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LetsGosam
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- Aug 28, 2020
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My biggest fear is you literally start over as a baby.
I'm not sure I see all this as consistent.The clone would have a different conscious. However, in another iteration of our universe, the "new" you will have formed at the same time and place as you now, so it would be assumed that it would be your consciousness.
I'm not sure I see all this as consistent.
I mean, there is just so much I don't understand about all this.
Another iteration of our universe -- it would not be numerically the same as this universe. And I can understand what the 'same time and place' means, but I can't grasp what it means in relation to other iterations of this universe. By definition it seems that a different iteration would mean a different time and place.. I don't understand meta or trans-universe time. I don't even really understand time itself.
And therefore I can't understand what it could mean in relation to identity of consciousness.
But listen, you seem to have it all figured out and you seem to understand the physics and metaphysics of it, so I won't keep arguing.
But you do seem to speak as if you know more that all the current experts on cosmology and astrophysics and quantum physics and neuroscience.
You are both terrified of eternal recurrence yet also intent on arguing for it/believing in it even though you cannot possibly know whether it could even be a metaphysical or logical possibility or not. But anyway, I think we've gone over this before. lol
I believe that death is the eternal end of our consciousness, just like birth is its beginning.
After we die, we go to our eternal abode. When we die, it's not the end of our life. It's the end of our death.
After we die, we go into the deathless. A timeless place, completely formless. Limitless in nature. Immovable. Immutable.
I believe that when we die and leave our bodies, we are only consciousness—the same consciousness we had while in our physical bodies, although with much greater awareness because the brain no longer filters our clarity. Once we are no longer confined by our physical limitations (which includes our brain and its functions) and we return to the afterlife, our awareness expands to greater spiritual knowing, which is our natural, eternal state. Death is the state where you are physically dead, but your consciousness survives.
If I end up back here when I die, I'll kill myself.
But if you do end up back here, you won't know. It will seem like the first time from your subjective viewpoint.If I end up back here when I die, I'll kill myself.
But if this is true, maybe there is some trick to break out of the cycle..like a bug in the program or something.
And anyone who wants to live or clings on to life or is pro-life is basically afflicted with the condition known as 'stockholm syndrome'.Life is certainly trying to keep us here forever. Life is like a kidnapper, and we're the kidnapee, trapped in life's basement.
Eternal recurrence cannot simply be the meaning to existence. Because if it is, then it's hell. But hell can only have meaning in relation to heaven.
If heaven is something inherently unreachable for a lot of people, and hell is something which 'just happens due to luck', then heaven and hell are just useless words and existence itself is absurd and meaningless. This is a philosophical stance, not science.You're right, there is a heaven. Heaven is the lives that people wouldn't mind living over again. Once you are in either heaven (there) or hell (dread to live over again), there is no escape. No. Escape. And the big crunch is making a comeback.
I don't think there could be 'untold past iterations' because real infinities cannot be part of the fabric of reality. They are mathematical fictions in set theory that only give paradoxes when you try to apply them to reality.
"The infinite is nowhere to be found in reality. It neither exists in nature nor provides a legitimate basis for rational thought... The role that remains for the infinite to play is solely that of an idea." David Hilbert
Yes, I know I keep saying the same thing all the time lolYou keep re-iterating this fact, and people keep going on not understanding it. It took me a long time to understand what you're trying to convey.
Ye, I've heard of that too. Another metaphysical scare-story which might sound plausible because it has the backing of a daunting and complicated word -'quantum'. But there is no evidence for it as far as I know. I just think that when it comes down to it, people will believe what they want to believe regardless of arguments or evidence.Quantum Immortality, which is similar to what you guys are talking about
Didn't he write a paper on quantum suicide?Jack Mallah,
Didn't he write a paper on quantum suicide?
Did he say anything to you about this eternal recurrence idea?
I had to read that several times, slowly.Yes he wrote the paper on Quantum Suicide. He used to be part of a forum called "everything-list" where smart physicists got together to argue about the Theory of Everything. I spent many hours peering on that board, trying to understand the vastly complex information these dudes were battling out about.
He did say something about eternal recurrence to me. But I don't remember what he said. He wrote, however, an amazingly, outstanding paper titled Many-Worlds Interpretations Can Not Imply 'Quantum Immortality'
And in this paper he wrote,
The method of Theory Confirmation can be applied to the question of immortality. In
general, if we are immortal, there would be two classes of observations: Those made by
normal people within a normal lifespan, and those made in the 'afterlife'. For 'quantum
immortality' the 'afterlife' will be taken to mean those who find themselves to be much
older than a normal human lifespan.
