our myths and stories, not our
empirical observations. Such non-dualistic view entails merely that the
spectrum of qualities normally associated to constructs of the
imagination extends further beyond our ordinary intuition as far as
their potential concreteness, solidity, and continuity than we ever
dared think. I wanted to write this article today to mark the release of
my second book, Dreamed up Reality. I wanted to give you a taste of the key idea I dwell
upon in it; the idea that, ultimately, all data about reality â€"
about what may or may not be going on resides in the mind. From a strict
epistemic perspective, the 'external' world is a story we tell
ourselves; a non-provable myth, reasonable and self-consistent as it may
appear. As such, if one wants to set out on a path of exploration
unhindered by the cultural fog we live in, one must go back to basics
and start from within the mind: What does one really know from
experience and what is, instead, myth and story-telling? This was my
attempt many years ago and I now decided, through my new book, to share
that story.
If you would like more information or to purchase this book from
amazon.com simply click on its title: Dreamed Up Reality:
LET'S SEE, SHOULD I TAKE THE BLUE PILL OR THE RED PIL ???
> On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 10:18:09 -0500, jak1...@webtv.net (Jack McKinney) wrote on
> "Dreamed Up Reality":
>>To be fair, this subject is too hot to handle for most people, for it
>>would mean the end of life as we currently know it....
> That will happen anyway. The old stories, though needed
> to remain 'human', are being replaced.
> The cultures collapsed several years ago, they have been > deteriorating since, at some time they will disintegrate.
> 'Humans' may go extinct. From dust to dust and dust in between,
> a matter of perspective. 'Humans' are not important at all,
> thus the situation simply doesn't care.
Does it matter if the situation doesn't care?
Some humans care...and that is what is experienced.
With human constraints, how is there certainty about what the situation is or how humans are perceived by what ever else may be? Seems, 'We don't know all of what we don't know."
And we may be wrong about what we think we know.
> There is strong evidence that this is much more than just a simple
> theory...
> Book Review of 'Dreamed Up Reality'
> By Dirk Vander Ploeg - 1 year 1 week ago Schizophrenic Idealism
> By Bernardo Kastrup
> The philosophy of idealism, defended through the ages by great minds
> like those of George Berkeley, Immanuel Kant, Georg Hegel, Gottfried
> Leibniz, and John McTaggart, entails that all reality is ultimately
> just a conscious experience.
That's not so with Kant's critical idealism, unless "all reality" above excludes the unconditioned, or things in themselves that are not all mental entities (or at least unknowable whether that is the case or not).
Immanuel Kant: "The term 'idealist' is not, therefore, to be understood as applying to those who deny the existence of external objects of the senses, but only to those who do not admit that their existence is known through immediate perception, and who therefore conclude that we can never, by way of any possible experience, be completely certain as to their reality. Before exhibiting our paralogism in all its deceptive illusoriness, I have first to remark that we must necessarily distinguish two types of idealism, the transcendental and the empirical. By transcendental idealism I mean the doctrine that appearances are to be regarded as being, one and all, representations only, not things in themselves, and that time and space are therefore only sensible forms of our intuition, not determinations given as existing by themselves, nor conditions of objects viewed as things in themselves.
". . . Neither the transcendental object which underlies outer appearances nor that which underlies inner intuition, is in itself either matter or a thinking being, but a ground (to us unknown) of the appearances which supply to us the empirical concept of the former as well as of the latter mode of existence. If then, as this critical argument obviously compels us to do, we hold fast to the rule above established, and do not push our questions beyond the limits within which possible experience can present us with its object, we shall never dream of seeking to inform ourselves about the objects of our senses as they are in themselves, that is, out of all relation to the senses. But if the psychologist takes appearances for things in themselves, and as existing in and by themselves, then whether he be a materialist who admits into his system nothing but matter alone, or a spiritualist who admits only thinking beings (that is, beings with the form of our inner sense), or a dualist who accepts both, he will always, owing to this misunderstanding, be entangled in pseudo-rational speculations as to how that which is not a thing in itself, but only the appearance of a thing in general, can exist by itself.
". . . We are justified, [it is argued], in maintaining that only what is in ourselves can be perceived immediately, and that my own existence is the sole object of a mere perception. The existence, therefore, of an actual object outside me (if this word 'me' be taken in the [P 345] intellectual [not in the empirical] sense) is never given directly in perception. Perception is a modification of inner sense, and the existence of the outer object can be added to it only in thought, as being its outer cause, and accordingly as being inferred.
"Accordingly, as regards the relation of the perception to its [ultimate] cause [minus spatiotemporal relations], it always remains doubtful whether the cause be internal or external; whether, that is to say, all the so-called outer perceptions are not a mere play of our inner sense, or whether they stand in relation to actual external [as transcendent] objects as their cause. At all events, the existence of the latter is only inferred, and is open to all the dangers of inference, whereas the object of inner sense (I myself with all my representations) is immediately perceived, and its existence does not allow of being doubted."
