Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-02-01 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 30 Jan 2013, at 11:58, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Bruno Marchal

That is, if comp actually works.
Is there any experimental proof available ?


Comp is the hypothesis by default, as it is far simpler than non-comp,  
and there are no evidence at all for non-comp, just feeling by some  
people having usually a pre-Gödelian conception of numbers and machines.
I got comp from observation of amoeba, and i was lucky to be born with  
the discovery of the genetic code, making biological organism digital  
relatively to chemistry and physics.


Bruno






- Receiving the following content -
From: Bruno Marchal
Receiver: everything-list
Time: 2013-01-27, 07:03:11
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God

Hi Roger,

Pro-life will lead to comp abuse, when you will get an artificial  
brain without your consent.


Pro-life is risky making comp into a (pseudo)-religion, but comp  
warns us that if this happen, we will get unsound, arithmetically.  
But there is a possibility we already are.


Bruno


On 25 Jan 2013, at 16:29, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Stathis Papaioannou

I think right-to-lifers are those with some moral or religious  
foundation


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30771408/ns/us_news-life/t/majority-americans-now-pro-life-poll-says/#.UQKkI2cUBlM

abortionPoll-bcol.grid-6x2.jpg


- Receiving the following content -
From: Stathis Papaioannou
Receiver: everything-list
Time: 2013-01-24, 20:14:48
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God

On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net  
wrote:


 It's probably a lot simpler than that. In the U.S. if you're an  
atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear. Depending a lot on where  
you live,

 you may be isolated and reviled.

Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.


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Stathis Papaioannou

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-30 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Bruno Marchal 

That is, if comp actually works.  
Is there any experimental proof available ?


- Receiving the following content - 
From: Bruno Marchal 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-27, 07:03:11
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God


Hi Roger,


Pro-life will lead to comp abuse, when you will get an artificial brain without 
your consent. 


Pro-life is risky making comp into a (pseudo)-religion, but comp warns us that 
if this happen, we will get unsound, arithmetically. But there is a possibility 
we already are.


Bruno




On 25 Jan 2013, at 16:29, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Stathis Papaioannou 

I think right-to-lifers are those with some moral or religious foundation

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30771408/ns/us_news-life/t/majority-americans-now-pro-life-poll-says/#.UQKkI2cUBlM

abortionPoll-bcol.grid-6x2.jpg


- Receiving the following content - 
From: Stathis Papaioannou 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-24, 20:14:48
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God


On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:

 It's probably a lot simpler than that. In the U.S. if you're an atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear. Depending a lot on where you live,
 you may be isolated and reviled.

Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-30 Thread Craig Weinberg


On Wednesday, January 9, 2013 1:37:58 PM UTC-5, John Clark wrote:

 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 7:18 AM, Roger Clough rcl...@verizon.netjavascript:
  wrote:

  I sense God's presence.


 That's nice, but how do you know (and more important how do we know) if 
 you are sensing a omnipotent being who created the universe or if you are 
 sensing a bad potato that you ate yesterday?  

 I've never had a mystical experience, but if I did I'd have the courtesy 
 to keep my mouth shut about it if the evidence for its validity was 
 available only to myself.


Maybe that's why you've never had a mystical experience.
 

 Even if I had discovered a new fact about the nature of reality there 
 would be no way to communicate the truth about it to others. And even if 
 you are certain about it you can't be certain that you should be certain 
 about it, because you can be 100% sure about something and still be dead 
 wrong, in fact it's very common, just look at Muslim suicide bombers.


The longer we live, the more we will see that what we thought was right, 
wasn't the whole story, and that many of the things that we thought were 
most wrong is not completely false. There has never been a time in history 
when this was not true and I don't expect that there ever will be.

Craig


   John K Clark




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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-28 Thread Bruno Marchal

Hi Roger,

Pro-life will lead to comp abuse, when you will get an artificial  
brain without your consent.


Pro-life is risky making comp into a (pseudo)-religion, but comp warns  
us that if this happen, we will get unsound, arithmetically. But there  
is a possibility we already are.


