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by TeMPOraL
2576 days ago
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> The intent comes from the design, decided by the physics of the system. (...) I like this view as it models the universe in self contained meaningful (includes purpose) way without any supernatural claim. Where does the design come from then? This question can only have supernatural answers. > If it is destined that whatever surviving life learns these principles to survive, that seems to give a sort of roadmap for existence, an intention of how its supposed to go. Why? This view conflicts with pretty much the human-universal underpinning of morality. Nature is brutal, and while humans sometimes commit such acts on their own, they're universally frowned upon and great effort is expended to avoid them. Moreover, we've already freed ourselves from the shackles of biological evolution many thousand of years ago. We're now in the development regime couple of orders of magnitude faster - the progress of science and technology. There's nothing to say we have to, or even should, guide our lives by the patterns we learn from other parts of nature. |
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Why is the design so exact, why is there only one? Well, with 2+2=4, + and = and digits are part of a system we already both know and have mentally setup, we've already put design to make it that way. So shouldn't 'someone' have to decide what the first logic is? Well, no, because binary logic is self-evident. I have a hunch that there is a single everything algorithm which is the way that something must always emerge from nothing, but as far as I can tell, any cellular automata that expands infinitely (as opposed to fizzling out) starts exhausting various binary systems and renders out the 'design' of that. A very easy to recognize early emerging and very common design is the Sierpinski triangle. Note that back when Steven Wolfram was first researching into that, he didn't do anything to purposefully design Sierpinski triangles in, they were just there, part of the predestined design.
And yes theres nothing that says we have to live according to nature. Theres nothing saying we have to survive at all. Personally I like living though, and paying attention to other systems in nature and trying to learn lessons, seems to be helpful for making living even better.