WaveJumper said:
No, you are playing stupid games. Both stone and dirt behave to the same set of physical laws. Single electrons and your bath tub do not. Their properties are not just somewhat different, they have little in common.
Actually, it is you who are playing games. To say that they "exist differently" is an absurd way of wording it. The difference is only in their properties, which are governed by "different set of physical laws" as you describe. This is only semantics.
WaveJumper said:
I don't care for such Hindu nonsense. Here is an excerp from your website(links to crackpot and religious sites is forbidden):
This made me laugh. I linked to an article which didn't pose anything. It was merely a critique of the stance some people have to the concept of "truth". To call a critique crackpottery is pathetic. The article have no religious material whatsoever.
WaveJumper said:
"One idea I have is to use them for healing. Anyone with a disease such as AIDS or cancer, whether or not they have any understanding of Dharma, can use the prayer wheel for meditation and healing..."
"Tibetan prayer wheels (called Mani wheels by the Tibetans) are devices for spreading spiritual blessings and well being. Rolls of thin paper, imprinted with many, many copies of the mantra (prayer) Om Mani Padme Hum, printed in an ancient Indian script or in Tibetan script, are wound around an axle in a protective container, and spun around and around. Typically, larger decorative versions of the syllables of the mantra are also carved on the outside cover of the wheel.
Tibetan Buddhists believe that saying this mantra, out loud or silently to oneself, invokes the powerful benevolent attention and blessings of Chenrezig, the embodiment of compassion.
Viewing a written copy of the mantra is said to have the same effect -- and the mantra is carved into stones left in piles near paths where travelers will see them. Spinning the written form of the mantra around in a Mani wheel is also supposed to have the same effect; the more copies of the mantra, the more the benefit."
http://dharma-haven.org/tibetan/prayer-wheel.htm
Again, this has nothing to do with the article I linked to. The website contains a collection of articles and essays. They are not linked to each other in the way you try to make it look like. By the way, it's Buddhism, not Hinduism.
WaveJumper said:
Is this your source of truths?
I find it ironic that you say it is a "source of truths" when the article is a critique of your notion of truth. No, it is not my source of truths. By the way, the site doesn't pose "truths" at all. If you read how your quotation is worded, you'll see that. For example: "Viewing a written copy of the mantra
is said to have the same effect", and "Spinning the written form of the mantra around in a Mani wheel is also
supposed to have the same effect; the more copies of the mantra, the more the benefit.". You should understand that these are not claims of truth, but descriptions of use by some. There is a gigantic difference, I hope you can see it.
WaveJumper said:
What exactly does it imply? That your computer is a Demon behaving like a computer, perfectly matching a computer's properties? Do you doubt that your GF/wife is truly a female? It could be Batman manifesting as a female, or even worse, a male porn star with the properties of your wife(and science cannot refute this).
What does this has to do with anything? To say that the thing is not equivalent to its properties has nothing to do with such pessimistic practical skepticism. If you believe so, you have not understood a thing of what I mean.
WaveJumper said:
If you want to return to reality(which is mandatory for having a meaningful debate), adopt the stance that the way our brains interpret information is the correct way and embrace commonly accepted scientific facts(not just Hindu healing, all-knowing crackpottery).
You are creating a strawman which you find easy to beat on. To call the article crackpottery and "Hindu healing" is nonsense. It does not in any way disregard science as the search for knowledge and understanding of nature - it is the notion of truth it is criticizing. If you had read it and understood it, you'd see that it doesn't criticize science at all!
Actually, the following:
WaveJumper said:
the way our brains interpret information is the correct way
illustrates just how wrong you are. (my emphasis) You have no idea how intricate and complicated our brains are, and what a fundamental part the contextual relativity of language has to do with our thought and understanding of the world.
You seem blinded in you naturalistic view.