Emergence & Religion: Could We Create a God?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of emergence, where a system exhibits properties that no individual elements possess. The same is true for human social constructs, such as economies, religions, and states. Emergent systems can affect the individual elements and vice versa. The conversation then delves into the idea of religion as a social construct, uniquely suited for self-preservation and possessing mechanisms for reproduction and mutation. It raises the question of whether the influence of an imagined deity in a complex and stable religious system is indistinguishable from the influence of an actual deity. However, without evidence, it remains mere speculation.
  • #1
OB 50
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I've been thinking a lot lately about the phenomenon of emergence. Basically, where a system exhibits properties that no individual elements of that system possess.

For instance, water possesses myriad properties that could not be directly inferred from examining a single water molecule in isolation. One could never infer the properties of ice or steam or surface tension from a single molecule, but when a large number of these molecules are placed together to form a system, these properties all emerge from the whole.

The same is true is human social constructs. If you were some hypothetical observer who met only one human, you would never infer the global economy from that meeting. However, put enough people together, and these systems start to form. Economies, religions, states, nations, etc.

The interesting thing about emergent systems is that the individual elements of the system all contribute to affect the system as a whole, but the system affects the individual elements as well, seemingly without direct influence from anyone element.

Our consciousness is a prime example. We can identify and catalog every individual part of our body, but no single part is indivisibly "us". We have almost no control of our individual autonomous body functions, yet we have direct control over the actions of our body as a whole. We can take direct action (as the emergent system) that can positively or negatively affect the well-being of our individual parts, like smoking or crashing a car. Alternately, our parts can take actions that can inevitably affect the system as a whole, like a rogue cancerous growth.

This idea that the influence can go both ways, both up and down the hierarchical structure of the system, is what interests me when thinking about the social construct of religion.

Now, before I go any further, I want to make it clear that I'm not espousing an opinion on the validity of anyone's beliefs. I'm just interested in examining the properties of religion as a social construct, and the possible implications and effects of that system on the elements that make it up - people.

Religion as a system seems uniquely suited for self-preservation.

Perhaps the one common trait of most, if not all, humans is a fear of death and the unknown. Every major religion I'm aware of addresses this issue in some form or another, which presents an almost irresistible incentive. With this uncertainty taken care of, the burden and tragedy of everyday life can seem manageable. Once this is accepted, there is very little incentive to reject this notion, because the alternative is unthinkable.

In addition, religion possesses mechanisms for reproduction and mutation. Missionaries, evangelists, crusaders, family traditions - all mechanisms for continued reproduction. Splinter groups and sects form constantly - mutations. Some form and disband in a relatively short time, but others are more successful and flourish, like Islam and Christianity.

These now distinct religions then compete with one another for supremacy or survival, just like competing life forms. We've seen this happen for thousands of years. In Egypt and Greece, we can find the fossilized remains of two religious systems that must have seemed all-powerful at the time.

This brings me to my main point.

Say we have some hypothetical population of a few million people. For the sake of argument, there is no actual divine influence being exerted upon this population from an actual deity. However, these people have a very clear idea and understanding of the deity that they worship, regardless of its actual existence. They have rules covering virtually every aspect of their daily lives which are derived in part or in whole from the teachings of this deity, and each tries to live their life accordingly.

With enough people and a complex and stable religious social construct, is the influence of this imagined deity in any way distinguishable from the influence of an actual deity? If everyone is acting in the way that they perceive this deity would desire them to act, then has the emergent system exerted its influence on the population in the same manner a real deity would desire to do so?

In short: If God didn't already exist, did we create Him in a way that can still affect the course of human events in a very real way?
 
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  • #2
Yes, religion has a cultural and biological free floating rationale and history. This is described in detail in such books as

"Religion Explained" by Pascal Boyer
"Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomena" by Daniel Dennett.
"In Gods We Trust: The Evolutionary Landscape of Religion" by Scot Atran
"Darwin's Cathedral: Evolution, Religion, and the Nature of Society" by David Sloan Wilson

etc.
 
  • #3
Moridin said:
Yes, religion has a cultural and biological free floating rationale and history. This is described in detail in such books as

"Religion Explained" by Pascal Boyer
"Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomena" by Daniel Dennett.
"In Gods We Trust: The Evolutionary Landscape of Religion" by Scot Atran
"Darwin's Cathedral: Evolution, Religion, and the Nature of Society" by David Sloan Wilson

etc.

Without taking a week off to tackle your reading list, I have no idea which part, if any, of my argument you're actually addressing. If this is confirming the evolutionary/biological analogues that I presented, then you glossed over my entire point.

Let me distill this as simply as I possibly can:

Is it possible that right now, as we speak, human actions are being influenced in a very real way by a "god" which is entirely the product of an emergent system?
 
