But “consciousness” and “intellect” are only thought of by humans.
And what empowers the human thought? Chemical reactions perhaps?
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But “consciousness” and “intellect” are only thought of by humans.
Why not? It is logical. You do not defeat argument X because of argument Y, when you know a lot of X and nothing of Y.
One of the anchors of a spiritual world view is to tie in the spiritual reality to the practical, physical one via that which existed prior to creation. The understanding is that the ultimate mystery of the origin of anything and everything is a logical opening through which the spiritual can be equated with the mundane and actual.
In my study of science I have long been fascinated by the idea of a self-created Universe whose laws explain its origin. I assumed some such explanation was possible and elegant. But now I wonder at whether such a belief is elegant at all. Starting with nothing how do we reason regarding the plain facts of the actuality?
If we look at the origin of anything we will find a complex, creative background (whether conscious or not) out of which that thing has arisen. Then wouldn't the most elegant assumption be that the Universe as a whole did the same?
The irony here is that the Universe is usually defined as that which includes all we know, so if there was a something before the Universe then we would not know about it by the definition of the term and the question I have asked would become unanswerable except as, perhaps, a useful exercise of the subjective imagination creating meaning.
So can we know whether there was nothing or something prior to the existence of the Universe?
I have a middle ground idea which I will introduce, if appropriate during the course of conversation.
One of the anchors of a spiritual world view is to tie in the spiritual reality to the practical, physical one via that which existed prior to creation. The understanding is that the ultimate mystery of the origin of anything and everything is a logical opening through which the spiritual can be equated with the mundane and actual.
In my study of science I have long been fascinated by the idea of a self-created Universe whose laws explain its origin. I assumed some such explanation was possible and elegant. But now I wonder at whether such a belief is elegant at all. Starting with nothing how do we reason regarding the plain facts of the actuality?
If we look at the origin of anything we will find a complex, creative background (whether conscious or not) out of which that thing has arisen. Then wouldn't the most elegant assumption be that the Universe as a whole did the same?
The irony here is that the Universe is usually defined as that which includes all we know, so if there was a something before the Universe then we would not know about it by the definition of the term and the question I have asked would become unanswerable except as, perhaps, a useful exercise of the subjective imagination creating meaning.
So can we know whether there was nothing or something prior to the existence of the Universe?
I have a middle ground idea which I will introduce, if appropriate during the course of conversation.
Simply because one is contingent upon the other. YMMV.
That’s probably why multiverse models are only theoretical models, and not scientific theory.There is no evidence of ANYTHING before the Big Bang. Indeed science has no way of even testing anything of that nature. The idea of multi-verses is a metaphysical belief of some scientists.
1) something that changes all the time. What you lose from view does not exist anymore and what you will see does not exist yet
2) nothing changes. Your consciousness acquires the current snapshot of an immutable outside reality
I believe the 2nd is true ......
What is contingent upon what? And what evidence do you have to support your claim, whatever that is?
The idea of multi-verses is a metaphysical belief of some scientists.
And what empowers the human thought? Chemical reactions perhaps?
It is possible that our human brains just aren't capable (yet, at least) of conceptualizing such things as the origins of the Universe. For example, take the idea of the "beginning of time". For anything to have a beginning means that at some point in TIME it didn't exist, then at some later point in time it did. So the beginning of time could only exist in a conceptual framework where time already exists - so then that point can't be the beginning. In other words, the beginning of time implies that time already started before it "began".
It is possible that our human brains just aren't capable (yet, at least) of conceptualizing such things as the origins of the Universe. For example, take the idea of the "beginning of time". For anything to have a beginning means that at some point in TIME it didn't exist, then at some later point in time it did.
Why not? I want to learn and understand how our consciousness fits in Block universe model.
But “consciousness” and “intellect” are only thought of by humans.
And since I see all religions and all philosophies are of human-construct, whether it be theistic or not, dharmic or non-dharmic.
Hence Brahman is anthropomorphic of the human conditions.
Not necessarily.
The Big Bang cosmology for example, is only the beginning of the universe that we know of, starting with the Planck Epoch. It may give us the finite beginning, it doesn’t mean that time doesn’t exist before the Big Bang’s t = 0 sec.
The t = 0 and greater is everything that the BB theory trying to explain, from the earliest subatomic particles forms to the atoms to star and galaxy formations; the Big Bang theory explained the evolution of the universe.
We simply don’t have enough data and evidences to know much about the universe before BB. The only things that BB cosmologists can determine about the universe as a singularity, is that it infinitely hot and dense.
As a sidenote, what I find quite amusing with this whole "time is an inherent property of space-time itself", is that it is perfectly accurate to say "The universe has always existed".
Since "always" means "for all of time". And if you take any moment in history (in "time"), then the universe existed. When there is time, there is a universe. So the universe always existed. Perfectly accurate statement. Lol.
The big bounce theory is about the universe expanding, collasping, repeat.
What evidence would we expect to find if the universe expanded, then collapsed and then re-expanded? Or would there be any way to tell?
It is possible that our human brains just aren't capable (yet, at least) of conceptualizing such things as the origins of the Universe. For example, take the idea of the "beginning of time". For anything to have a beginning means that at some point in TIME it didn't exist, then at some later point in time it did. So the beginning of time could only exist in a conceptual framework where time already exists - so then that point can't be the beginning. In other words, the beginning of time implies that time already started before it "began".
That depends on the specifics. In some scenarios, there is information transfer across the 'bounce'. We don't have a tested theory of quantum gravity, so saying anything more goes beyond what we know.
I was thinking if everything collapsed back down to a tiny hot singularity that everything/all information would be annihilated from the heat and pressure.
That depends, in part, in how much that singularity is 'smoothed out' by quantum effects.