DifferentiatingEgg
Even in the inorganic world all that concerns an atom of energy is its immediate neighbourhood: distant forces balance each other. Here is the root of perspectivity, and it explains why a living organism is "egoistic" to the core. — Nietzsche
Life" might be defined as a lasting form of force-establishing processes, in which the various contending forces, on their part, grow unequally....
The triumphant concept "energy" with which our physicists created God and the world, needs yet to be completed: it must be given an inner will which I characterise as the "Will to Power"—that is to say, as an insatiable desire to manifest power; or the application and exercise of power as a creative instinct, etc. Physicists cannot get rid of the "actio in distans" in their principles; any more than they can a repelling force (or an attracting one). There is no help for it, all movements, all "appearances," all "laws" must be understood as symptoms of an inner phenomenon, and the analogy of man must be used for this purpose. It is possible to trace all the instincts of an animal to the will to power; as also all the functions of organic life to this one source. — Nietzsche
bizso09
all "laws" must be understood as symptoms of an inner phenomenon, and the analogy of man must be used for this purpose. — Nietzsche
Patterner
No. Because, while you are here, experiencing this coordinate zero, other coordinate zeros are everywhere, in all directions, up to about 13.5 BLY from you. How could you experience the coordinate zero that Arcturus experiences?I mean, there can be multiple heres and nows, but still the fact is that I'm only seeing one of them, and how come it's this one if they are all here and now, shouldn't I be seeing them all? — bizso09
Esse Quam Videri
wonderer1
However, my concern is why it's one particular inner phenomenon is playing in the Window, how was that selected, if there were multiple Windows, then why am I not them, — bizso09
Philosophim
Well of course if someone else claims to be someone or something else, its a contradiction.
— Philosophim
Exactly. So my question is, are you claiming to be a "You" right now in the real world? Because if so, it's a contradiction. — bizso09
bizso09
Esse Quam Videri
bizso09
sime
Even though the java programming language can be compiled to run on any computer, it is an additional fact of the world that which specific computer it actually runs on. It is convenient to ignore this fact in order to "avoid inconsistent semantics", but that ignorance is wrong nevertheless, when we talk about the world in its totality. — bizso09
bizso09
bizso09
What truth-criteria should Bob use when interpreting Alice's claims about an Alice-independent world? — sime
noAxioms
Well, that would be a 5th person then. Perhaps you don't really mean 'in addition'.Let's describe a world with four people in it. Alice, Bob, Cecil, Dan. In addition, there is You in this world. — bizso09
You obviously have a very dualistic & anthropocentric way of thinking, where there is a separate set of experiencers and only human beings to be experienced.Now consider two distinct scenarios:
Scenario 1: You are Alice. This means that you have access to Alice's thoughts, feelings, perception, and can see, hear, feel through her body.
Scenario 2: You are Bob. This means that you have access to Bob's experience, etc.
The question is, what is the difference between the two scenarios?
This pretty much sums up my thinking as well. No matter the model used, no paradox apparent.EITHER there's some spirit soul thing, a ghost going around to these bodies inhabiting them, in which case there's no paradox because there is a real difference
OR there are not these spirits and souls, and then there's no "you" that isn't synonymous with Bob, or synonymous with Alice, and there's no paradox. — flannel jesus
Call it what you want. Either the pointer is identical with the thing pointed to, or it is separate, and can point to this or that. "You are Alice" is phrased in the latter way of thinking, especially when it is suggested that it instead points elsewhere.You is not meant to be a spirit or soul, but more like a reference point, or pointer, i.e. a window of first person perspective. — bizso09
Indeed, a coordinate system is an abstraction and thus can have its origin placed anywhere. My only nit on your post is the 13.5 BLY. Why that? Certainly somebody could place an origin a trillion LY from here without running into problems. Our particular typical assignment of 'here' does not concern any part of the universe that has not dependence on human notice.No. Because, while you are here, experiencing this coordinate zero, other coordinate zeros are everywhere, in all directions, up to about 13.5 BLY from you. How could you experience the coordinate zero that Arcturus experiences? — Patterner
and you run into contradictions, which you note in the title. That sort of assertion works only under solipsism, and you don't seem to be suggesting that.I argue that in the world, the You is an absolute global unique fact. — bizso09
Depending on your person definition of 'to exist' in that context, I don't necessarily consider it to be fact. OK, it works under most idealistic definitions (like cogito ergo sum), where existence is founded on experience.I'm just deriving conclusions starting from the fact that I exist. — bizso09
Pretty bold assertion with that 'we all agree that ...' bit. I for one agree with less than a quarter of all that. Irrelevant since you have a classical dualistic model going on here, so my opinion of non-classical and monistic matters not.Here's another way to put it, why there is a contradiction.