Bruno


On 25 Jan 2013, at 16:29, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Stathis Papaioannou

I think right-to-lifers are those with some moral or religious  
foundation


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30771408/ns/us_news-life/t/majority-americans-now-pro-life-poll-says/#.UQKkI2cUBlM

abortionPoll-bcol.grid-6x2.jpg


- Receiving the following content -
From: Stathis Papaioannou
Receiver: everything-list
Time: 2013-01-24, 20:14:48
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God

On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net  
wrote:


 It's probably a lot simpler than that. In the U.S. if you're an  
atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear. Depending a lot on where  
you live,

 you may be isolated and reviled.

Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.


--
Stathis Papaioannou

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-28 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 25 Jan 2013, at 05:43, Craig Weinberg wrote:




On Thursday, January 24, 2013 10:20:25 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
On 1/24/2013 6:28 PM, Craig Weinberg wrote:




On Thursday, January 24, 2013 9:05:31 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
On 1/24/2013 5:14 PM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
 On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdbmeek...@verizon.net   
wrote:


 It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an  
atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where  
you live,

 you may be isolated and reviled.
 Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
 Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
 can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is  
perhaps

 a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.



Scottsdale is pretty cosmopolitan - it's where airline pilots go to  
retire.  NYC of course
is as secular, diverse, and worldly as any place in the world.  Try  
visiting small towns
in Kentucky, South Carolina, Mississippi, Oklahoma,...  It's not  
called the bible belt

for nothing.

It would be more tedious than genuinely threatening to be an  
atheist adult in redneck America - unless you insist upon being as  
vocal as the Fundies. Yes, there's a lot of churches, and people  
will ask you what church you go to, but they will also ask you what  
sports team you support and think you are just as threatening if  
you are unaffiliated that way.


I'd didn't say they'd be threatening.  But if you were an atheist  
looking for a friendly ear the only ones you'd find would probably  
want to convert you.


I don't know that not being able to talk to others about your (non)  
religious beliefs would be cause for suicide though. Especially now  
that there's the internet... I can't remember the last time I had a  
conversation with someone about religion IRL. If it was that  
important to find a friendly ear in multiple neighbors and co- 
workers specifically to listen to you talk about being an atheist,  
then that makes me think about questioning the claim that atheism  
isn't like a religion.


Atheism (at least the non agnostic strong form of it) is a (pseudo)  
religion. The atheists believe religiously in a primary material  
reality (the creation), and define God like the Christians (to not  
believe in it). So they are ally with (strong) Christians to prevent  
the coming back of seriousness, inquiries and deductive reasoning in  
the theological field. Seen from the Plato/Aristotle difference  
perspective, (strong) atheism is a slight variant of Christianism, and  
that is even more palatable when you are aware of the atheist sects  
(which are often secret and non transparent, practice communion, give  
a name to a God, etc. and are largely ignored by the media).


Bruno


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



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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-28 Thread meekerdb

On 1/27/2013 3:09 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 25 Jan 2013, at 05:43, Craig Weinberg wrote:




On Thursday, January 24, 2013 10:20:25 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:

On 1/24/2013 6:28 PM, Craig Weinberg wrote:



On Thursday, January 24, 2013 9:05:31 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:

On 1/24/2013 5:14 PM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
 On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdbmeek...@verizon.net  wrote:

 It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an 
atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where you 
live,
 you may be isolated and reviled.
 Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
 Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
 can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
 a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.



Scottsdale is pretty cosmopolitan - it's where airline pilots go to 
retire.
 NYC of course
is as secular, diverse, and worldly as any place in the world.  Try 
visiting
small towns
in Kentucky, South Carolina, Mississippi, Oklahoma,...  It's not called 
the
bible belt
for nothing.


It would be more tedious than genuinely threatening to be an atheist adult 
in
redneck America - unless you insist upon being as vocal as the Fundies. Yes,
there's a lot of churches, and people will ask you what church you go to, 
but they
will also ask you what sports team you support and think you are just as
threatening if you are unaffiliated that way.


I'd didn't say they'd be threatening.  But if you were an atheist looking 
for a
friendly ear the only ones you'd find would probably want to convert you.


