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by psyc
3348 days ago
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My parents got me my most influential book when I was 4. "What Makes It Go? What Makes It Work? What Makes It Fly? What Makes It Float?" by Joe Kaufman. It taught me that everything has causal inner mechanisms. From then on, I had xray vision and could imagine the inner mechanisms of every object at work. |
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I do not mean to start a tangential flamewar, but the ability to accept and be comfortable with not knowing, while at the same time believing that the unknown is not unknowable, is something a certain kind of religious worldview precludes. This is one thing which I realised quite early on that my parents didn't share my beliefs on: for them, there's some underlying agent that chooses what happens in situations that we call random or do not understand:
"I don't know why this happens, but there's no reason why we never should/it's not computable/etc."
"Ah, child, it's time to accept things as they are. When I do not understand, I say God's causing it to happen."
It's a confusing mixture of the different positions one can take on determinism coupled with a sort of complacence I find remarkable.