  • #4
OB 50 said:
Let me distill this as simply as I possibly can:

Is it possible that right now, as we speak, human actions are being influenced in a very real way by a "god" which is entirely the product of an emergent system?


Don't worry, The Flying Spaghetti Monster is a tolerant and forgiving God!


Now seriously, you should know by now that in principle anything is possible. But... until we have evidence of such phenomena, it's mere speculation, unfounded or otherwise. This brings up another question - why would such a God hide from its creations? Or if we aren't his creations, but he is our creation as you assert, why would you call such errr... entity God? If i dream up making a bank robbery, should this be considered a real emergent robbery for which i should be penalised according to the law?
 
  • #5
WaveJumper said:
Don't worry, The Flying Spaghetti Monster is a tolerant and forgiving God!


Now seriously, you should know by now that in principle anything is possible. But... until we have evidence of such phenomena, it's mere speculation, unfounded or otherwise. This brings up another question - why would such a God hide from its creations? Or if we aren't his creations, but he is our creation as you assert, why would you call such errr... entity God? If i dream up making a bank robbery, should this be considered a real emergent robbery for which i should be penalised according to the law?

If you imagine a bank robbery, it's just a fantasy.

If EVERYONE thinks that you are a bank robber, then for all intents and purposes, you ARE a bank robber.

This is why I used quotes "god". Obviously this phenomenon doesn't possesses any supernatural powers or exist in any literal sense, any more than the United States exists as anything other than an agreed upon social construct.

There's nothing about creation here, and there's no "hiding" going on. The relationship between the elements doesn't work that way. Can you "hide" your consciousness from your toes? Can you directly communicate with your pancreas?
 
  • #6
OB 50 said:
If EVERYONE thinks that you are a bank robber, then for all intents and purposes, you ARE a bank robber.
Could you expound on the reasons behind this statement?
OB 50 said:
This is why I used quotes "god". Obviously this phenomenon doesn't possesses any supernatural powers or exist in any literal sense
There is an exact word for this and it isn't "God". It's mass hysteria and is fairly common in societies subjected to religious or other types of propaganda.
 
  • #7
WaveJumper said:
Now seriously, you should know by now that in principle anything is possible. But... until we have evidence of such phenomena, it's mere speculation, unfounded or otherwise.


I'm curious about something you said. How do you define evidence?
 
  • #8
WaveJumper said:
Could you expound on the reasons behind this statement?

We could easily substitute "bank robber" for almost anything. "President of the USA" is a good one. The power wielded by this position only exists when everyone agrees upon the fact that the person possesses the power. Otherwise, it's just some guy.

Same with your "bank robber" status. If everyone agrees that you are a bank robber, then you will be treated as such. You will still have the personal knowledge that you never actually robbed a bank, but what good will that do you? Who will you tell, when everyone "knows" that's what you did? You will live the life of someone who robbed a bank (prison, ridicule, etc.), and when you die, you will be remembered as a bank robber.


WaveJumper said:
There is an exact word for this and it isn't "God". It's mass hysteria and is fairly common in societies subjected to religious or other types of propaganda.

I hesitate to use the term "mass hysteria", but I get what you're saying. Maybe that's the other side of the coin. Mass hysteria implies a spontaneous, panicked shared delusion. What I'm describing is the result of a complex and structured system.
 
  • #9
swat4life said:
I'm curious about something you said. How do you define evidence?
If you saw someone stealing your car stereo or someone beating your daughter, would you ask yourself - "How do i define evidence?"
 
  • #10
WaveJumper said:
If you saw someone stealing your car stereo or someone beating your daughter, would you ask yourself - "How do i define evidence?"

In general, it's better in life to give well thought out responses rather than emotional reactions...
 
  • #11
swat4life said:
In general, it's better in life to give well thought out responses rather than emotional reactions...


Right. Now which part of this fairly neutral statement:
WaveJumper said:
Now seriously, you should know by now that in principle anything is possible. But... until we have evidence of such phenomena, it's mere speculation, unfounded or otherwise.

provoked you to question the nature of commonly accepted standards of evidence, by saying this:

I'm curious about something you said. How do you define evidence?
 
  • #12
I think OB 50 raises interesting points.

Truth is a human construct (or, more generally, the result of sentient life). I see no reason to assume that anything is true or false, outside the realm of conscious interpretation.

That being said, if everyone believes something, then it's (at least temporarily) true. What's the difference between mass hysteria and science, other than the fact that most of science hasn't been disproven yet? The difference between God and Gravity is not qualitative, only quantitative; if Gravity stopped working one day, then our science would have been a lie; if God descends from the sky one day, then he will be proven true.

I think it's completely plausible that God is an emergent quality of a system of human beings. Human beings are very complex animals, and when you network them in societies the complexity becomes enormous. Even simple cellular automata can express incredibly rich emergent behavior, and these are many, many orders of magnitude less complex than even the simplest life form.

