Sunday, March 29, 2020

Beyond Space - A Book about the Angels by Fr. Pascal P. Parente

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Interestingly, a book on Angelology is titled, Beyond Space.

The text includes the concept of Beyond Time, as well.
 
What this book suggested to me, is that eternity, far from being a static state,
is dynamic.  Things happen in eternity, but not in a sequential timeline, as we experience change
in our universe.
 
We cannot of course comprehend such a timeless state, nor one without space.
 
Indeed, IMO, space-time-energy-matter (STEM) is a single thing.  We divide it according to
our experience.
 
I picture STEM as a block of reality which includes all of space and all of time,
but a block which "quivers" so to speak, or undulates, through meta-space and meta-time.
 
This, in turn, allows the future to escape the constraints of determinism, and gives us free will.

 Of course, this is all metaphysical speculation.
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Friday, March 27, 2020

The Nature of Time

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W

e have all heard the expression, “time flies.”  We have oftentimes asked, where does the time go?  On the other hand, we sometimes experience time as going by very slowly.  These are all subjective measures of time, based on our feelings of patience or impatience, etc.

      Is there any objective, empirical measure of something we might call, the “speed” of time?

      At first the question may not make sense, since speed incorporates both space and time.  We cannot validly measure something against itself.

      We measure the speed of a race-car by measuring how many miles, of road, the car travels per hour.  The road is considered stationary, the car moves relative to the road.  We cannot, however, measure the speed of time against anything.

      Or can we?

      Most of us have an intuitive “feel” for the passage of time.  We know that some things take a long time, some a short time.  There are two ways to measure time, then.  One of them is objective or mathematical.  The other is subjective, based on how we experience time.

      For us, the experience of time involves our brains, the transmission of signals along our neurons and across our synapses.  These brain activities can process the information about events which take time, and we must understand that the processing itself takes time, so that there is a form of loop, a self-referential quality to our experience.  Our physical activities are included among these events.  For example, the act of walking across the street takes time, and during this time, the brain is actively involved, not only in the walking, but in measuring the time it takes.

      Compare this processing by the brain, to the processing of data by a computer.  Whereas the brain may take a few seconds to complete a particular calculation, the computer can perform the same calculation millions of times faster than we can.  I recall reading some old science fiction story in which a conscious computer found itself impatient with the slowness of communicating with humans.  In effect, the computer had to wait “computer years” for each human response.[1]

      Time is also measured with mathematical objectivity.  In physical nature, there is no such thing as a “long time” or a “short time.”  These are purely human perceptions of time.  Nature never gets impatient or bored.  Subatomic events that take place in the realm of pico-seconds are no different than pan-universal events that span epochs.  An event that occurred 14 billion years ago is not ancient to nature, and an event that occurred just a moment ago is not recent, as we think of it, not to an unconscious physical universe.

      There is a saying that for humans, the days are long and the years are short.  This demonstrates that we have multiple ways of experiencing the passage of time.  For a small child, the interval between Christmases is very long.  For adults in their later years, the Christmas seasons seem to fly by in a staccato.

      Humans experience the span of their own lifetime as a sort of individual eternity.  Our earliest memories seem very long ago, and our acknowledgment of eventual, inevitable death is pushed beyond our experiential horizon to some far flung future date that, while we know it must eventually occur, feels as if it never really will.  Few humans feel that they are a part of history in the same way that we feel our today is part of this week.  Once in a while we confront the task of providing life insurance or estate planning for our heirs after we are gone, but this is not quite the same as our making plans for the upcoming weekend.

      Were we to be as conscious of the brevity of our life-spans as the mathematics require, our entire attitude toward life might become very different.  We might all regard ourselves as the ephemeral creatures we are, flashes in the pan so to speak, giving us perhaps a greater sense of urgency, and a greater appreciation of each moment.  On the other hand, could we handle all that without being overwhelmed by panic?

      In nature, it may be that there is no such thing as the “passage” of time.  Nature may not experience (so to speak) time as past, present and future.  It may be all of a piece, a single fabric, a weave of all events.

            In regard to that, let us insert a side note here.  It is sometimes said that if time is all of a single weave, that therefore, the future is carved in stone (so to speak), inevitable and unchangeable.  If so, this fact would indicate that we do not have free will.  However, this way of thinking is in error.  A simple example is that what you did yesterday is now unchangeable, and yet, at the time you did it, you exercised your free will.  Eternity is taken to mean unchanging, and yet it could also be very dynamic.  Our brains never experience such things, and so we have no way of comprehending the strange properties of time.

      The Big Bang Theory requires us to consider a paradoxical question, the question of what was there “before the Big Bang.”  It is paradoxical, because if time and space came into being at the moment of the Big Bang, then therefore there was no “time before” the Big Bang, since there cannot logically have been time before time.

