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New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
#61
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
(January 9, 2018 at 2:59 am)vulcanlogician Wrote: I tend not to view the eternal recurrence as a metaphysical proposition. Rather as a thought experiment designed to show where the locus of meaning lies in life. Whether one's life is a one shot deal or perpetually repeats, the meaning of that life is found within that life.

Ought we not lead a life that we affirm? So much that we would live it again and again? What kind of life would that be? Don't look elsewhere for answers. Why not ask oneself?

You're the one who would have to live that life again and again were it to eternally recur.

The question isn't whether life repeats to eternity or not.

The question is: Why not live life as if it did?
In your reasoning, you may not be considering that ALL possibilities will repeat infinitely.  That means it doesn't matter what you choose to do because you will do all of them (if it's possible and if you're causally determined - ie no freewill).

If you have freewill, then it's all moot because freewill isn't causally determined.  But then you have to explain where the freewill came from (ie something from nothing because freewill cannot be caused).

We can escape all those problems by simply dismissing causality.  There are no things, events and there is just the 1 thing and the 1 now, both of which last eternally because we've dismissed causality as ridiculous.

(January 9, 2018 at 2:12 am)Whateverist Wrote: When I responded to the part about a flash of light bookended by endless darkness, the me's I had in mind which would replace my 'light' weren't narrowly this me.  I was thinking just me's appropriate to their starting conditions.  So essentially me's in potential, but that's enough.  What difference does it make?  I wouldn't want a lot of memories and biases from a bunch of dead people in the past clogging up my experience, no one to come would want that from me.
It seems you're describing the player of all the parts as being you. And I agree. All the "you's" that arise, "you" will play their parts.
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#62
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
(January 9, 2018 at 2:12 am)Whateverist Wrote: I wouldn't want a lot of memories and biases from a bunch of dead people in the past clogging up my experience, no one to come would want that from me.

Forgetting is a feature, not a bug.  Wink
I am the Infantry. I am my country’s strength in war, her deterrent in peace. I am the heart of the fight… wherever, whenever. I carry America’s faith and honor against her enemies. I am the Queen of Battle. I am what my country expects me to be, the best trained Soldier in the world. In the race for victory, I am swift, determined, and courageous, armed with a fierce will to win. Never will I fail my country’s trust. Always I fight on…through the foe, to the objective, to triumph overall. If necessary, I will fight to my death. By my steadfast courage, I have won more than 200 years of freedom. I yield not to weakness, to hunger, to cowardice, to fatigue, to superior odds, For I am mentally tough, physically strong, and morally straight. I forsake not, my country, my mission, my comrades, my sacred duty. I am relentless. I am always there, now and forever. I AM THE INFANTRY! FOLLOW ME!
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#63
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
(January 10, 2018 at 6:29 am)Agnosty Wrote:
(January 9, 2018 at 2:12 am)Whateverist Wrote: When I responded to the part about a flash of light bookended by endless darkness, the me's I had in mind which would replace my 'light' weren't narrowly this me.  I was thinking just me's appropriate to their starting conditions.  So essentially me's in potential, but that's enough.  What difference does it make?  I wouldn't want a lot of memories and biases from a bunch of dead people in the past clogging up my experience, no one to come would want that from me.
It seems you're describing the player of all the parts as being you.  And I agree.  All the "you's" that arise, "you" will play their parts.


I think me's makes more sense than you's, as they will all have a 'me' kind of experience, something that is no more linked to myself than to anyone else living. I just don't think it is important to find a unique eternal pathway for every human being, nor do I think there is one .. well apart from our collective role in the web of life. But there is no more "I" in "web" than there is in "team".

It would be like following the path of one raindrop for years. Its parts will be spread through other raindrops in future iterations. It just doesn't matter.
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#64
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
(January 10, 2018 at 6:29 am)Agnosty Wrote: In your reasoning, you may not be considering that ALL possibilities will repeat infinitely.  That means it doesn't matter what you choose to do because you will do all of them (if it's possible and if you're causally determined - ie no freewill).

If you have freewill, then it's all moot because freewill isn't causally determined.  But then you have to explain where the freewill came from (ie something from nothing because freewill cannot be caused).

We can escape all those problems by simply dismissing causality.  There are no things, events and there is just the 1 thing and the 1 now, both of which last eternally because we've dismissed causality as ridiculous.

What I meant was more along the lines of this:


Quote:In the aftermath of Nehamas (1985), an influential line of readings has argued that the thought to which Nietzsche attributed such “fundamental” significance was never a cosmological or theoretical claim at all—whether about time, or fate, or the world, or the self—but instead a practical thought experiment designed to test whether one’s life has been good. The broad idea is that one imagines the endless return of life, and one’s emotional reaction to the prospect reveals something about how valuable one’s life has been, much as ... a spouse’s question about whether one would marry again evokes—and indeed, fairly demands—an assessment of the state of the marriage
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/nietz...erRecuSame

So, in one reading, the eternal recurrence is a thought experiment through which one might assess the state of one's own life. You can read it as a metaphysical postulate, as many have done. But I think more value lies in taking it as a thought experiment.

I believe choices have causes, so I tend toward hard incompatibilism. If that's not true then it's probably compatibilism. Contemporary libertarianism is confused hogwash. I'm not sure how the free will debate factors in to all this, though. I don't think that libertarianism denies causality per se. 