I think it's important not to fall into the trap of saying that emergent properties of a system aren't real, though. They are very real; real is a matter of degree and interpretation. Unicorns are real, in that you can draw a picture of one, think about one, and even make one, with enough expertise. If all cats died, would cats cease to be real? If it turned out that cats had always been dogs wearing suits, would cats cease to be real then?
 
  • #13
AUMathTutor said:
That being said, if everyone believes something, then it's (at least temporarily) true. What's the difference between mass hysteria and science, other than the fact that most of science hasn't been disproven yet? The difference between God and Gravity is not qualitative, only quantitative; if Gravity stopped working one day, then our science would have been a lie; if God descends from the sky one day, then he will be proven true.

I want to make sure this isn't misinterpreted as a "truth is subjective" discussion. Gravity may very well be the emergent property of some more fundamental underlying structure, but it is not dependent on human opinion or observation. Quite the contrary; we are in fact emergent systems brought about by the structure imposed upon matter by the phenomenon of gravity.

AUMathTutor said:
I think it's important not to fall into the trap of saying that emergent properties of a system aren't real, though. They are very real; real is a matter of degree and interpretation. Unicorns are real, in that you can draw a picture of one, think about one, and even make one, with enough expertise. If all cats died, would cats cease to be real? If it turned out that cats had always been dogs wearing suits, would cats cease to be real then?

Another very important distinction. Unicorns possesses a very specific set of properties that need to be fulfilled for anyone to consider them "real".

1. They are solid objects. They can be touched and they take up space.
2. They are not invisible. They can be seen.

These two things alone are enough to put a huge damper on people's willingness to believe in unicorns, but this isn't about simple belief in a thing. Unicorns don't possesses intent.

On the other hand, God possesses a unique set of properties which makes it very easy to believe. Most of these are non-falsifiable, which when combined with the concept of faith and the promise of avoiding death, provide a very compelling reason to believe.

1. Omnipresence - God is everywhere, yet invisible.
2. Omniscience - God knows everything, including your individual thoughts.
3. Omnipotent - God possesses great power, including that of life and death.
4. Intent - God has an agenda. He has a purpose for each believer, and that believer tries to divine this purpose and live according to it.

Whether God exists or not is irrelevant. The simple fact that there are billions of people attempting to live their lives in accordance with the perceived wishes of a supreme being makes that intent real. The effect on their behavior is indistinguishable in either case.
 
  • #14
What you say about emergence and social construction is commonsense. But where things fall apart for me is the idea that the non-falsifiable can also be considered real.

If you define something as undectable, untestable, you are defining it out of existence. Its existence becomes moot. Much like imagining a completely non-interacting particle.

On the other hand, you could change the word god in your chain of argument for laws of physics. They are emergent social beliefs (models, or ideas that shape our impressions) which indeed are everywhere at once, know everything that goes on, able to constrain every event. So they are real in the way you say, but are also a set of testable, falsifiable constructs.

Getting back to gods and religions, god constructs are in fact tested - as you yourself mention - by their daily social utility. And their ability to propagate through time as memes.

So gods are indeed real as social memes. And as usually articulated, the "physical properties" of gods do seem in conflict with our scientific models of physical reality. But that is hardly troubling to anyone taking a social constructionist perspective of god beliefs.
 
  • #15
A while back I had exactly the same thoughts as you.

I do think that 'god' does in fact I guess control certain aspects of what happens on this world regardless of whether or not 'god' exist. So this in essence makes the 'intent of said god true' like you said.

This of course must be so though... how else could it be? I don't believe that thinking that the existence or non-existence of god is irrelevant to the impacts it has on human lives is really productive of anything. This only shows that the concept is real (which it must be anyways because we know of it...) and that people decide to follow the concept (which also must be so because we have the religions you spoke of...). So this concept now has an impact on the lives of humans.

So what I guess I am saying is that this has no impact on helping determine anything useful... for instance whether their exist 'religious god(s)'
 
  • #16
"1. They are solid objects. They can be touched and they take up space.
2. They are not invisible. They can be seen."

I think that's a vast oversimplification of *everything*. Water is not a solid object. The empty space in a vase can't be touched and doesn't take up space. Nor is it visible.

The unicorns thing is a stretch, but your reasoning is severely flawed.

"I want to make sure this isn't misinterpreted as a "truth is subjective" discussion. Gravity may very well be the emergent property of some more fundamental underlying structure, but it is not dependent on human opinion or observation. Quite the contrary; we are in fact emergent systems brought about by the structure imposed upon matter by the phenomenon of gravity."

This isn't about subjectivism, just about the fact that very few things in the world are verifiably true. Gravity, God, and the existence of unicorns all provide good examples of things that (a) appear to be true but may not really be true, (b) do not appear to be true but may actually be, and (c) things the truth of which may depend on the interpretation.

A lot of what I said was a response to criticisms of your points, rather than a supplement to your views, OB50.

