To briefly summarize Kastrup’s metaphysics in my own words and from my own understanding of it: all that exists is one (inherently spaceless and timeless) consciousness, and each metabolizing organism is a dissociated localization of this one consciousness. He uses the analogy of dissociative identity disorder (DID) from psychology to express how the one consciousness localizes (dissociates) itself into seemingly many subjects. The inanimate universe as a whole that we all perceive is simply what the one consciousness looks like from our dissociated perspectives. As a naturalist, Kastrup does not believe that the one consciousness in its “pure” form is intrinsically self-reflective like we are, since it did not undergo the evolutionary process that we did. — Paul Michael
I'm no expert here but it seems to me Kastrup - who is a very articulate communicator and does a great road show - is essentially riffing off Schopenhauer's idealism and updating it. K argues that humans are dissociated alters of cosmic consciousness and matter is what consciousness looks like when viewed from a certain perspective. Mind is all that exists. Importantly, like Schopenhauer, K argues that cosmic consciousness (Will) does not have a plan for existence, it is instinctive, does not communicate and is not a god surrogate. Much of Kastrup's model involves demonstrating how materialism is incoherent. — Tom Storm
Other than creating a flurry of rebuttals or anxieties in the so called scientific physicalist community, what does the model give us? Does Kastrup straw man naturalism by reducing it to materialism? He's clearly benefiting enormously from the current gaps in the understanding of consciousness and quantum physics. — Tom Storm
I hope not — Paul Michael
Technically he says we’re the same universal consciousness or “core subjectivity” but we’re unique dissociated alters or localizations of it. — Paul Michael
We are temporary, changing “patterns” who should be held responsible for our actions, because each individual pattern has its own tendencies regarding action. — Paul Michael
This god was lonely, so to create someone to play with, he split himself up into all the myriad things in the world and then made them all forget they were part of him. Did I get that right, Wayfarer? — T Clark
To briefly summarize Kastrup’s metaphysics in my own words and from my own understanding of it: all that exists is one (inherently spaceless and timeless) consciousness, and each metabolizing organism is a dissociated localization of this one consciousness. — Paul Michael
Considering Kastrup wrote a book that attempts to “decode” Schopenhauer’s idealism and show how his own model is very similar, I would say you absolutely nailed it here. — Paul Michael
As a naturalist, Kastrup does not believe that the one consciousness in its “pure” form is intrinsically self-reflective like we are, since it did not undergo the evolutionary process that we did. — Paul Michael
As I've pointed out many times, a scientist's methological position in no way is indicative of – or entails – any specific metaphysical (ontological) commitment.I think his profession of being a naturalist is a trojan horse maneuvre ... — Wayfarer
It must be the quixotic mathematics of field equations, tensors, matrices, lie groups or Calabi–Yau manifolds which, like catnip spiked with crack, hooks so many particle physicists to Neoplatonism / Vendata -like constructs (mandalas) :sparkle:... Kastrup's is arguably an iteration, with the useful feature that he a PhD in computer science and has worked as a physicist at CERN ... — Wayfarer
I received a telephone call one day at the graduate college at Princeton from Professor [John]Wheeler, in which he said, "Feynman, I know why all electrons have the same charge and the same mass" "Why?" "Because, they are all the same electron!" — Richard Feynman
all that exists is one (inherently spaceless and timeless) consciousness — Paul Michael
He uses the analogy of dissociative identity disorder (DID) from psychology to express how the one consciousness localizes (dissociates) itself into seemingly many subjects. — Paul Michael
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