Pepper8Jack wrote: »Pagans! Heathens! Heretics!
Cast aside you false gods and frivolous idols! Open you hearts and gaze into the flames and the truth of your ignorance will manifest before you.
There is but one true God, and we all must allow his light to guide our path.
For the night is dark, and full of terrors.
ContraTempo wrote: »Pepper8Jack wrote: »Pagans! Heathens! Heretics!
Cast aside you false gods and frivolous idols! Open you hearts and gaze into the flames and the truth of your ignorance will manifest before you.
There is but one true God, and we all must allow his light to guide our path.
For the night is dark, and full of terrors.
Yeah, except for the part where my toons have personally met several.
:-P

This system came to be by no reason at all out of nothingness which never was. But whenever nothing is changed, it has to be something, otherwise it would not have changed.
There was one thing I couldn't understand about the model you described. It seemed that the something that began to exist is highly ordered and full of designods that make it appear ideal. But that seems odd to me, because if something can come into being out of nothing isn't it much more probable that it would be chaotic and contain far less of the designoids that make it appear ideal? There is also another lingering question. If something can just begin to exist from nothing for no reason then why isn't anything and everything popping into being from nothing? Why do only universes full of designoids appear that give it the illusion of being ideal? It would seem that such an unrestrained capacity that would allow anything and everything to pop into being without a reason would result in a much more chaotic universe than we experience. You could be walking down the street and literally get run over by a galaxy with no insurance.
This system came to be by no reason at all out of nothingness which never was. But whenever nothing is changed, it has to be something, otherwise it would not have changed.
I don't think that you can change nothing without reifying nothing. There is no prior state in which "something" is changed from. Step 1 - something just beings to exist without a reason.
There was one thing I couldn't understand about the model you described. It seemed that the something that began to exist is highly ordered and full of designods that make it appear ideal. But that seems odd to me, because if something can come into being out of nothing isn't it much more probable that it would be chaotic and contain far less of the designoids that make it appear ideal? There is also another lingering question. If something can just begin to exist from nothing for no reason then why isn't anything and everything popping into being from nothing? Why do only universes full of designoids appear that give it the illusion of being ideal? It would seem that such an unrestrained capacity that would allow anything and everything to pop into being without a reason would result in a much more chaotic universe than we experience. You could be walking down the street and literally get run over by a galaxy with no insurance.
1)No, universes are just a small part of the system - it is infinitely large..... because it is a closed system, there is no outside to it, nothing can effect it.
2)It is created by it's system axiom "there has been change", which I put like this as well due to lack of a better expression. The initial event did not have a before, there was no time and there is none in this initial state.
3)The whole thing is basically just math - and that is why we can describe it so well with math, because it is math.
1)No, universes are just a small part of the system - it is infinitely large..... because it is a closed system, there is no outside to it, nothing can effect it.
2)It is created by it's system axiom "there has been change", which I put like this as well due to lack of a better expression. The initial event did not have a before, there was no time and there is none in this initial state.
3)The whole thing is basically just math - and that is why we can describe it so well with math, because it is math.
1) So if understand right the multiverse, or all the universes is an infinite set of things. I think that would be a potential infinite right?
2)I don't understand that. An axiom would be an abstract object and by definition they don't stand in causal relationships. Do you mean that it exists by the necessity of it's own nature?
3)Oh yeah I have heard about this. It's basically taking the vacuum energy and mathematically rendering it as nothing via the structures and terms of mathematics. So for example +200 and -200 can be viewed as nothing in mathematics, they just cancel each other out. Is there another equation out there that deals with nothing as an actual nothing and not a mathematically rendered nothing?
Yeah nothing is like time, really hard to convey in common language.
It has just one axiom - "there has been change" - which is obvious and so it is an acceptable axiom
It has just one building block - relations
it has just one principle of basic operation - complex adaptive
Edit: Axioms are what create a system, no axiom, no system. An Axiom is assumed truth, so it has to be pretty obvious to be true to accept it - like "there has been change" - we all can accept that, because it is obvious. And this is all what I have assumed - and thought about it, what does it mean when this is the only axiom of the system and all there is, what will happen? - And this led to this way to describe reality. it is not science though, even I use mathematical arguments - it cannot be proven nor be tested - so it's a philosophy with some mathematical underpinning, but nevertheless just a philosophy.
Sorry, if I respond very slowly, I am watching the live stream from EVE online fanfest from Reijkavic.
It has just one axiom - "there has been change" - which is obvious and so it is an acceptable axiom
It has just one building block - relations
it has just one principle of basic operation - complex adaptive
Edit: Axioms are what create a system, no axiom, no system. An Axiom is assumed truth, so it has to be pretty obvious to be true to accept it - like "there has been change" - we all can accept that, because it is obvious. And this is all what I have assumed - and thought about it, what does it mean when this is the only axiom of the system and all there is, what will happen? - And this led to this way to describe reality. it is not science though, even I use mathematical arguments - it cannot be proven nor be tested - so it's a philosophy with some mathematical underpinning, but nevertheless just a philosophy.
I think you explained the way time works in a multiverse really well. I fluctuate between A and B theory all the time, sometimes it feels like A sometimes it feels like B. Somehow I think both describe time and were just shy of a few bits to complete the picture and maintain free will.
I think I understand the relational building blocks, it makes sense. It's kind of like mixing drinks the completed drink has some of the properties of the separate mixtures. But I guess I don't understand the first relation. What is the first relation? The first something has nothing in which to have a relationship with so it can't build upon a first discrete relationship. Without a discrete relationship to externally derive it's order and designoids it just inexplicably comes into being with all the necessary causality to formulate and unpack an ideal world. Wouldn't a random and chaotic world be much more probable than the one we see?
I don't think that truths, axioms or abstract objects can stand in a causal relation with something. They basically just describe reality. They can't create something or bring something into being. Like for example the truth statement "the pen is red" is not true until the pen is red, but the pen could have been blue; it's not contingent on the truth statement, the truth statement is contingent on reality. The pen has to be red before or simultaneous with the truth statement the "Pen is red". It doesn't have causal power. It seems possible that nothing could have just remained nothing, so it doesn't seem like it exists from the necessity of it's being.
I'm not sure "there has been change" is an axiom. Change is the transition from one thing to another thing. Nothing is not a thing. You can't change from nothing to something because nothing is not a prior form. I think the real axiom would be that "the universe began to exist". The universe didn't change into being it began to exist.Sorry, if I respond very slowly, I am watching the live stream from EVE online fanfest from Reijkavic.
Take your time. I'm playing the game and just enjoying the conversation when it happens. I just replied now cause my game crashed and the thread was still up underneath (that 64bit though). What's great is your perspective is your own so I get the chance to learn something I wouldn't otherwise have learned.
Edit: and to your '"pen" example - I say, there is no pen, nor is there something what is you to recognize this color, nor would there be a color red, but just a wave equation "interpreted" as being red - red is a label, which gives this wave equation the meaning of "red", but it isn't red at all, it is not even there as a real entity, it's virtual. Nothing of that is real, not that pen, nor you. It just feels as if it would be there, but it is in fact just a virtual network of relations. Basically just like Tamriel in ESO is not there at all. Nor is your avatar. Still it feels like there would be your avatar in Tamriel. But what is really there of it?- Just the relations which describe the world of tamriel and your avatar - math, computed on a computer, interpreted by a computer, rendered by a graphic card. And voila this world of Tamriel and your avatar appear to exist - even they don''t.
MasterSpatula wrote: »
Can anyone tell me why they're called daedric "princes" or "lords" but many are then referred to as "she"?