We all agree that we live in one world, which is the actual world. In this actual world, there is a property which tells us "What's playing in the current experience that is visible now". — bizso09
Exactly. So the answer is not what Esse 'has playing' (as you put it), since that's not what's asked. Surely the answer, whatever it is, should be the same answer despite who answers it. How do you not see this?But the problem with the question is that it is not dependent on who's asking it. The question is not "Given that I am Esse, what's playing in the current experience that is visible now", but rather it's without the "given" clause.
No, them saying different answer is giving an answer to a different question, so them all giving wrong answers does not result in a contradiction, it just means nobody understood the question.If we assume, that each creature is honest and communicates the truth, then this is a logical contradiction about the world.
bizso09
Pretty bold assertion with that 'we all agree that ...' bit. I for one agree with less than a quarter of all that. — noAxioms
Each of us is the universal experiencer in our own world, but there is one world only. Contradiction.The answer is either that there is one experience of some universal experiencer, — noAxioms
everybody's answer should be the same ('everything' and 'category error' respectively). If anybody gives a different answer, then they're wrong. — noAxioms
See aboveSo there's no contradiction. — noAxioms
noAxioms
My point was that it is presumptuous of you to suggest that everyone holds the same personal beliefs as you.Which part do you not agree with? — bizso09
OK, I agree that you've identified at least two contradictions. Typical reaction to this should be to reconsider some of your assertions (not one of which I would assert). Belief in a consistent model is arguably better than belief in a self-contradictory one. I say arguably, because there's potential pragmatic value to holding certain contradictory beliefs, and certain pragmatic value to holding simply wrong beliefs.Each of us is the universal experiencer in our own world, but there is one world only. Contradiction.
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The answer should be the same, but it's not the same. Each person's answer is different and it's right, but collectively it's wrong. Contradiction
That statement is also contradictory. If it's person dependent, then it's a subjective fact, not a 'global absolute' one. Perhaps you don't know what those terms mean.Look, where the "You" is placed is a global absolute unique fact to each person.
It does not follow from that axiom, should you choose to accept it (most do). As you might gather from my username, I'm somewhat reluctant to accept any axiom without question.This is derived from the axiom that they exist.
Not how you defined it earlier.Since the coordinate system is the definition of the world,
Your not going to find the moon on google maps, but that doesn't mean the moon doesn't exist, it just means a different coordinate system is more appropriate.and existence, in my view if something is not on this coordinate system, it means it doesn't exist.
More assertions that contradict other assertions of yours. Some of it has to be wrong.Existence is binary, and the coordinate system is the world, which includes everything that exists.
I lost count after six. Yours seems to be a mind-dependent relation, something like 'all that is part of my personal world'. Except for your funny (circular) definitions of 'world', that's not a totally unusual definition.There are no different flavours of existence.
But you're the one giving the contradicting answers, not the rest of us.We cannot have conflicting answers to the exact same question. This is the contradiction.
:lol:"You" is absolute and globally unique.
