- #1
bola
- 71
- 0
Here's something I wrote, comment on whatever portions you'd like, I tried to put everything into one piece.
Imagine the Universe right before the Big Bang. A small perfect sphere of energy. This ball then explodes, sending trillions and trillions of small particles out into nothingness. What did this result in? Our Universe, ourselves, and a hell of a lot more.
We are here on a rotating ball of dust and rock, in the middle of a vacuum, maybe this vacuum is dark energy, maybe it's not.
The scenario is ridiculous in itself.. I mean a large rotating ball? Who would've thought.
I will get right to it. The Universe has a Plank length. This plank length is 10 -30 meters large, which means it's 30 billion times smaller than a centimeter. What happens at Plank length is that Quantum effects start to warp time and space in a way so that we can't measure it.
So far the smallest possible particle we have been able to observe in a laboratory is a sub-atomic particle.
We divide these particles into 2 main categories, matter and forces.
Matter particles has a mass, while force particles have no mass.
Matter particles are made up of negatively charged electrons, opposites push each other away, so when two electrons meet, they push each other away. Your hand is made up of billions of small electrons, and so is the wall you're trying to push your hand through.
Force particles have no mass, so with no mass to hinder them, they travel at the speed of light.
This makes up the light we see around us, electromagnetism, gravity and maybe some undiscovered forces too.
Every atom has a core, made up of protons and neutrons, which are bound together by a force called 'The Strong Force', which we call the 'Nucleus'. Protons and neutrons are composed of even smaller particles called 'Quarks' and 'Leptons'.
Around the core, in an orbit, flies the electrons, which are negatively charged.
At present time scientists have found a little over 200 particles, so I won't go much into that now. I wanted to put down the basis for my philosophy session.
Over this we have atoms. These atom make up the basic building blocks of the universe. By combining atoms together you get molecules.
For example two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom creates one water molecule.
So this is all very intriguing, but how do we put it to good use in the real world? What philosophies comes from this?
Firstly we can set up some few basic questions.
1. Why does the universe exist?
2. Where does all the energy in the universe come from?
3. How does the conscious mind come into play?
4. And what is this consiousness?
5. What is infinity, and how does it come into play regarding the human mind, is it a human concept or something which was conceived the moment the universe was created?
6. What is time? How does it function?
I separate the universe into 3 different 'realms', Subjective, Objective, and Cojective.
Subjective is the human conscious mind. The world a human brain creates, when senses create memories, creates mental filters, and all the other things that the human minds creates of a world.
Objective is the physical world around us, it's science, quantum mechanics, string theory, math and chemistry all rolled into one. It's what we can observe in a laboratory. I will separate the objective world into two worlds later on.
Cojective is a word I made up just now to describe the massive force that is the collection of all subjective human mind realities.
When two conscious minds intercept each other, they create a common world, a world where standards, common sense and such is decided.
When a new baby is born, when they grow up they are automatically introduced to this Cojective.
When these subatomic particles bind to create molecules, they create what I like to call 'patterns'.
Now a pattern is for example, an apple, or a sofa, or a human.
It's at the atomic level only a collection of small particles, but are assigned a sum that is greater than its parts in the subjective level and the objective level.
See that's what the universe is all about.. It's not just a large blob of energy like quantum mechanics assumes, it creates a world which creates patterns that are greater than the sum of its parts.
So I will separate the Objective world into 2 realms, 1. The mechanical world and 2. The collective world.
If you wanted to create an Universe with beautiful sunsets, cars, spaceships and living beings(in other word an exciting universe), you would have to make some basic building blocks that make these possible. Quantum mechanics are these building blocks.
If we were to look at the Universe from a quantum level, it would only be a large ball of moving energy, it would be chaos, it would have no shapes, it would be like the suns core.
But in the Collective world, the energy would form to create things like apples, and wooden tables for the apple to lie on, and in my opinion, consciousness, the universes greatest achievement.
Without consciousness, there would be no observers to explore and live in the world, it would, in essence, be just a moving blob of energy void of any meaning.
It is an observer that assigns value to these forms of energy, that puts them to use and enjoys them.
The Mechanical world is basically the realm of quantum mechanics, and should it exist, the world of string theory.
