Giulio Prisco wrote on
https://www.turingchurch.com/p/irrational-mechanics-draft-ch-14

>*"I’ve been talking of the ultimate God (the cosmic operating system, aka
> Mind at Large" [...] The cosmic operating system is alive and aware, or
> better super alive and super aware, and computes above and beyond what we
> call time.*



 I like your term "cosmic operating system", but I think it's a mistake to
equate that to the traditional concept of God. The Cosmic Operating System
is not a person or even a super person, it need not be conscious or
intelligent and it might operate the universe but not have created the
universe. The existence of the universe might turn out to be a logical
necessity because "nothingness" is unstable.


*> "We need, or at least I need, a concept of life after death that is
> solid enough to suspend disbelief. Without such a concept of life after
> death I would fall into the deepest state of paralyzing despair, and jump
> off the closest window to exit this unpleasant game but God is not enough".*



As far as life after death is concerned, the idea of an invisible man in
the sky does not give me any comfort or hope, especially not a God as
unpleasant as the Christian or Muslim God. The existence of God is not
necessary or sufficient for life after death, but the fact that quantum
mechanics says information cannot be destroyed because everything evolves
according to the Schrodinger equation in a reversible deterministic way is
a little more interesting; of course quantum mechanics could turn out to be
wrong about that but I sorta doubt it, so it gives me a little hope. Not a
lot but a little.  That's why I'm going to have my brain frozen to liquid
nitrogen temperatures when I die. I want the information that makes me be
me be scrambled as little as possible. I want to make it as easy as I can
for your cosmic operating system.

> * > "and penultimate God-like cosmic engineers"  *

I don't think such cosmic engineers exist in the observable universe… at
least not yet.  I believe that if someday we build a Jupiter brain and
then ask it "does God exist?" His  reply will be "He does now".

> *> "I guess there is a high degree of entanglement between persons who
> love the same people, do the same things, or have similar thoughts and
> feelings, *

Quantum entanglement is a real thing and there is even a theory that the
geometry of spacetime is the product of the quantum entanglement of
information and there's some sort of correlation between spatial distance
and entanglement, but so far it's just a theory, or maybe a theory for a
theory.

> *> and that entanglement propagates in time.*

Your sort of entanglement and  quantum entanglement do  have that in common.

> *> "I don’t think technological resurrection needs a perfect copy of a
> quantum state."*

I think that is a virtual certainty, otherwise you'd become a different
person many trillions of times every second, every time an air molecule
bumped into you and changed the quantum state of your body.


 John K Clark

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