I think the point is that things can exist "by accident" in a certain sense. "God" exists "by accident" because enough people act under this assumption to make his presence felt regardless of the hidden property of his existence. In simpler terms, if you're walking in the street and all of a sudden you feel like you got hit by a bus, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to question whether there was really a bus there at all, or if it was a car or a tractor trailer, or if you really just tripped and imagined the whole thing, or if you're in a coma you'll never wake up from and dreamt the whole thing, etc.
 
  • #17
AUMathTutor said:
"1. They are solid objects. They can be touched and they take up space.
2. They are not invisible. They can be seen."

I think that's a vast oversimplification of *everything*. Water is not a solid object. The empty space in a vase can't be touched and doesn't take up space. Nor is it visible.

The unicorns thing is a stretch, but your reasoning is severely flawed.

"I want to make sure this isn't misinterpreted as a "truth is subjective" discussion. Gravity may very well be the emergent property of some more fundamental underlying structure, but it is not dependent on human opinion or observation. Quite the contrary; we are in fact emergent systems brought about by the structure imposed upon matter by the phenomenon of gravity."

This isn't about subjectivism, just about the fact that very few things in the world are verifiably true. Gravity, God, and the existence of unicorns all provide good examples of things that (a) appear to be true but may not really be true, (b) do not appear to be true but may actually be, and (c) things the truth of which may depend on the interpretation.

A lot of what I said was a response to criticisms of your points, rather than a supplement to your views, OB50.

I think the point is that things can exist "by accident" in a certain sense. "God" exists "by accident" because enough people act under this assumption to make his presence felt regardless of the hidden property of his existence. In simpler terms, if you're walking in the street and all of a sudden you feel like you got hit by a bus, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to question whether there was really a bus there at all, or if it was a car or a tractor trailer, or if you really just tripped and imagined the whole thing, or if you're in a coma you'll never wake up from and dreamt the whole thing, etc.
I don't think he is attempting to prove god necessarily exists in reality. Actually from what I got out of this he says exactly what you say. That god is a emergent property of peoples minds. The validity of the belief however he doesn't claim to have any knowledge of.
 
  • #18
Its an interesting concept to imagine that... let's say 4 billion people on the planet have an inkling of what a "god" is. They've either gotten the idea from TV evangelists or from someone singing in a mosque or from a book or just from their parents.

Concretely, this creates an electromagnetic chatter specifically signatured to describe an "all knowing" being with a big beard or 27 vestal virgins or.. like a scroll with your name on it. This is creating an emergent property of the collective human awareness that surrounds the planet like a haze of dogmatic fear, rapture, more fear and perhaps some ethical wisdom that maintains some of the composure amongst the masses.

What an enormous opportunity just begging to be exploited by commercial, industrial, military and control freaks. This could well be the cause of global warming:rolleyes:.
 
  • #19
Sorry! said:
I don't think he is attempting to prove god necessarily exists in reality. Actually from what I got out of this he says exactly what you say. That god is a emergent property of peoples minds. The validity of the belief however he doesn't claim to have any knowledge of.

So if I understand it correctly, the statement is basically that the influence of an actual "God" (or other deity / supernatural being) would be indistinguishable from the subtle cumulative influence of a large number of people collectively believing in such a God / deity / being.

Actually, apart from a few hazy / sarcastic posts, I must admit this is the most interesting thread I've seen in the Philosophy forum in a while.

Yes, this is basically just a bookmark/subscription post ;)
 
  • #20
CompuChip said:
So if I understand it correctly, the statement is basically that the influence of an actual "God" (or other deity / supernatural being) would be indistinguishable from the subtle cumulative influence of a large number of people collectively believing in such a God / deity / being.

Actually, apart from a few hazy / sarcastic posts, I must admit this is the most interesting thread I've seen in the Philosophy forum in a while.

Yes, this is basically just a bookmark/subscription post ;)
The ancient Egyptians believed the Sun was God. Would then, by this theory, the Sun be considered an emergent God indistinguishable from the influence of an actual God? Could God be really anything and shouldn't this theory propose minimum standards that would exclude certain "comic" types of God, or does anything go?

Is this thread serious or am I failing to see the humour?
 
  • #21
CompuChip said:
So if I understand it correctly, the statement is basically that the influence of an actual "God" (or other deity / supernatural being) would be indistinguishable from the subtle cumulative influence of a large number of people collectively believing in such a God / deity / being.

This is pretty much exactly the point I'm trying to get across.

WaveJumper said:
The ancient Egyptians believed the Sun was God. Would then, by this theory, the Sun be considered an emergent God indistinguishable from the influence of an actual God? Could God be really anything and shouldn't this theory propose minimum standards that would exclude certain "comic" types of God, or does anything go?

Is this thread serious or am I failing to see the humour?

I'm completely serious.