If I were a little electron with consciousness, I wouldn't be able to enjoy anything like apples and sunsets, because all I would see around me would be points of electrically charged energies.
So this begs the question, why does the universe exist?
We can confirm that it exists, and we can confirm that the quantum mechanic level has some sort of integrated 'plan', to make the Collective world possible.
Or can we?
I have a good quote here, from my friend isotope777 on isonews, he says 'What's the difference between putting all the component molecules/elements required for life in a jar and shaking them up randomly, as opposed to organizing those molecules into a complex life form?
Is one arrangement of atoms really more "complex" than the other?'
And really, what is the difference?
If we assume that if particles are organized together, with no premade plan to organize into something useful, then any organization of basic particles would make something. Does that tell us that no matter how the universe arranges something in space, it will always make something greater than the sum of its parts?
Is everything in the universe just blobs of energy randomly put together? Is it perhaps a chaos of energy, and that humans are a part of this chaos but interprets it as order because it's an inherent part of it? Is chaos and order the same?
The Universe needs a time dimension to work.
Now to my knowledge, time works like this:
It can only go forward. If I break a cup of tea, the cup is forever broken, the energy will continue moving in space, further transforming, indefinetly, into other forms. The particles won't move back in space to reassemble the cup into what it was.
So this tells me the universe is in constant change, its energy always moving, energy transforming.
So this begs the question, how was the universe made?
If we assume it had a creator of some sort, not a God, but some intelligent being, that is outside the universe, created it as an experiment.
He would not be a part of the energy blob that is the universe, he would not be made up of particles, he would be a completely separate entity.
Or, it could be an infinite universe, if it literally existed forever, it would be an everending cycle where the big bang occurs over and over.
But even in this theory, the question is asked 'where does all this energy come from?' 'trillions upon trillions of particles aren't just created out of thin air you know..'
And I just don't buy the theory that 'well in an infinite universe there was no beginning and has no end', which seems ridiculuous to me.
Or, it ould be another system, with no creator, but is not infinite. Now this is the most difficult section to explain.
If we imagine nothingness, and then imagine somethingness, which is a large blob of energy, it seems weird that something would come from nothing.
The concept of 'existence' seems to me to be independent of the human mind, it seems to me a question that was asked the moment the first 'somethingness' was created.
Why would, in nothingness, something just come? Why would the universe just spring to life, without any kind of cause?
An infinite universe seems to me an universe without an explanation. I mean if it has literally existed forever, how will we ever reach a 'Theory of Everything?'
But this begs the question again, say we have a finite universe, where is this universe located? Is it inside something else?
It seems that the universe can be finite, but existence and non existence is infinite.
So in theory we can have both. This is something I've thought long and hard about, but can't reach a reasonable conclusion.
In a sense, the thought of existence is important. We may never know the answer, but we can at least come up with some ideas and questions to make us think.
I have this idea that the universe is basically just a means to an end.
Because in reality, the universe is much more than just a place to have fun, it asks the fundamental questions 'why does anything exist at all? Why isn't there just nothingness? If nothingness is a reality, then somethingness must also be a reality?
I mean, what if the universe exists simply because it has to. If there was literally nothing, on any dimension, realm, reality or world, then the concept of nothingness wouldn't exist because nothing would exist.
So how come something must exist?
I can't answer that, but if we say that the universe has to exist, simply because it has to, well then things get a little interesting.
It doesn't just tell us something about the universe itself, it tells us about existence.
So for my last word I will summarize. The Universe is a large blob of energy that exists simply because it has to exist, it is on the fundamental level a chaotic place, but in the Collective level it assembles forms that do more than the sum of their parts. Observers assign these forms with value, these seemingly chaotic forms, and then the world becomes alive. The concept of observers is something I will address later on, but I have this theory that just as the universe exists because it has to, the universe is also implementing all possible scenarios into the universe. For example, it has introduced the concept of existence versus nothingness, it has introduced the concept of observers via consciousness, it has introduced the concepts of chaos versus order.
These are concepts that are outside the human brain, and even outside our particle run blob of energy.
You can create analogs of particles, and the same questions would still be asked. You could create totally different universes where time and space were completely different, maybe even where time and space didn't exist, the questions would STILL be asked by the inhabitants.