I don't know that not being able to talk to others about your (non) religious beliefs 
would be cause for suicide though. Especially now that there's the internet... I can't 
remember the last time I had a conversation with someone about religion IRL. If it was 
that important to find a friendly ear in multiple neighbors and co-workers specifically 
to listen to you talk about being an atheist, then that makes me think about 
questioning the claim that atheism isn't like a religion.


Atheism (at least the non agnostic strong form of it) is a (pseudo) religion. The 
atheists believe religiously in a primary material reality (the creation), and define 
God like the Christians (to not believe in it). So they are ally with (strong) 
Christians to prevent the coming back of seriousness, inquiries and deductive reasoning 
in the theological field. Seen from the Plato/Aristotle difference perspective, (strong) 
atheism is a slight variant of Christianism, and that is even more palatable when you 
are aware of the atheist sects (which are often secret and non transparent, practice 
communion, give a name to a God, etc. and are largely ignored by the media).



OK, I'm ready for an expose'  What are these secret atheist sects that practice communion, 
etc.


I was just imagining some poor teenage non-believer in Kentucky who couldn't get a date 
because nobody would let their daughter go out with an atheist from the pit of hell.  I 
didn't consider that he might commit suicide because he couldn't find any atheists to have 
communion with.


Brent

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-25 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Stathis Papaioannou 

I think right-to-lifers are those with some moral or religious foundation

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30771408/ns/us_news-life/t/majority-americans-now-pro-life-poll-says/#.UQKkI2cUBlM




- Receiving the following content - 
From: Stathis Papaioannou 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-24, 20:14:48
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God


On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:

 It's probably a lot simpler than that. In the U.S. if you're an atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear. Depending a lot on where you live,
 you may be isolated and reviled.

Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

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attachment: abortionPoll-bcol.grid-6x2.jpg


Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-25 Thread Craig Weinberg


On Thursday, January 24, 2013 11:46:14 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:

  On 1/24/2013 8:43 PM, Craig Weinberg wrote: 

 I don't know that not being able to talk to others about your (non) 
 religious beliefs would be cause for suicide though.


 Not a cause, just the absence of a little prevention.


Theoretically, ok, but in practice, most people who have access to the 
internet or telephone should be able to plug that absence without too much 
trauma.

Craig 


 Brent
  

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Re: Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Craig Weinberg

Period, meaning that's it. 


- Receiving the following content - 
From: Craig Weinberg 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-23, 12:48:50
Subject: Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to kill 
seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across Yorkshire and 
Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the voice of God, speaking 
from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, telling him to kill 
prostitutes. 

http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

Albert Fish 1870 ? 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
apparently had an array of ?isorders? and was judged to be ?isturbed but sane? 
by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate his victims, 
and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God telling him to kill 
children. 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in Manitoba 
nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save people from an 
alien attack.

http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He was 
arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By mid-1974 he 
was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that followed him around. 
God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys and sever their penises. 
Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, Michael, and proceeded to 
torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican youth. Their next victim was 
one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had previously accused him of abuse. For 
such a transgression the hapless youngster was found drowned in an abandoned 
building. 


On Saturday, January 12, 2013 5:56:06 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote:

The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period. 


Period?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to kill 
seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across Yorkshire and 
Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the voice of God, speaking 
from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, telling him to kill 
prostitutes. 

http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

Albert Fish 1870 ? 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
apparently had an array of ?isorders? and was judged to be ?isturbed but sane? 
by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate his victims, 
and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God telling him to kill 
children. 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in Manitoba 
nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save people from an 
alien attack.

http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He was 
arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By mid-1974 he 
was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that followed him around. 
God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys and sever their penises. 
Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, Michael, and proceeded to 
torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican youth. Their next victim was 
one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had previously accused him of abuse. For 
such a transgression the hapless youngster was found drowned in an abandoned 
building.  

There are many, many more of course...