The form that a particular "god" takes is irrelevant. Sure, in ancient Egypt, it could have been the Sun. If everyone in that society tried to live by what they perceived the desires of the Sun to be, then are those desires any less real than those imposed by an actual being?

Let me be explicitly clear. The only manifestation of this "god's" power or will is through the actions of humans. This has nothing to do with the supernatural, or creation, or any of that jazz. It's purely behavioral.
 
  • #22
I concur that this is the most interesting thread in the philosophy forum for a while.

Everything you're saying seems to make sense.
 
  • #23
Maybe it would be helpful to step back from the idea of "god" for awhile, and look at how other emergent systems behave in a similar manner.

The best example I can think of right now is The Economy. There's no one I know who isn't in some way affected by the state of the global economy. Everyone contributes to it, by either consuming or producing, and everyone is affected by it, in the form of prices and wages, yet no one holds any direct control over the system as a whole.

As we speak, virtually everyone on the planet is in agreement as to how they want the economy to behave. They want it to get better. Well, that's great! If we're all in agreement that we want a healthy economy, then why isn't it so? If it's just a matter of shared belief, then why doesn't it just happen?

That's the point. Once a system reaches a certain size and complexity, it becomes greater than the sum of its parts. Even the most powerful people on Earth have no direct influence over the state of the economy. They try really hard by manipulating individual elements of the system, but the effects can never be accurately predicted in advance.

The economic system is greater than the sum of its parts: individuals, states, nations, industries, religions. It seems to have its own agenda, and we almost take this for granted. Why is it so hard to imagine that the will of "god" could manifest itself in much the same way?
 
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  • #24
I think i just find this thread pointless because I have already pondered over these ideas and found them to be of minimal use. Like obviously the social construct of say a god will be followed by somebody or the social construct never would have been created. It may have a limited life or it may continue for a extremely long time but none-the-less that/those god(s) still had influence in this world through the actions of the people. Why does this matter though? I could make a new god sitting right here on my laptop and begin indoctrinating simple minded people. Does that mean that my god is 'real'? To me it doesn't it just implies that the construct (of god, not my god) is powerfull. (which is why people will probably believe in my created god)

One thing however I did find interesting in my thoughts of this process is that the constructs DO take on a whole new life of their own. When we try to get rid of them they will presistently fight to stay in existence. The only way to completely rid society of a particular construct is for everyone in society to simultanesouly take a leap-of-faith to whatever other option there is and never look back.

For instance when one religion overtakes another the prior religion never just disappears. It always fights to maintain it's existence and sometimes it stays around for extremely long times even though there is another main religion which is more popular. I am sure that people still do believe in an ancient god or gods. Or ancient economic ideas, ideas based on gender etc. etc.

I think the person I read about this stuff was John Searle, very interesting stuff.
 
  • #25
Sorry! said:
I think i just find this thread pointless because I have already pondered over these ideas and found them to be of minimal use. Like obviously the social construct of say a god will be followed by somebody or the social construct never would have been created. It may have a limited life or it may continue for a extremely long time but none-the-less that/those god(s) still had influence in this world through the actions of the people. Why does this matter though? I could make a new god sitting right here on my laptop and begin indoctrinating simple minded people. Does that mean that my god is 'real'? To me it doesn't it just implies that the construct (of god, not my god) is powerfull. (which is why people will probably believe in my created god)

Sure, you can make up a god and start indoctrinating simple-minded people. Maybe in a thousand years you will have converted enough people and established the necessary social structures and institutions for it to have some meaningful measure of influence. Good luck though, because you said yourself that the other established "gods" aren't going down without a fight.

But the thing is, you can't create a new god. The idea already exists within your head of what a god might be. Sure, the details might be a bit different (mutation), and if they're more appealing than what's out there now, it might take off (natural selection). You'd just be perpetuating the very same process, not refuting it. The process depends upon people doing exactly what you're suggesting. That's how it adapts to the changing world.

The story is the same over and over again: Creation, Suffreing, Messiah, Salvation.
(I'm leaving out elements of Eastern religions for simplicity's sake, since their concept of "god", if any, is less personified than the personal Western god.)

These are the elements that work. Fish have gills and fins, because that's what works. If your new god is missing these things, then you likely won't convert many people. If it does, then what did you really do other than put on a fresh coat of paint?

Sorry! said:
I think the person I read about this stuff was John Searle, very interesting stuff.

I'm pretty sure he would disagree with me, though I did find his Chinese Box thought experiment to be a useful analogy for this type of idea. However, I disagree with his conclusion. The box does speak Chinese.
 
  • #26
I'm not sure if this was OB50's intent but he is simply making a standard systems science or hierarchy theory point.

A hierarchy that develops "naturally" has both bottom-up and top-down causality. There is a set of small stuff that constructs, and then at the global spatiotemporal scale, there emerges a generality, a prevailing ambience, that constrains.