      It is also interesting to consider that the age of the universe may not be measurable.  We might have nothing to measure it against.  Physicists speak of the first tiny fractions of a second after the Big Bang, but what is the “clock” (so to speak) by which that time could have been measured?  Did a measurement standard of time exist then, or does physics merely reconstruct it retroactively?

      If we somehow discover space aliens, will their experience of time be comparable to ours?  Will they have enhanced, super-fast thinking modes that make us seem, to them, intellectual snails?  Will, to them, the wings of a hummingbird in flight be seen in ponderous slow motion?

      Beyond our own universe, whether in the multi-verse or in a spiritual level of existence, what is time?  Is there time there?

      And what of this paradox?  It is always now, it is never now.

T

ime has been considered a mystery for, well, for a long time.  In the preceding section, we introduced the importance of distinguishing between mathematical time and consciously perceived time.  Let’s go a little further into that.

      A simple diagram of time demonstrates both our understanding of time, and our misunderstanding of it.

      Such a diagram, a “timeline,” is perhaps the most simple of all diagrams.  It is often drawn as a single line, horizontal, with an arrowhead at the right end, signifying the passage of time from past (leftmost) to future (rightmost).  Of course other conventions can be used, but let’s use this one.
 
past                                  present                                      future

 ---------------------------------X------------------------------------------>

      In addition to past and future, our diagram also contains a place somewhere near the middle, a point which indicates the present moment, or “now.” 

      The concept of “now” presents a paradox.  The paradox is that any instant in time to which we can point as the “now” instant, immediately becomes a part of the past, as soon as we point to it. Indeed, because our brains perceive according to the transmission of electro-chemical impulses along our neurons, and because those transmissions take much more than an instant of time, we are inherently incapable of sensing a “now” instant of time.  Thus we have the paradox which says that it is always now, it is never now.  So how can we ever perceive a “now” moment?

      The answer is that our brains redefine “now.”  Instead of sensing the present as an infinitesimally short span of time (perhaps a grain of Planck time?), our brains define “now” as a finite segment of time.  Indeed, we have several levels of now, depending on the length of the segment and its context.

      Let’s use an example from carpentry.  If a carpenter is using a hammer to drive a nail through two boards, then that is what he is doing “now.”  He is nailing two boards together.  That task may take only a second or two.  However, if we ask him why he is nailing those two boards together, then he may answer that he is putting a door frame together.  That task may occupy a half hour or more, but that half hour is the answer to what he is doing “now.”  On a wider scale of time, the carpenter may say that he is building a house, a task which takes days, in which case, his “now” occupies those several days.

      “Now” can be an even broader period of time, including “this present generation,” this lifespan, or even the era of nations.

      Were the brain to conceive of each “now” only as the tiniest instant of time, then we might have no sense of continuity. We might not connect the instants into a coherent series.  If so, then there would be no music, because music must have melody.  We do not hear music note by note, but as a continuum.  Indeed, when we hear the same music a second time, our “now” may encompass the entire musical composition, because no matter where we are in the composition, we are mentally placing each note into the whole.  We are remembering the notes already played, and anticipating the notes yet to come.  In a sense, the musical piece becomes timeless for us, partially outside of time.

      Certain brain disorders connected with hearing actually may have the effect of a person being unable to connect the notes of a piece of music into a continuum, unless the person has heard that music before.  This demonstrates that hearing is not merely a function of the ear, but a complex processing of auditory signals inside the brain.  The neural structure for accomplishing this process is not complete at birth, but is developed over a period of time through maturation and experience.  It can be damaged, resulting in various degrees of impairment, some of which may result in failure to recognize music, or even spoken language.

      As we can see, the concept of time as we perceive it is not exactly the same as time measured mathematically.  This is an important point to make, because it may answer the question of whether the Bible contradicts science when it comes to the age of the universe.

      Many Biblical scholars tell us that the genealogy accounts in the Bible place the creation of the world as being only six thousand years ago, whereas calculations by astronomers place it at 13.7 billion years ago.  Who is right?

      Here is a proposed answer to that controversy.

      At the moment when the first man consciously perceived the passage of time, then it was that time as we perceive it began to “flow.”  Up until then, time had existed only as a mathematical abstraction, the abstraction of numbers.  The word “abstraction,” does not mean nonexistent, nor unimportant.  Another term for it, as used here, might be, outside of experience.

      What difference does that make?  As we discussed in Chapter 8, it bears upon the controversy between the Biblical calculations of the age of the universe, and the astronomical calculations.

      Our timeline diagram might now take on a distinctly different character.
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X--------------------------------------->

Mathematical time  . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . Consciously Perceived time

       The dotted line at the left of the timeline represents time that is calculated retroactively, a time that was never experienced by any conscious entity.  The solid line begins at the moment that time was first consciously perceived, a time which may be in accord with the six thousand year figure proposed by some Biblical scholars.

