Well, not to intrude on your privacy, but at some point, it might be 
interesting to read on your own personal view. Yes, the fellows on this list, 
will take an axe to your profound, musings, on all this. On the maths, as the 
British term it, I do believe that what makes someone great, or even good at 
math, maybe, inheritance of a gift for memorizing patterns, thus, while the 
rest of us fumble, you and your fellow math-heads, soar into the higher ends of 
human thought. It probably how your dendrites are wiring together, for 
effective, pattern memorization.  My distaste is not incepted, from from being 
emotional, rather I may be emotional by being incapable. ;=)


Er well. It is not my view, but the universal machine's one, I mean those 
knowing that they are universal. My view is private, and it would be confusing 
if I tried to describe. It is math, and standard definition in analytical 
philosophy.






Like the speculation, earlier this year, that the cosmos is all a sim (naw!) it 
might be a great thing if we can contact the control program of your universal 
machine. Probably impossible, using the sense that I mean it. By the way, much 
of your commentaries and publications, a capitulated, in the writings of 
Stephen Wolfram, and Eric Steinhart, as you may already know.  Steinhart is a 
naturalist philosopher, also on Evo-Devo, who views darwinian evolution, 
evolving vast computers, which in turn, evolve smarter and smarter vast 
computers, of which you and I are a product of.


On another topic, how are you folks faring in Europe,. given the onslaught (my 
term) of Jihadists? My old point is that we need better theologies, not 
Religions, to put forth (here I go again!) plausible, afterlife theories, which 
in the long term, I am convinced, will ameliorate the situation, that I 
perceive upon your continent.  The trick is, it would be something we all would 
believe as well. This must work for atheists and agnostics, as well as the 
deeply religious. 


With this in mind, Professor, have a Joyeux Noel, a happy Chanukah, a 
Prosperous Newtonmass, a glorious, Leonard Susskind Day, May, Carlo Rovelli 
guide your wisdom, may, Sir Andrew Wiles, guide your chalk stick! May, William 
D. Gropp, guide your keyboard!


Adieu!



-----Original Message-----
From: Bruno Marchal <[email protected]>
To: everything-list <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, Dec 18, 2016 1:12 pm
Subject: Re: No gravity / no dark matter




On 18 Dec 2016, at 00:04, spudboy100 via Everything List wrote:


Well, Doc, you mentioned your afterlife view before, 


Er well. It is not my view, but the universal machine's one, I mean those 
knowing that they are universal. My view is private, and it would be confusing 
if I tried to describe. It is math, and standard definition in analytical 
philosophy.








and I either found it emotively, unpalatable (Damn. there's goes the human 
amygdala again!) or found it too hard to comprehend, 


You can ask question. Do you have a problem with the definition of the weak 
computationalist assumption?










when you used to say "read the universal dovetailer argument," (Darn that weak 
cerebrum!), and so forth. 


I don't believe in weak cerebrum. I think you just showed, indeed just above, 
some emotional unpalatableness, if I can say.











 
 
My own sense of things driven by both cranial structures, indicate for me, that 
since there is and has been unending tragic goings on in the world (perhaps 
3.75 billion years worth?), so I in my insight have decided its up to our 
species, and/or its descendents, to sort thing out. 



yes, but history shows also that the tragic doing is sometime just perpetuated 
by such "good intentions". The passage from unicellular to pluricellular was 
also a way to sort things out, but it made us going out of the ocean and it can 
lost us on Mars, Titan, or far beyond. 
Nothing is simple. Beyond universality, simplifying is itself a root of 
complexifying.








I am believing that, lacking all other available actions, computing is the way 
to go. the only way at this point.  



To compute you need a universal machine, and that machine is only one more 
unknown in a equation of 8 billions of unknowns.












99.95% of our species population thinks differently from I, and taking that as 
a reasonable sign that I am on the wrong side of things, once more, I persist 
anyway.



We have partial control. The attempt to get total control either kill 
universality/freedom, or get inconsistent/delire/catastrophes.






 
 

 
 
You look for and accept (as most do!) reality as it is.





I am not sure this makes sense. At some level we all have to do that. At a 
different level, we all try to improve the human condition relative to this or 
that possible "reality". 


The main lesson here given by the universal machine, but also by Alan Watts 
(The wisdom of insecurity) or Robert Valadier (Inéluctable morale) is ... well, 
it is sum up in the popular saying "Hell is paved with good intention". 


One way to help, avoiding that warning, is to study the right, and politics, 
and trying to fix the system, which has been taken into hostage since 
sometimes. Today the fundamental powers (media, politics, judiciary, academic, 
etc.) are no more separated, which is mandatory for a democracy (Montesquieu).