Where things get really interesting is where the two things are mutual. Where not only is the small adding up to make the large, but the large is in turn responsible for shaping up the identity of the small.

Then you have a true self-organising system.

So taking the god example. A collection of individual humans are the small local constructive "stuff", the located substance of the system. Then together they create some kind of prevailing belief system. This set of global beliefs turns out to have social utility - it gives the collection of individuals a survival advantage. And the beliefs operate as an ambient set of constraints. Each person's behaviour is not determined by the beliefs, but it is guided, steered, limited, shaped.

To put is simply, the local scale becomes defined by its degrees of freedom. Any property that is not being globally suppressed, constrained by the emergent ambience that prevails broadly over space and time, will naturally be free to happen. What is not forbidden is what can and must be happening.

So from local actions comes some global form, some general set of constraints. And these constraints then in turn are more sharply focusing the identity of a set of local individuals. Kids grow up to act a certain way. Groups over time become more narrowly bound as the memes evolve and develop.

The psychology creates the sociology and the sociology in turn creates the psychology. Local and global scales are in interaction so that a whole system self-organises (what Hoftsteddler, reinventing the wheel, once popularised as a strange loop).

So from systems science, we can see that collections of anything will produce their own prevailing states of global constraint. Constraints that in turn sharpen up the identity of the localised collection. A very simple example of such a phenomenon would be a spin glass or Ising model - self-organising phase transitions.

Human social systems are then what we would call complex adaptive systems (CAS) in that they have this systems causality in an evolutionary context. There is selection pressure and competition. There is a need for knowing and adaptation. The phase transition, so to speak, is open ended.

Anyway, there is plenty of science to ground the discussion. And from the understanding that the global level is about constraint - large scale constraints that are in dynamic equilibrium with local constructive action - we can see why human societies would want to endow their "gods" with some particular mythic qualities.

A god must be everywhere and see right inside your head if you are to feel socially constrained even in your thinking. God forbid that your thoughts should go off topic.

But also god acts only as a set of global constraints - long run patterns which we must have a choice about fleetingly breaking. So as with QM, on the fine grain, there is room for fluctuations. We can sin, then atone. As long as things average out, the system as a whole stays on track.

There is a pretty precise fit between our concept of god (which has evolved through human history to become something ever more abstract and globalised) and the global scale that systems science would predict. And we can see it in other generalised notions like the UN bill of human rights or other rational/humanist attempts at global ethical constraints.

We make these things real. And they in turn really make us. It is a two-way causality. But different in that the local acts in an additive and constructive fashion. The global acts in a constraining and shaping fashion.

Emergence is a bad word because of its connotations of accidental, not quite real. In systems science, it is actually the whole system that must emerge - self-organise. Or better yet, develop, evolve, equilibrate. And the local and the global scales are different yet both *real* in that they are causally essential to what is found.
 
  • #27
apeiron said:
I'm not sure if this was OB50's intent...

Yes, this is exactly the process I've been trying to describe. Thanks for taking the time to restate it using the proper terminology and concepts.

These types of self-organizing systems are everywhere, but I think the "god" system possesses a unique quality apart from all others. It specifically supposes a personified will.

I would go so far to say that the "god" system is distinct and more primary than the system of organized religion. I may be wrong, but it seems to me that many believers have a clear distinction between "the church" and "god". This distinction is necessary for splinter groups to form, and for the "god" system to perpetuate itself through changing societal conditions.
 
  • #28
If you are talking about the special features of a christian gods, and other evangelising religions, again this is a well understood story.

Ancient rome had its traditional animistic gods. It had an easy-going plurality which allowed many varied traditions co-exist within a new kind of social system ruled by abstract philosophical constraints - ideas like democracy, property rights, sharper separation of individual and state.

(BTW: a distancing of local and global scale, of local constructive freedoms and global generalised constraints, that systems theory predicts is precisely what will happen to allow system growth and development: the more space created between the local and global scales of the hierarchy, the more room there is for complexity to develop inbetween.)

Then along came christianity which was successful as a new social meme exactly because it said there is only one god, and your relationship with him is personal, not social.

So a new social order - one that allowed dynamic human growth - began in greece and became an expanding empire under rome. The idea of a prevailing law-ruled state emerged. So religion had to then come in over the top of this. It had to put its super-god at a higher scale than "your mere social state". And this allowed the new mystical cult of christianity to convert local individuals in any organised social system. To expand its numbers by colonising the minds of all the many cultures making up rome, then any new minds it came across while colonising the globe.

So a certain super-god had to emerge to put itself at a higher level of global constraint than the dynamic new social democracies. Ideas like guilt and sin had to be invented so that humans could be controlled by an abstract all-seeing, at the end of your life averaging your performance, god. You see how beautifully the christian god fits into the local/global scale story. Every little act is noticed, but it takes all your life for the final tally. A law-ruled state just notices the coarse grain trangressions and each sin is dealt with in isolation as it happens.