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Re: Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Craig Weinberg 


An article in the American Journal of Psychiatry in 2004 suggested that 
atheists might have a higher suicide rate than theists.[10] According to 
William Bainbridge, atheism is common among people whose social obligations are 
weak and is also connected to lower fertility rates in some industrial 
nations.[11] Extended length of sobriety in alcohol recovery is related 
positively to higher levels of theistic belief, active community helping, and 
self-transcendence.[12] Some studies state that in developed countries, health, 
life expectancy, and other correlates of wealth, tend to be statistical 
predictors of a greater percentage of atheists, compared to countries with 
higher proportions of believers.[13][14] Multiple methodological problems have 
been identified with cross-national assessments of religiosity, secularity, and 
social health which undermine conclusive statements on religiosity and 
secularity in developed democracies. [15]

- wikipedia
- Receiving the following content - 
From: Craig Weinberg 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-23, 12:48:50
Subject: Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to kill 
seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across Yorkshire and 
Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the voice of God, speaking 
from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, telling him to kill 
prostitutes. 

http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

Albert Fish 1870 ? 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
apparently had an array of ?isorders? and was judged to be ?isturbed but sane? 
by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate his victims, 
and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God telling him to kill 
children. 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in Manitoba 
nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save people from an 
alien attack.

http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He was 
arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By mid-1974 he 
was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that followed him around. 
God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys and sever their penises. 
Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, Michael, and proceeded to 
torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican youth. Their next victim was 
one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had previously accused him of abuse. For 
such a transgression the hapless youngster was found drowned in an abandoned 
building. 


On Saturday, January 12, 2013 5:56:06 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote:

The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period. 


Period?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to kill 
seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across Yorkshire and 
Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the voice of God, speaking 
from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, telling him to kill 
prostitutes. 

http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

Albert Fish 1870 ? 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
apparently had an array of ?isorders? and was judged to be ?isturbed but sane? 
by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate his victims, 
and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God telling him to kill 
children. 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in Manitoba 
nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save people from an 
alien attack.

http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He was 
arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By mid-1974 he 
was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that followed him around. 
God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys and sever their penises. 
Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, Michael, and proceeded to 
torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican youth. Their next victim was 
one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had previously accused him of abuse. For 
such a transgression the hapless youngster was found drowned in an abandoned 
building.  

There are many, many more

Re: Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Craig Weinberg


On Thursday, January 24, 2013 4:46:47 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote:

  Hi Craig Weinberg
  
 Period, meaning that's it. 


I know what you meant by period. If you noticed, I attached a list of 
serial killers who followed what they understood to be the voice of God.

The implication is that if you disable your own critical thinking and open 
your will to whatever claims to be God in your psyche, then don't be 
surprised if you end up murdering and eating people, as so many have found 
out and continue to find out. Ah, but they're probably Liberals, eh? The 
Godless Nazi-Hippies that do whatever God says.

Craig
 

  
  

 - Receiving the following content - 
 *From:* Craig Weinberg javascript: 
 *Receiver:* everything-list javascript: 
 *Time:* 2013-01-23, 12:48:50
 *Subject:* Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

  
 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

 Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to 
 kill seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across 
 Yorkshire and Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the 
 voice of God, speaking from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, 
 telling him to kill prostitutes. 

 http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

 Albert Fish 1870 � 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
 apparently had an array of �isorders� and was judged to be �isturbed but 
 sane� by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate 
 his victims, and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God 
 telling him to kill children. 


 http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

 Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in 
 Manitoba nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save 
 people from an alien attack.

 http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

 On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He 
 was arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By 
 mid-1974 he was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that 
 followed him around. God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys 
 and sever their penises. Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, 
 Michael, and proceeded to torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican 
 youth. Their next victim was one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had 
 previously accused him of abuse. For such a transgression the hapless 
 youngster was found drowned in an abandoned building. 


 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 5:56:06 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote: 


 The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period. 


 Period?


 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

 Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to 
 kill seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across 
 Yorkshire and Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the 
 voice of God, speaking from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, 
 telling him to kill prostitutes. 

 http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

 Albert Fish 1870 � 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
 apparently had an array of �isorders� and was judged to be �isturbed but 
 sane� by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate 
 his victims, and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God 
 telling him to kill children. 


 http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

 Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in 
 Manitoba nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save 
 people from an alien attack.

 http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

 On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He 
 was arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By 
 mid-1974 he was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that 
 followed him around. God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys 
 and sever their penises. Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, 
 Michael, and proceeded to torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican 
 youth. Their next victim was one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had 
 previously accused him of abuse. For such a transgression the hapless 
 youngster was found drowned in an abandoned building.  