If the 'afterlife' is infinite, then it will have infinitely more integral measure than the
normal life. Thus, the effective probability of finding oneself in a normal lifetime would
be zero. If there is no 'afterlife' then the effective probability of that would be unity. By
applying Bayesian reasoning, this implies that if one does find oneself in a normal
lifetime, as we do, there must be no infinite afterlife.
Which is an incredibly enlightening, and insightful thing to say.
I had to read that several times, slowly.
Great passage. It just highlights the difficulties you get into when you start applying actual infinities to reality.
Assuming infinity of worlds (or eternal recurrence) means that we could never have reached the present time/could not be alive in this universe (the 'effective probability would be zero').
But we have reached the present.. so there can be no infinity/eternal recurrence.
That's basically what he's saying (and what I've been trying to say in this thread), except he's using more technical and refined concepts.
There might be something to this, actually.
Assume that Poincaré recurrence applies to the universe. This doesn't necessarily mean that everything will always happen identically - it could mean that reality repeats itself to the nearest possible degree endlessly. That could effectively mean that history will play out identically to the point of my birth each time, but that, for me, my actions and choices will differ each time, just as they will for you. The basic facts, up to the point of your birth, play out identically,and from there everything is subject to change. And it will be this way forever.
I am, actually, convinced that this is what it is. Which could be very cool for me actually- I was a very happy boy up until my father committed suicide, aged six.
If what I'm saying is true, the odds are strong that, on the next iteration, he won't kill himself; that was basically a freak event that turned me into a massively antisocial sociopath. I was extremely happy as a small child. I think, if he lives, I will become an extremely happy young adult also.
I am totally down with rolling the dice on this being the case.
We would only have 'broken the cycle' if we assume that there is a cycle to begin with. No one has shown or demonstrated that there is.
Clocks lie, people die.Technically, there is not a cycle.
We are not moving in a circle. Circles do not exist in reality. This sounds like pseudo-science, but I found out it is true for myself.
Circles, and cycles are illusions. If a cycle existed, it would be never-ending. But there are no cycles. Only the illusions of cycles.
Think about a clock. A clock moves in a circle. However, everyday is a new day. The clock keeps moving from 1 to 12, but every day is not 'reset'. We are not living the same day over-and-over again. Clocks are liars.
Clocks lie, people die.
The reality of clocks can only be understood in the context of 4-dimensional spirals....
Hawking believed in a big crunch so that would necessarily imply a limited universe with unlimited time. If we are to go by Hawking, what do you think that would imply?
I understand your argument, it's clever, but I think it is possible to steer a boat between the scylla and charybdis you present by denying the possibility of actual infinities without thereby making the universe finite.The thing is, if there are no true infinities, then the universe is bound, finite, and therefore subject to Poincare recurrence. If the universe is infinite, then it has infinite time to reproduce itself via quantum fluctuation after heat death. Either way the possibility of recurrence is real.
This is the crucial question...so many unknowns..the supposed quantum fluctuations which would occur after heat death due to random local decreases in entropy are purely hypothetical...to reproduce itself via quantum fluctuation after heat death
I understand your argument, it's clever, but I think it is possible to steer a boat between the scylla and charybdis you present by denying the possibility of actual infinities without thereby making the universe finite.
The universe can be potentially infinite into the future (and open), which isn't the same as being actually infinite. But that wouldn't make it 'finite' in the sense required for Poincare recurrence (i.e. having a finite volume, being a discrete system with a countable number of states).
Whichever way you look at it, eternal recurrence requires actual infinities, not just potential infinities.
The past cannot be actually infinite as we could never have reached this point if it was, and the future cannot be actually infinite as it doesn't exist yet and so can only be a potential..
This is the crucial question...so many unknowns..the supposed quantum fluctuations which would occur after heat death due to random local decreases in entropy are purely hypothetical...
...but even if they do occur, the question would also arise what it means exactly for the universe to 'reproduce itself'. It would be discontinuous (although I admit this is a problematic assertion) with this universe, therefore numerically distinct. It would also have completely new particles, so it might resemble this universe exactly, but only as a 'replica'..
Under these conditions, to say that there would still be a continuous identity of consciousness holding between beings a, b, c etc, in universes A, B, C, etc, as if beings a, b, c, etc were numerically one and the same (which they cannot be, since only a can be identical with a, b with b, etc), would be a unjustified logical leap.