 I sift through science papers (like at ARXIV) and other popular online source, 
attempting to look for possibilities of things, such as cosmological registers 
of some sort, a MAC address in the sky, but something, more read-write, a 
spacetime SSD, for a laugh.  




Everything can be used for a laugh (grin).


Not sure why you want a MAC address in the sky, well, not sure a sky belongs to 
the category of things providing addresses. I Hope you don't believe that God 
lives on some cloud (re-grin).


Bruno






 
I try to get some rationalist light (for a change) on afterlife, soul, 
consciousness, meaning, etc. And I hope we can improve our relations in general 
by extending our knowledge of that reality, although with computationalism, we 
can never be sure our knowledge *is* knowledge, except for a few first person 
indexical (like a pain here&now or a pleasure here&now, that we can know but 
not communicate rationally, nor justified).
 
 
 
 
-----Original Message-----
 From: Bruno Marchal <[email protected]>
 To: everything-list <[email protected]>
 Sent: Fri, Dec 16, 2016 12:48 pm
 Subject: Re: No gravity / no dark matter
 
 
 

 
 
On 16 Dec 2016, at 15:11, spudboy100 via Everything List wrote:
 

When entering into discussions such as these, are you doing for the 
intellectual enjoyment of physics, astronomy, and math, or are you interested, 
instead, of allowing humanity better control of our region of the universe, by 
understanding the rules? 
 
 

 
 

 
 
I guess each one of us has his, or her, own motivation.
 

 
 
Mine is just to try to figure out what is reality, and what is the relation 
between us and that reality.
 

 
 
I try to get some rationalist light (for a change) on afterlife, soul, 
consciousness, meaning, etc. And I hope we can improve our relations in general 
by extending our knowledge of that reality, although with computationalism, we 
can never be sure our knowledge *is* knowledge, except for a few first person 
indexical (like a pain here&now or a pleasure here&now, that we can know but 
not communicate rationally, nor justified).
 

 
 
I think most fundamental researchers are motivated by a curiosity and 
fascination on some Reality that they are searching, and often, it can happen 
they get cursed by the beauty of their theories, which can help but can also 
become an handicap----that will depend on many things.
 

 
 
So it is neither for the enjoyment of some science per se, nor for helping 
humanity, it is by curiosity of what is real, with, in the background some 
enjoyment for what we can see/conceive in the process, and the idea that better 
knowing what is real can only help humanity if she needs help.
 

 
 
Bruno
 
 
 
 
 
-----Original Message-----
 From: Russell Standish <[email protected]>
 To: everything-list <[email protected]>
 Sent: Thu, Dec 15, 2016 7:36 pm
 Subject: Re: No gravity / no dark matter
 
 On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 04:47:03PM +0100, Bruno Marchal wrote:
 > 
 > The question you asked was (I quote):
 > 
 > >>>I don't see why you would say physicalism needs to be assumed to
 > >>>explain the predictive power of physics.
 > 
 > 
 > Let me try to explain again.
 > 
 > How do a physicist make a prediction about his future first person
 > experience?
 > 
 > To fix the things, why am I pretty sure I will fell like seeing  an
 > eclipse when predicted by Newton's law.
 > 
 > The usual materialist/physicalist answer is roughly like this. There
 > is the assumption of a physical reality(*) and that it contains or
 > realized objects obeying laws.
 
 I don't think this is the case. For example, in the theory of statics,
 used to construct bridges, solid objects with properties of tensile
 strength, (mass) density, elasticity and so on are assumed, even
 though ontologically, they are known to be composed of mostly empty
 space, with those very ontological properties the result of
 electromagnetic fields.
 
 Most other physical models are the same - the example Brent gave of
 using continuous fluid mechanics to predict hurricances is an
 excelent point. Of course we know that the atmosphere is not a
 continuum, but rather made up of a collection of molecules with
 emergent properties that makes the continuous description a good one.
 
 It may be that some physicists think that the objects of the Standard
 Model (leptons, quarks, bosons etc) are somehow fundamental, but I doubt
 that many would stick to their guns on that. 
 
 But the Standard Model is used quite rarely for making predictions,
 and is generally computationally infeasible. Classical dynamics is
 much more widely used.
 
 So I cannot see why someone pointing to the predictive power of
 physics is in any way making an ontological statement of the form of
 physicalism. IIRC, in the original context, Brent was trying to
 tongue-in-cheek say that the laws of fluid dynamics is God, even
 though I know he strongly asserts that God must be a person, so it
 must have been some sort of satirical response. Nevertheless, I didn't
 see anywhere where he claimed that the models of physics were ontological.
 
 
 -- 
 
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Dr Russell Standish                    Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)
 Principal, High Performance Coders
 Visiting Senior Research Fellow        [email protected]
 Economics, Kingston University         http://www.hpcoders.com.au
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
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http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/
 


 
 
 
 
 
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http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/



 


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