Anyway, with christianity, the lid was kept on social development for a long time. We had the dark ages. Then a new cult asserted itself even over the head of a mystic super-power. The one we call science.

And what are the global constraints on individual action that science exerts, and which shapes the kind of people we have in the modern era?

Scientists (our high priests, the true believers, of which there are many self-appointed in the field of physics, quick to demonise any straying from the path - off topic! speculation!) would say the kind of person being made is all good. The ultimate stage of human development.

But history suggests these things have phases. So what is next?

For a laugh, it could be argued that what is coming in over the head of science as the largest global scale of social organisation, of meme-making, is the new cult of celebrity, of triviality, of irrational exhuberance. Nietzsche's superman perhaps? The self that is transcendant, the new global scale? Like, whatever.

Of course, global "gods" have to have social utility in the long run to persist. They actually have to work as prevailing controlling ideas over both large expanses of space AND time. And you can see where that argument goes.
 
  • #29
apeiron said:
If you are talking about the special features of a christian gods, and other evangelising religions, again this is a well understood story.

Ancient rome had its traditional animistic gods. It had an easy-going plurality which allowed many varied traditions co-exist within a new kind of social system ruled by abstract philosophical constraints - ideas like democracy, property rights, sharper separation of individual and state.

(BTW: a distancing of local and global scale, of local constructive freedoms and global generalised constraints, that systems theory predicts is precisely what will happen to allow system growth and development: the more space created between the local and global scales of the hierarchy, the more room there is for complexity to develop inbetween.)

Then along came christianity which was successful as a new social meme exactly because it said there is only one god, and your relationship with him is personal, not social.

Again, thanks for adding such a detailed reply. I'm afraid my lack of formal knowledge on this subject has hindered my ability to articulate exactly what it is I'm trying get across. This helps quite a bit in refining my ideas.

I'm under no illusions that I somehow "discovered" everything you outlined above. I'm aware that this is the generally accepted view of evolving social structures, and my poor attempt at summarizing it probably muddied the waters a bit.

I still think that the "god" system is unique from all the rest, that's why I would still venture to say that the word "emergent" applies in this specific instance. There is a particular aspect of human consciousness that comes into play here, and I think that's where the "god" system in some way transcends other self-organizing social systems.

Whether it's a side effect of consciousness or an essential element, humans are constantly trying to predict what other humans are thinking. Right now, this process is shaping this very conversation. I'm trying to make a point, so I try to pick the appropriate words and phrases to get that point across. But while doing so, I'm trying to figure out exactly what you think I've said about my point so far. I'm aware that there is a gap between my intended meaning, and what you actually interpreted my meaning to be. Based on your previous responses, I can see how my previous assertions were misunderstood and adjust my subsequent responses so that they address what I perceive your understanding to be.

It's a continuous feedback loop, but one that is not dependent solely on trial and error. It is predictive in nature. Based on my understanding of my own consciousness, I can predict with some accuracy what you are thinking. It will never be 100% accurate, but it works well enough that we can all mostly get through our day without appearing to be completely incomprehensible to one other. We humans devote a large portion of our thought processes to this predictive activity, and possibly entire portions of the brain are specialized for this.

Every time person A interacts with person B, person A runs a simulation of person B in their head. Depending on how well person A knows person B, the simulation will be either more or less accurate. If person A is interacting with their identical twin who he has known intimately since birth, then the simulation will be extremely accurate. If person A is interacting with a stranger on the internet, then the simulation is based on a very small amount of knowledge and the rest is assumed, resulting in a very inaccurate simulation. This is why we usually just start calling each other "Hitler" before a discussion makes it to page 3.

In effect, the only person who knows the "real you" is you. To the rest of the world, you are the aggregate of everyone's internal simulations of who they think you are. Other than direct or indirect physical contact, this is how we affect the world. The "real you" is largely irrelevant to anyone but yourself. The "perceived you" is what actually allows you to function as a person in society.

This is precisely why I think that "god" is a unique system. We have billions of people in some fashion using this dedicated part of their thought processes to ask themselves, "What is God thinking, and what does he want me to do?" This might come into play tangentally in systems like the economy, but there is never the direct thought process of, "what does the economy want me to do?" or "What is the economy thinking?" The fact that "god" must be viewed as a "person" engages this process of predictive simulation within the human mind.

Once you have a few billion people running a distributed and predictive "god" simulation in their heads, based on a very specific set of attributes which are passed down and codified by the supporting system of organized religion, how is this simulation any different from a real person? The effects are very real. People live and die every day according to the perceived will of "god".
 
  • #30
Again your points seem commonsense and there is much research that would bear on them. Well, I say commonsense, but it is actually pretty rare for people to arrive at them intuitively.