Imagine the Universe right before the Big Bang. A small perfect sphere of energy. This ball then explodes, sending trillions and trillions of small particles out into nothingness. What did this result in? Our Universe, ourselves, and a hell of a lot more.
We are here on a rotating ball of dust and rock, in the middle of a vacuum, maybe this vacuum is dark energy, maybe it's not.
The scenario is ridiculous in itself.. I mean a large rotating ball? Who would've thought.
I will get right to it. The Universe has a Plank length. This plank length is 10 -30 meters large, which means it's 30 billion times smaller than a centimeter. What happens at Plank length is that Quantum effects start to warp time and space in a way so that we can't measure it.
So far the smallest possible particle we have been able to observe in a laboratory is a sub-atomic particle.
We divide these particles into 2 main categories, matter and forces.
Matter particles has a mass, while force particles have no mass.
Matter particles are made up of negatively charged electrons, opposites push each other away, so when two electrons meet, they push each other away. Your hand is made up of billions of small electrons, and so is the wall you're trying to push your hand through.
Force particles have no mass, so with no mass to hinder them, they travel at the speed of light.
This makes up the light we see around us, electromagnetism, gravity and maybe some undiscovered forces too.
Every atom has a core, made up of protons and neutrons, which are bound together by a force called 'The Strong Force', which we call the 'Nucleus'. Protons and neutrons are composed of even smaller particles called 'Quarks' and 'Leptons'.
Around the core, in an orbit, flies the electrons, which are negatively charged.
At present time scientists have found a little over 200 particles, so I won't go much into that now. I wanted to put down the basis for my philosophy session.
Over this we have atoms. These atom make up the basic building blocks of the universe. By combining atoms together you get molecules.
For example two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom creates one water molecule.
So this is all very intriguing, but how do we put it to good use in the real world? What philosophies comes from this?
Firstly we can set up some few basic questions.
1. Why does the universe exist?
2. Where does all the energy in the universe come from?
3. How does the conscious mind come into play?
4. And what is this consiousness?
5. What is infinity, and how does it come into play regarding the human mind, is it a human concept or something which was conceived the moment the universe was created?
6. What is time? How does it function?
I separate the universe into 3 different 'realms', Subjective, Objective, and Cojective.
Subjective is the human conscious mind. The world a human brain creates, when senses create memories, creates mental filters, and all the other things that the human minds creates of a world.
Objective is the physical world around us, it's science, quantum mechanics, string theory, math and chemistry all rolled into one. It's what we can observe in a laboratory. I will separate the objective world into two worlds later on.
Cojective is a word I made up just now to describe the massive force that is the collection of all subjective human mind realities.
When two conscious minds intercept each other, they create a common world, a world where standards, common sense and such is decided.
When a new baby is born, when they grow up they are automatically introduced to this Cojective.
When these subatomic particles bind to create molecules, they create what I like to call 'patterns'.
Now a pattern is for example, an apple, or a sofa, or a human.
It's at the atomic level only a collection of small particles, but are assigned a sum that is greater than its parts in the subjective level and the objective level.
See that's what the universe is all about.. It's not just a large blob of energy like quantum mechanics assumes, it creates a world which creates patterns that are greater than the sum of its parts.
So I will separate the Objective world into 2 realms, 1. The mechanical world and 2. The collective world.
If you wanted to create an Universe with beautiful sunsets, cars, spaceships and living beings(in other word an exciting universe), you would have to make some basic building blocks that make these possible. Quantum mechanics are these building blocks.
If we were to look at the Universe from a quantum level, it would only be a large ball of moving energy, it would be chaos, it would have no shapes, it would be like the suns core.
But in the Collective world, the energy would form to create things like apples, and wooden tables for the apple to lie on, and in my opinion, consciousness, the universes greatest achievement.
Without consciousness, there would be no observers to explore and live in the world, it would, in essence, be just a moving blob of energy void of any meaning.
It is an observer that assigns value to these forms of energy, that puts them to use and enjoys them.
The Mechanical world is basically the realm of quantum mechanics, and should it exist, the world of string theory.
