RE: Question about meaning and perception of reality from a theist.
January 8, 2012 at 4:39 am
(This post was last modified: January 8, 2012 at 4:48 am by genkaus.)
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: If they are real they must be universal constants. If you are saying only that they exist they do not.
Nonsense. A lot of things exist without being universal constants.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: Consciousness can't be observed, just like gravity cant be observed. We observe the effects of consciousness, not consciousness itself.
No object can actually be observed. What you are observing is the energy being reflected or radiated from that object. It is the effect of the object that you observe, not the object itself.
Guess what genius, observation of consequences of an objects presence is the same as observing the object itself.
Neither gravity nor consciousness are universal constants.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: Time and space are not real. They have not always existed, at least in theory. They are a constrcuct neccessary for the observation of physical reality.
Where did you get your high school degree? Time and space are not real? They do not exist?
Existence itself depends on time and space. To exist means to be at a particular point at a particular time.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: Knives aren't real. They exist in physical reality. If knives were real they would be universal constants. Knives would have always existed everywhere in the universe. If knives were real then the reason the apple falls from the tree is "knives".
Where the hell did you get the idea that everything that is real must be a universal constant? That's frankly the most idiotic thing I've ever heard of.
To exist means to be at some place at some time. It does not require to be at all places at all times.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: If you say the purpose of the knife is cutting tomatoes and I say it is stabbing people we have differing perceptions about the purpose of the knife. Knives aren't real, they have no inherent purpose. If you believe that consciousness is real, it would have inherent purpose, what that purpose is is open for debate. If you believe consciousness merely exists in time and space there can be no real purpose to it. Just as there can be no purpose for knives. Do with them what you will in that case, it doesn't matter.
Nothing in existence has an inherent purpose. Both knives and consciousness are real and neither has an inherent purpose.
I think you are confusing "inherent" purpose with "real" purpose. Purposes are assigned by a consciousness. When the objects they are assigned to are put to that purpose, it becomes real. Very much so. It need not be inherent, i.e. it need not be assigned universally.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: As I stated before it lies in the terms "real" and "exist". I believe you are using the term "real" incorrectly. The part I bolded is exactly my argument; consciousness is responsible for the creation of the universe and everything in it. Consciousness is real rather than something temporal and spacial. It is universal constant.
Actually, what I said is not your argument.
Consciousness did not create the universe or anything in it. Multiple consciousness are responsible for identifying how the universe works and creating concepts and laws about it. All of these were temporal and not universal constants.
And you are the on using the terms 'exist' and 'real' incorrectly. To exist means to be within the context of space and time.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: the meaning cannot remain if there is no meaning. You percieve that it remains because you are conscious of it. If ciousness is temporal and exists only as an emergent function of complex systems such as the brain, once all consciousness expires any and all meaning expires with it. meaning will no longer exist. It won't exist because it isn't real. Meaning can't be real unless consciousness is. you may belive it is real, but it is an irraltional belief unless you also believe consciousness is universal constant.
To be real and to exist does not mean that it should be independent of time. Something can be real and later on cease to exist.
Seriously, where the hell did you get the idea that everything that is real must be a universal constant?
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: Surely. Unless consciousness is real, however, that meaning is pure perception and is illusory. whatever meaning someone else has ascribed to your life will cease once they do. Whatever meaning they ascribed wasn't real, it was just perception.
Why would being a matter of perception make something illusory? You can only perceive what is real.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: You must believe that after your life has meaning, that meaning cannot be taken away.
No.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: No. that statement requires no belief about whether your life already has meaning. That you wrote it, however, does. That you were able to conceive the sentence shows that you hold beliefs about meaning. If you hold beliefs about it you must be aware of it. if you are aware of it you hold it in your conscious. If you hold it in your conscious you must believe that you have already given meaning to your life.
No. Being aware of the possibility of meaning does not mean that I have already given meaning to my life.
I'm aware of many things that do not apply to my life. Some of them I even wish to apply to my life. For example, I hold beliefs about parenthood and what it means. I am fully capable of doing that by observation of other parents without actually being a parent myself. Similarly, i can hold beliefs about meaning of life without having decided upon the meaning of my life.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: My questions are these:
Do you believe meaning is real?
If so does it come from consciousness?
If consciousness comes from the brain then can things without brains have meaning?
If meaning comes from consciousness then when people are not conscious do their lives lose meaning?
Yes. But it is not a universal constant.
Yes.
Yes. Things with brain can assign meaning to them.
Not necessarily. There is meaning attached to their lives by other entities with brains.
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: No. I believe in reality. reality is the only thing that is real. things which exist within reality only do that, "they exist within reality" they are not "real".
Things that exist within reality are not real? How can you even hold such irrational ideas where the the sentence itself is self-refuting?
Quote:Answer this: If "god" has a meaning for your life, then that meaning is also held within god's consciousness. Why would that be any more real than the meaning I hold within my consciousness?
(January 7, 2012 at 7:04 pm)amkerman Wrote: "God" is reality. God is real. God exists independently of our ideas about or observations of God. God does not have meaning for my life, God is the meaning. God is consciousness as universal constant and all physical forces which created the universe. God is incomprehensible.
God is reality. Your consciousness exists within reality so your consciousness exists within God.
God is reality. meaning is real. meaning is a part of reality. Meaning exists apart from our ideas about it. Meaning is a part of God. it something God gives of Godsself to reality. it is the same always and the same for everyone. Whether or not the meaning you percieve coincides with meaning in reality depends on what meaning actually is and what you perceive meaning to be.
Because God is reality and God's meaning is a part of God, so it it real.
Now you seem to have devolved into incoherent babbling.
Well, whatever argument you are trying to present here, which I'm not sure can be even called that, seems to rest on the premise that consciousness called god is equivalent to reality. That is a false premise and it is axiomatically false since it goes against the first law of existence. So the rest of the argument is automatically invalid and nonsensical.
(January 7, 2012 at 4:59 pm)amkerman Wrote: You have a very common misunderstanding of the difference between something that exists and something that is real. Something that is real by definition exists apart from our observations of our ideas and opinions about what they are. Neurons and "the brain" are not real. They merely exist in reality. We believe that physical interactions over billions of years eventually formed neurons and brains. before the necessary physical interactions took place neurons and brains did not exist. They could not exist. They arent real. They only exist because of our ideas about how they were created, which is through universal forces, those forces which are responsible for the creation of the universe and everything in it.
Go consult a dictionary about the definition of reality and existence before you accuse me of having the misconception and present me with this inane argument.
Something that did not exist before was not real before. That does not mean that it could never exist or never be real. At the very least, try not to present me with so mundanely self-refuting bromides such as "what exists within reality is not real".
(January 7, 2012 at 4:59 pm)amkerman Wrote: Agreed. And even if we never interpreted how reality works, they would still exist. They are constants. They have always existed and the fact that we have observed them and called them universal constants is mere happenstance. They exist indepently of our ideas about or observations of what they are.
The laws of nature would. The constants would not. They are conceptual values created by humans to interpret the laws of nature. If we did not exist, no interpretation would take place and these constants would never be created.