Prediction is what consciousness (and modelling generally) is all about. That is why I always cite mind theorists who treat anticipation as fundamental like Neisser, Grossberg, Rosen.

And then the human mind is a social phenomenon. It exists and develops at a group level. There you have Vygotsky and social constructionism as your cites.

But I question how far you can take the idea that a god concept is the most complete or final step in the emergence of socially constructed mind.

In some ways it works. We would construct a person locally (the image we each have of being a "self"). And so we would re-construct that same kind of person at the "super-mind" level. We would have small god (me and you) living within the mind of the big god (me now talking to a larger part of myself, as a holistic system, through the medium of prayer and revelation).

So yes, it kind of works. A nested hierarchy with the small gods nested in the mind of the global god, the small gods constructing their small scale interactions with each other and the big god constraining in his broad scale way.

The big weakness is that this concept of personification (as you yourself say) is itself a myth. A construct. The idea of an "I", an experiencing ego, a located soul with a window on reality, is itself not very scientific under closer examination. And so to repeat this myth on the super-scale - as a global person - is to compound an error.

Perhaps there are a few billion people who do think this way - I am a "person" and I exist in the mind of a "person" - but it is not a necessary way of construing the situation.

Social anthropology (Harre is a good cite) will tell you how "primitive" people treat their self-regulation and emotions quite differently. They have no issue with understanding that the way they act is the way of the group. Even the language of self-regulation is externalised.

And it is easy to imagine better ways for modern minds to frame their actions within a context than to place ourselves as local egos withing the mind of a super-ego.

So what is natural in systems science is for there to be a context that shapes, that constrains. The christian idea of a god as the context and souls as located selves are indeed two mutually reinforcing memes - the same thing, person-ification, at two scales of a nested hierarchy.

But the idea of personhood does not stand up to scrutiny. It does not do much at the scientific level. Which is why systems science leads you to focus on anticipatory systems and complex adaptive systems and other ways of putting "knowing" or semiosis into the realm of matter.

Systems science would say if you really find it useful to treat located brain/minds as anticipatory processes then your emergent super-mind, the result of a collection of these individual instances, would then be a super-anticipatory system in some sense.

Instead of small-god/big-god as the figure and ground, the event and context, you would have something more intellectually robust such as smallscale anticipation/largescale anticipation as the emergent duality.
 
  • #31
CompuChip said:
Actually, apart from a few hazy / sarcastic posts, I must admit this is the most interesting thread I've seen in the Philosophy forum in a while.
This cannot be!

Lock, just to be on the safe side.

:biggrin:
 
  • #32
apeiron said:
I'm not sure if this was OB50's intent but he is simply making a standard systems science or hierarchy theory point.

Yes, this is what I got out of his posts, and I too believe it is commonsense. I don't know if I completely agree with him that society can rid themselves of constructs but oh well. :P


And yes OB50 they will DEFINITELY fight to remain alive once they get to the point your describing, say like christianity, they take on a whole new life of their own. Without even needing human interaction I believe but I still think we can be gone with them just the same way we created them.
 
  • #33
Sorry! said:
Yes, this is what I got out of his posts, and I too believe it is commonsense. I don't know if I completely agree with him that society can rid themselves of constructs but oh well. :P


And yes OB50 they will DEFINITELY fight to remain alive once they get to the point your describing, say like christianity, they take on a whole new life of their own. Without even needing human interaction I believe but I still think we can be gone with them just the same way we created them.

I never said that we can or should rid ourselves of these constructs. Can a bee rid itself of the hive?

Am I necessarily happy that there may exist an overarching intelligence that would most likely prefer to destroy me, given the chance? No. I'm not exactly the kind of person that fits into the "god" system, so while this line of thinking fascinates me, I also find it pretty disturbing.
 

1. What is emergence?

Emergence is a scientific concept that describes how complex systems and patterns can arise from simpler interactions and components. It is the idea that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

2. How does emergence relate to religion?

Emergence can be seen as a potential explanation for the emergence of religious beliefs and practices in human societies. It suggests that religion may have emerged from simpler social and cultural interactions and evolved over time into the complex systems we see today.

3. Can we create a god through emergence?

While emergence can explain the emergence of religious beliefs and practices, it cannot create a god in the traditional sense. Emergence is a natural process, and the concept of a god is often considered supernatural and beyond scientific explanation.

4. How does emergence impact our understanding of religion?

Emergence can help us understand the origins and evolution of religious beliefs and practices, but it does not necessarily provide evidence for or against the existence of a higher power or deity. It is important to approach the study of religion with both scientific and cultural perspectives.

5. Can emergence and religion coexist?

Yes, emergence and religion can coexist. While emergence offers a scientific explanation for the emergence of religion, it does not necessarily conflict with the beliefs and practices of a particular religion. Many scientists and religious individuals find ways to reconcile their beliefs with scientific explanations.

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