If I were a little electron with consciousness, I wouldn't be able to enjoy anything like apples and sunsets, because all I would see around me would be points of electrically charged energies.
So this begs the question, why does the universe exist?
We can confirm that it exists, and we can confirm that the quantum mechanic level has some sort of integrated 'plan', to make the Collective world possible.
Or can we?
I have a good quote here, from my friend isotope777 on isonews, he says 'What's the difference between putting all the component molecules/elements required for life in a jar and shaking them up randomly, as opposed to organizing those molecules into a complex life form?
Is one arrangement of atoms really more "complex" than the other?'
And really, what is the difference?
If we assume that if particles are organized together, with no premade plan to organize into something useful, then any organization of basic particles would make something. Does that tell us that no matter how the universe arranges something in space, it will always make something greater than the sum of its parts?
Is everything in the universe just blobs of energy randomly put together? Is it perhaps a chaos of energy, and that humans are a part of this chaos but interprets it as order because it's an inherent part of it? Is chaos and order the same?
The Universe needs a time dimension to work.
Now to my knowledge, time works like this:
It can only go forward. If I break a cup of tea, the cup is forever broken, the energy will continue moving in space, further transforming, indefinetly, into other forms. The particles won't move back in space to reassemble the cup into what it was.
So this tells me the universe is in constant change, its energy always moving, energy transforming.
So this begs the question, how was the universe made?
If we assume it had a creator of some sort, not a God, but some intelligent being, that is outside the universe, created it as an experiment.
He would not be a part of the energy blob that is the universe, he would not be made up of particles, he would be a completely separate entity.
Or, it could be an infinite universe, if it literally existed forever, it would be an everending cycle where the big bang occurs over and over.
But even in this theory, the question is asked 'where does all this energy come from?' 'trillions upon trillions of particles aren't just created out of thin air you know..'
And I just don't buy the theory that 'well in an infinite universe there was no beginning and has no end', which seems ridiculuous to me.
Or, it ould be another system, with no creator, but is not infinite. Now this is the most difficult section to explain.
If we imagine nothingness, and then imagine somethingness, which is a large blob of energy, it seems weird that something would come from nothing.
The concept of 'existence' seems to me to be independent of the human mind, it seems to me a question that was asked the moment the first 'somethingness' was created.
Why would, in nothingness, something just come? Why would the universe just spring to life, without any kind of cause?
An infinite universe seems to me an universe without an explanation. I mean if it has literally existed forever, how will we ever reach a 'Theory of Everything?'
But this begs the question again, say we have a finite universe, where is this universe located? Is it inside something else?
It seems that the universe can be finite, but existence and non existence is infinite.
So in theory we can have both. This is something I've thought long and hard about, but can't reach a reasonable conclusion.
In a sense, the thought of existence is important. We may never know the answer, but we can at least come up with some ideas and questions to make us think.
I have this idea that the universe is basically just a means to an end.
Because in reality, the universe is much more than just a place to have fun, it asks the fundamental questions 'why does anything exist at all? Why isn't there just nothingness? If nothingness is a reality, then somethingness must also be a reality?
I mean, what if the universe exists simply because it has to. If there was literally nothing, on any dimension, realm, reality or world, then the concept of nothingness wouldn't exist because nothing would exist.
So how come something must exist?
I can't answer that, but if we say that the universe has to exist, simply because it has to, well then things get a little interesting.
It doesn't just tell us something about the universe itself, it tells us about existence.
So for my last word I will summarize. The Universe is a large blob of energy that exists simply because it has to exist, it is on the fundamental level a chaotic place, but in the Collective level it assembles forms that do more than the sum of their parts. Observers assign these forms with value, these seemingly chaotic forms, and then the world becomes alive. The concept of observers is something I will address later on, but I have this theory that just as the universe exists because it has to, the universe is also implementing all possible scenarios into the universe. For example, it has introduced the concept of existence versus nothingness, it has introduced the concept of observers via consciousness, it has introduced the concepts of chaos versus order.
These are concepts that are outside the human brain, and even outside our particle run blob of energy.
You can create analogs of particles, and the same questions would still be asked. You could create totally different universes where time and space were completely different, maybe even where time and space didn't exist, the questions would STILL be asked by the inhabitants.