> In other words, unlike realism which postulates an external,
> objective world 'out there' triggering our perceptions idealism
> postulates the existence of nothing but our conscious perceptions
> themselves. As such, idealism is a much more parsimonious and
> cautious worldview. Yet, somehow, realism has come to completely
> *dominate* the worldview of our culture.
As seen above, Kant doesn't doubt the external, objective world that has experiential evidence for itself; nor discard either the necessity or the possibility of the metempirical - only that the latter is a product of reflective thought and thus subject to its proliferation of multiple abstract schemes. The 'noumenal' can be explored by practical philosophy that feigns no positive evidence for its arguments, but not theoretical philosophy, which is best spent with efforts directed at the empirical world.
On Monday, October 8, 2012 1:11:49 AM UTC-4, Sir Frederick Martin wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 10:18:09 -0500, jak1...@webtv.net (Jack McKinney) wrote on "Dreamed Up Reality": >To be fair, this subject is too hot to handle for most people, for it >would mean the end of life as we currently know it.... That will happen anyway. The old stories, though needed to remain 'human', are being replaced. The cultures collapsed several years ago, they have been deteriorating since, at some time they will disintegrate. 'Humans' may go extinct. From dust to dust and dust in between, a matter of perspective. 'Humans' are not important at all, thus the situation simply doesn't care. ---------------------------- http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0056A1HI8/ref=docs-os-doi_0 "Dreamed Up Reality": Diving into the Mind to Uncover the Astonishing Hidden Tale of Nature -- Bernardo Kastrup (Author) ----------------------- And : www.newscientist.com " What is reality?" This week's special issue is a user's guide to the ultimate question of existence. In eight articles, we explore how to define reality, what it could be and whether it exists. Does particle physics have the answer, or is mathematics the ultimate reality? Is the universe all inside your head? And how can we be sure we're not living in a simulation? ----------------------- -- Frederick Martin McNeill Phone: 858 206-3517 Poway, California, USA Email mmcne...@fuzzysys.com *************************************** "Problems cannot be solved at the same level of awareness that created them." ~ Albert Einstein "The difference between death and taxes is that death doesn t get worse every time Congress meets." -- Will Rogers **************************************
Ok, let's assume Sir is correct here. Even if we are 'less than pond scum' on cosmic scales, that still does not remedy the problem of the 'where to from here' delimma. By this, I argue that we have "choices" about our STATE. We can "choose" to remain quagmired in this bleakness of 'nothingness from nothingness' mindset, or...we can "choose" something better.
Or can we? That perhaps, is the question at hand.
In the end, my own base logic tells me this is 'just an experience'. We are 'experience' machines. This is not to jusfity the 'insane asylum' scenario, where everyone might fly off into their own 'invented' reality [for sake of whatever state of experience they might want]...although, there is already some truth to this, as we all exist within our own frame of minds as relating to the unique memories of past experiences we all carry.
The 'object' to me, is to find that 'BEST' experience this place and time offers. Perhaps it even affords itself as a matter of our evolution...best fit and all, with some caveat for 'advancement' [as seen by our best and brightest which lead us through time].
It's appears to be a trial and error bumping heads game plan nature has for us, where through sheer empirical hindsight, do we eventually find our best 'path from here' direction to take.
For me, I have yet to see anything to deter my own chosen path toward a Christ-like state as a POSSIBILITY in that mind-state, where, even as less than pond scum to cosmic nothingness, we can 'create' things like worth and value among ourselves as a matter of the virtues we find within [and then attempt to nurture and grow such virtues].
I do not know what 'love' is. It is electrical; chemical in nature; tied to our nervous systems for sure. And yet, it exists also on the simple airiness of thought itself, and can be cultivated, nurtured, and grown by the 'virtues' we promulugate within ourselves [again, by the very thought we carry and pursue].
So, I'm betting my wager on 'love' as that path of best hope from which our 'next' step should be taken across time [from this point of desert nothingness, and 'less than scum' reality]. Love [whatever it is], appears to be 'real enough'. And if there is no significanse, then perhaps we had better get busy and 'invent' some. Somewhere, in that vast desert, there just might be an oasis of some sort; at least sustaining of our continued survival if nothing else.
On Mon, Oct 8, 2012, 10:49am From: rm...@dcemail.com (chelloveck) On 10/8/2012 5:26 AM, Jack McKinney wrote:
<snip>
> That's not so with Kant's critical
> idealism, unless "all reality" above
> excludes the unconditioned, or things in
> themselves that are not all mental
> entities (or at least unknowable whether
> that is the case or not).
I think it is a pointless exercise to quibble about the exact nature of
Kant's position on the nature of reality, since from point of view, few
if any humans will ever be able to understand all there is about
reality... I do believe that Kant's ideas are much closer to the notion
that it is the properties of mind that create matter as opposed to the
various properties of matter that create the mind...