Patterner
True enough. I just went with the known universe.Indeed, a coordinate system is an abstraction and thus can have its origin placed anywhere. My only nit on your post is the 13.5 BLY. Why that? Certainly somebody could place an origin a trillion LY from here without running into problems. Our particular typical assignment of 'here' does not concern any part of the universe that has not dependence on human notice. — noAxioms
bizso09
With all due respect, I don't see how you can argue with the axiom that you yourself exist. Especially, since everything you know starts with "You".As you might gather from my username, I'm somewhat reluctant to accept any axiom without question. — noAxioms
It's intentionally phrased that way to highlight the contradictionPerhaps you don't know what those terms mean. — noAxioms
You can place the center anywhere you want. But in your world, the center is where you are. That's the locus point of perception, the "You".'s an arbitrary mathematical abstraction, the origin of which can be place anywhere one finds convenient. — noAxioms
If Google maps was defined as the world including everything, then if the moon is not on it, then it doesn't exist.Your not going to find the moon on google maps, but that doesn't mean the moon doesn't exist — noAxioms
What is something that "kinda" exists but not totally? Can you give an example?Non-binary would be something that kind-of exists, but not totally. — noAxioms
In the one and only real world, unicorns only exist as ideas in books or imagination of individual people. They only exist in this form, but not for example physically.Not part of your world, even if it's part of a different world. — noAxioms
Yes, I'm deriving the contradiction.But you're the one giving the contradicting answers, not the rest of us. — noAxioms
noAxioms
I argue with all of them. It's the whole point of open mindedness.With all due respect, I don't see how you can argue with the axiom that you yourself exist. — bizso09
In the one and only real world, unicorns only exist as ideas in books or imagination of individual people.
You're using the 2nd definition then (E2): Things you know about, a very mind dependent definition. Yes, that's one of the circular ones, true only by definition, thus proving little else if anything.Especially, since everything you know starts with "You".
There are counterexamples where this is not true, BiV being one of them.But in your world, the center is where you are. — bizso09
It's a coordinate system, not a world. The words mean different things.If Google maps was defined as the world
In MWI, you measure say the spin of a particle at an angle not orthogonal to the prior measurement. This yields say a 10% probability of spin up, and 90% of spin down. Doing so splits the world into one where up is measured, and one with down. There are two worlds, but a 90% chance that 'you' (whatever that means) is in the down one. It implies that the down world sort of exists more than the up one, else half the observers would see each outcome. That's an example of existence that is not just yes/no, but more vs less probable. Of course you don't seem to buy into MWI, but you asked for an example.What is something that "kinda" exists but not totally? Can you give an example? — bizso09
Yet again, driving a set of postulates to contradiction is a standard way of demonstrating that at least one of the postulates is wrong. You hold an inconsistent set of beliefs. Your problem, not ours.It's intentionally phrased that way to highlight the contradiction
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Yes, I'm deriving the contradiction.
My only nit on your post is the 13.5 BLY. Why that? — noAxioms
Just some FYI then:True enough. I just went with the known universe. — Patterner
bizso09
Yes, it's like a pointer or flag, which is an additional fact. It could point to other experience, but it doesn't, because it only points to one, in the real and only world.The usage of 'You' seems to be a separate experiencer of a person, or something that can point to one or another experiencee — noAxioms
Everything that exists comes from the "You". Because if "You" did not exist, then everything would be "undefined" or "NullPointerException" which results in a crash so to speak.Then there's 'exists', which is also undefined. — noAxioms
If "You" did not exist, nothing would make sense. See above. Since we are here having a blimey discussion, by definition that means "You" exists.probably no, circular, yes, circular, no, depends — noAxioms
I use E4.5 not "It's part of this universe," but rather "it's part of THE universe"(E2): Things you know about, — noAxioms
Then the center would be in the vat, if that's how you're perceiving, and that's the real world. "You" being in a vat doesn't change things.BiV being one of them. — noAxioms
No, it's not a requirement that I know about it, only that it exists in the same coordinate system, as me, aka it simply exists.Things you know about — noAxioms
Coordinate system in the sense that they can be related to "You" somehow. If something doesn't exist this way, it means they are fundamentally incompatible with "You".t's a coordinate system, not a world. — noAxioms
They are rational and inconsistent, which is the problem.You hold an inconsistent set of beliefs. — noAxioms
There might be many worlds, but there is only one "current" world, where "You" is right now, right here. And not in the indexical sense, but as "the" center.In MWI, you measure — noAxioms
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