Yes, I agree. Creative evolution is a good description of personality. It can reasonably be extended to a description of reality itself, which (especially in or through us, so far as we know) is creatively evolving. — mrcoffee
By use of these concepts of consciousness, virtually any information can be comprehended, even the concepts of consciousness... — Tyler
we see that humans have a habit of changing their habits. — mrcoffee
Memory is (one might say) actuality chasing possibility and generating more actuality, more memory. — mrcoffee
I would say that we largely figure out what it is by detecting regularities in experience — mrcoffee
I agree. The future exists as possibility, and in that sense possibility is higher than actuality. The actual is framed and used in pursuit of the possible, and the possible is itself a function of the actual (including the memory of what was once actual.) — mrcoffee
But 'free will' also vanishes. — mrcoffee
I'm not arguing for strict or exact determinism. — mrcoffee
future is constrained by the past. — mrcoffee
I think we should distinguish between random and unpredictable. — mrcoffee
As science progresses, the once unpredictable becomes predictable. — mrcoffee
If believing in free will only means believing that the future is not exactly determined — mrcoffee
Let's imagine an extra-terrestial with a superior brain and/or technology who can calculate future individual human behavior with pretty good reliability. — mrcoffee
We still wrestle the experience that we'll continue to call 'choice' or 'free will.' — mrcoffee
How does one respond to this state of affairs? Pick up the trash and throw it away or just let it pile up and create an even stronger cognitive dissonance? — Posty McPostface
I'd like to share my care for other people; but, I lack the compassion to do so. I feel bitter inside from the realization that people don't care as much as I would hope they would. — Posty McPostface
It's just that it's very hard to find people in a like state of mind. — Posty McPostface
Within the brain, there is an agent, which creates its own wave patterns — Metaphysician Undercover
interacting with the other wave patterns such that the person perceives the world. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the case of the universal hologram what would what would create the waves to interact with the other waves? — Metaphysician Undercover
The video clearly shows the individual's brain creating a holographic image. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's not what the Robbins video described though. It described each person's mind as creating a hologram from the brain wave patterns interfering with the wave patterns of the rest of the universe, so the hologram is the world as it is, being experienced within the mind. That's what supports his claim of direct realism. — Metaphysician Undercover
So each individual has one's own hologram — Metaphysician Undercover
I wonder why all the wave patterns are such as they are, what causes them to be the patterns that they are? — Metaphysician Undercover
We still need to assume God don't we? — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't agree. I am much more than memory. I think, I anticipate, and I act, none of these things can be directly attributed to memory. So memory is only one of my many attributes. — Metaphysician Undercover
Those wave patterns of the universe are not necessarily within the hologram, they would exist even if the mind wasn't making the hologram. — Metaphysician Undercover
If each mind creates its own hologram, — Metaphysician Undercover
So what is the source of creation of consciousness? Matter field? — bahman
OK, but that requires that the boundary between past and future is a real medium — Metaphysician Undercover
It is difficult which it eludes common imagination. Actually. I think those who see it for what it is are called delusional and put in mental institutions. So one must be careful. :)that's quite difficult to conceive of. — Metaphysician Undercover
but matter is not substantial without form. — Metaphysician Undercover
And the forms of matter are already assumed to be what exists as a hologram. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now we need another form, to account for the real existence of the boundary, — Metaphysician Undercover
this would be the soul. — Metaphysician Undercover
we have three distinct substances — Metaphysician Undercover
So are you saying that force filed is conscious of us too? — bahman
ote: At some point, because Robbins can't grapple with what he sees as the paradoxical implications of his own ill-defined principle of "abstract reciprocity of reference systems", — Pierre-Normand
So the surface is the boundary between past and future? This boundary is the medium upon which the hologram exists? — Metaphysician Undercover
But even if we accept that "mathematics is a reality", this is very far from saying that "whetever is mathematical is actually existence". At best mathematics describes a potentiality! — boundless
No, they are not equivalent. They can only be converted to each other. We know this by fact, there is an experiencer and a subject of experience. — bahman
There are evidence-based theories which suggest that free-will and the self are both illusory and are not what we think they are. — Pseudonym
There are two fields in nature: (1) Matter and (2) Forces. — bahman
, both of which we unavoidably do anyway by our very nature. — Sapientia
How something which doesn't have any essence can create? Mind should be something. — bahman
So mind experience as well. Does that decide too? — bahman
That is definition of mind in my opinion: The essence of any being with ability to experience, decide and create/act. — bahman
What is mind? — bahman