      Time may not be at all what it seems.



[1] Sir Roger Penrose, by the way, disconnects the concept of calculation from the concept of consciousness, suggesting instead that some yet-to-be-discovered principle of natural law is required to explain it.  The God Paradigm agrees with his basic idea, but whereas Penrose awaits a natural-materialistic explanation, the God Paradigm asserts that consciousness does not arise from natural law, but is a foundation of it. Clearly though, the passage of time is experienced consciously.

Sunday, March 15, 2020

The Monism versus Dualism Question in Idealism

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Monist Idealism holds that only consciousness exists.  Dualism holds that both mind and matter exist.  Is there really a conflict between these ideas, or is the dispute a distraction?
 
The discussions of Idealism seem to regard Monism and Dualism as an either / or issue.  While I understand that ultimately, everything is unified, this unity exists only on a level that is forever and fundamentally beyond our grasp.  This is not the monism of Idealism, in which the only thing that exists is mind.
 
There are both monist and dualist aspects to reality, among other aspects as well.
 
A loose analogy would be the human anatomy, in which the body (the organism) is a unified whole, but one that cannot dispense with its separate organs and tissues.  One cannot begin with a body and subdivide it into organs; nor can one begin with organs and assemble them into a functioning body.  The organism is holistic.  It is an interpenetration of unity and fragments.
 
The Idealist concept of Mind-at-Large (in some schools of thought) is that it alone exists, that is to say, it is the ultimate existence.  It perceives itself, and creates fragments of itself and perceives them.  Thus, monist Idealism does not conceive of anything higher or more fundamental than Mind-at-Large itself.
 
In a sense, this is to place the Monist Mind-at-Large in the role of God, surely a matter of high emotional contention, if one takes that literally.  I do not.  I might be called, a Christian Idealist.
 
Consciousness itself is a fundamental reality, but there are higher, more fundamental realities.  Reality exists as a system of hierarchy.  If Mind-at-Large is consciousness, then one might ask, what is it that is conscious?
 
To say that consciousness is itself conscious, and conscious only of itself and of its self-divided parts, is to miss out on other fundamental realities, such as life and free will, such as good and evil, such as love and indifference.
 
The Hindu-Buddhist tradition expresses well why the search for ultimate reality and ultimate meaning are futile.  The tradition holds that nothing can be said about the ultimate reality, not even this.  In more physicalist terms, when we seek to explore the ultimate reality, we arrive at a singularity, where all definitions fail.
 
Idealism has much to offer, both to philosophy and to science, both to psychology and sociology.  It displaces physical reality as the source of mind, and shows physical reality to be more the product of mind—but not an illusion of mind.  Physical reality and immaterial reality are interpenetrating realities.  In this respect, they are one and the same, but that is more a semantic evaluation than an empiric definition.
 
In the end, Idealism will benefit by demoting the monist/dualist argument to a side issue.  Mind does not arise from matter.  They are interactive with each other.  Physicalists have yet to accept that.
 
= = = = = = = = = =
 
My opinion here is restricted to a narrow scope.  It is that Idealism need not overly concern itself with monism / dualism.  The concepts are too ambiguous, and do not lend themselves to practical consequence.
 
Some Idealists seem to be of the opinion that practical consequences are irrelevant, that instead, what is relevant is reason that gets to the truth.  Well and fine, if one actually could get to the final truth, and do so through reason.  I do not think we can.
 
In the intermediate range, I think that some religions do tend toward both, toward truth as far as we can know it, and toward practical applications that help us to overcome our worst instincts, and become a benevolent, altruistic society.
 
Hindu--Buddhist-Eastern philosophies contribute much to the contemplation of inner reality, and have the beneficial aspect of encouraging humility and peaceful benevolence.  It is no coincidence that monasticism is common to both Western and Eastern religions, and resemble each other remarkably.  They are both on to something.
 
In my opinion, Evangelical Christianity, despite the abysmal failures attributed to many of its proponents, does the same as Hinduism, and has enormous potential to do better.  It relies less on reason than on divine revelation, but once divine revelation has set the course, reason is enhanced.  (This idea was eloquently expressed by the late Bishop Fulton J Sheen.)
 
However, this brings us full circle back to the discussion of practical applications.  Once the discussion of monism versus dualism has played its limited role, it should be placed to the back of the classroom, so that the more important and practical consequences of Idealism can be formulated and put into action.
 
One of the great enemies of philosophical progress is secular materialism, a philosophy that regards humans as mere chemicals without an inherent spiritual nature.  Such a philosophy, once it displaces religion, will necessarily tend toward technological barbarism, a society in which humans will be seen as mere tools of the powerful, expendable commodities, disposable at their convenience.

Opposition to that trend is a worthy endeavor, even noble.  Idealism has great potential to undertake that struggle.
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