I liked the stuff about dismissing causality. But I'm one to dismiss such a staple of my everyday existence.
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#65
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
^^^
Last sentence: I'm NOT one to dismiss such a staple of my everyday existence.

(totally missed the word "NOT" there)
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#66
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
(January 10, 2018 at 10:48 am)Whateverist Wrote:
(January 10, 2018 at 6:29 am)Agnosty Wrote: It seems you're describing the player of all the parts as being you.  And I agree.  All the "you's" that arise, "you" will play their parts.


I think me's makes more sense than you's, as they will all have a 'me' kind of experience, something that is no more linked to myself than to anyone else living.  I just don't think it is important to find a unique eternal pathway for every human being, nor do I think there is one .. well apart from our collective role in the web of life.  But there is no more "I" in "web" than there is in "team".  

It would be like following the path of one raindrop for years.  Its parts will be spread through other raindrops in future iterations.  It just doesn't matter.

But there are two you's... the actor and the acted.  One doesn't exist and the other is everything that exists.  So to say that you're linked to the you you are now is to be linked to the nonexistent you.

Of course there is no real purpose to this discussion.. it's just trivia.  Something to do.
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#67
RE: New Evidence for Multiverse from Planck Scientist
(January 10, 2018 at 7:03 pm)vulcanlogician Wrote:
(January 10, 2018 at 6:29 am)Agnosty Wrote: In your reasoning, you may not be considering that ALL possibilities will repeat infinitely.  That means it doesn't matter what you choose to do because you will do all of them (if it's possible and if you're causally determined - ie no freewill).

If you have freewill, then it's all moot because freewill isn't causally determined.  But then you have to explain where the freewill came from (ie something from nothing because freewill cannot be caused).

We can escape all those problems by simply dismissing causality.  There are no things, events and there is just the 1 thing and the 1 now, both of which last eternally because we've dismissed causality as ridiculous.

What I meant was more along the lines of this:


Quote:In the aftermath of Nehamas (1985), an influential line of readings has argued that the thought to which Nietzsche attributed such “fundamental” significance was never a cosmological or theoretical claim at all—whether about time, or fate, or the world, or the self—but instead a practical thought experiment designed to test whether one’s life has been good. The broad idea is that one imagines the endless return of life, and one’s emotional reaction to the prospect reveals something about how valuable one’s life has been, much as ... a spouse’s question about whether one would marry again evokes—and indeed, fairly demands—an assessment of the state of the marriage
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/nietz...erRecuSame

So, in one reading, the eternal recurrence is a thought experiment through which one might assess the state of one's own life. You can read it as a metaphysical postulate, as many have done. But I think more value lies in taking it as a thought experiment.

I believe choices have causes, so I tend toward hard incompatibilism. If that's not true then it's probably compatibilism. Contemporary libertarianism is confused hogwash. I'm not sure how the free will debate factors in to all this, though. I don't think that libertarianism denies causality per se. 

I liked the stuff about dismissing causality. But I'm one to dismiss such a staple of my everyday existence.

That's interesting but I suppose I'm missing the significance of the thought experiment.  How does contemplating an eternal return enable one to assess his own life?  For me, it's the opposite in that thinking that I'll return infinite times subtracts meaning.  Doing something once is special, but repeating it infinitely is lackluster.

Nietzsche didn't introduce me to this; rather it was the result of my own thinking while bantering with some guys about eternal causality.  Later, I discovered Nietzsche reasoned along the same lines and from then on I knew I was screwed up  Tongue  I've given the subject of infinity a great deal of critical thought over the past few years and as time moves on, the less sensible the idea becomes and the more difficult to articulate why. 

There can't be an eternal line of causality.  There just can't.  First, if everything is determined and therefore infinitely causative (because there can be no beginning to causality), then it's still self-causal.  I'm at a loss for words for how to get that idea from my head into someone else's.  If one thing causes another... like pushing a domino and it knocks the next one and so on, then where did the line of dominoes come from?  If one thing causes another thing, then the whole line of causality is a thing by virtue of being deterministic.  What's the point of splitting it up into events when it always plays-out the same way?  So, if it's always existed, then it had no time to come into existence and is therefore self-causal.

Let's say there is a rock and the rock has always existed.  It has been sitting there forever and ever.  Well, that still doesn't explain where the rock came from.  Knowing what we know about geology and astronomy (rocks came from exploding stars), how could a rock have eternally existed?  But my problem isn't restricted to rocks.... how could any 'thing' have eternally existed?  Therefore, if anything has eternally existed, it cannot be a determined thing.  The only thing that can exist eternally is the thing which can have no cause.

Now quantum mechanics says we can't know where an electron is until we look for it.  Ok, there it is.... we've located it.  Now, what caused it to be there?  Nothing.  It was completely random and it's an event that had no cause (it's not really an event, but part of a continuum, but anyway..).

Randomness is deeper than just happenstance.  There is no information in this string: 0000000 and it's completely ordered.  This string: 01010101 has information, but it's repetitive: repeat(01).  This string carries more information: 10101110 and it can't be reduced and looks random, so there is some link between information and randomness.  Check out this video for more on that https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMb00lz-IfE

How to tie it all together, I'm not sure, but it's fun to mull it over.  There is some connection with randomness and freewill.... I just can't quite draw it out yet.  Obviously, neither of them can be determined or caused, but how does a random quantum event give the sense of freewill?  What is the mechanism?
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