 There are many, many more of course...

 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 Everything List group.
 To view this discussion on the web visit 
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Re: Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Craig Weinberg


On Thursday, January 24, 2013 4:52:59 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote:

  Hi Craig Weinberg 
  
  
  
 An article in the American Journal of 
 Psychiatryhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Journal_of_Psychiatryin 
 2004 suggested that atheists might have a higher suicide rate than 
 theists.[10]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-10According
  to William 
 Bainbridge http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Sims_Bainbridge, 
 atheism is common among people whose social obligations are weak and is 
 also connected to lower fertility rates in some industrial 
 nations.[11]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-11Extended
  length of sobriety in alcohol recovery is related positively to 
 higher levels of theistic belief, active community helping, and 
 self-transcendence.[12]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-12Some
  studies state that in developed 
 countries http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Developed_country, health, life 
 expectancy, and other correlates of wealth, tend to be statistical 
 predictors of a greater percentage of atheists, compared to countries with 
 higher proportions of 
 believers.[13]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-13
 [14]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-mmartin-14Multiple
  methodological problems have been identified with cross-national 
 assessments of religiosity, secularity, and social health which undermine 
 conclusive statements on religiosity and secularity in developed 
 democracies. 
 [15]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-15
 

  

 - wikipedia

Maybe it's because atheists have higher intelligence on average, and higher 
intelligence is associated with higher suicide rates in some studies. It's 
not that hard to see why. If you are smart enough to see through religion, 
you are smart enough to see through the spectacle that passes for life on 
this planet. Without the fear of burning in hell forever, a lot of people 
would probably be more likely to end their lives.

http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-human-beast/201005/the-real-reason-atheists-have-higher-iqs
 

  - Receiving the following content - 
 *From:* Craig Weinberg javascript: 
 *Receiver:* everything-list javascript: 
 *Time:* 2013-01-23, 12:48:50
 *Subject:* Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

  
 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

 Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to 
 kill seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across 
 Yorkshire and Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the 
 voice of God, speaking from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, 
 telling him to kill prostitutes. 

 http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

 Albert Fish 1870 � 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
 apparently had an array of �isorders� and was judged to be �isturbed but 
 sane� by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate 
 his victims, and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God 
 telling him to kill children. 


 http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

 Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in 
 Manitoba nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save 
 people from an alien attack.

 http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

 On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He 
 was arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By 
 mid-1974 he was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that 
 followed him around. God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys 
 and sever their penises. Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, 
 Michael, and proceeded to torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican 
 youth. Their next victim was one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had 
 previously accused him of abuse. For such a transgression the hapless 
 youngster was found drowned in an abandoned building. 


 On Saturday, January 12, 2013 5:56:06 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote: 


 The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period. 


 Period?


 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

 Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to 
 kill seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across 
 Yorkshire and Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the 
 voice of God, speaking from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, 
 telling him to kill prostitutes. 

 http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

 Albert Fish 1870 � 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people

Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread meekerdb

On 1/24/2013 9:32 AM, Craig Weinberg wrote:

On Thursday, January 24, 2013 4:52:59 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote:

Hi Craig Weinberg

An article in the American Journal of Psychiatry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Journal_of_Psychiatry in 2004 
suggested that
atheists might have a higher suicide rate than theists.^[10]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-10 According 
to
William Bainbridge http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Sims_Bainbridge, 
atheism
is common among people whose social obligations are weak and is also 
connected to
lower fertility rates in some industrial nations.^[11]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-11 Extended 
length of
sobriety in alcohol recovery is related positively to higher levels of 
theistic
belief, active community helping, and self-transcendence.^[12]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-12 Some 
studies state
that in developed countries 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Developed_country,
health, life expectancy, and other correlates of wealth, tend to be 
statistical
predictors of a greater percentage of atheists, compared to countries with 
higher
proportions of believers.^[13]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-13 ^[14]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-mmartin-14 
Multiple
methodological problems have been identified with cross-national 
assessments of
religiosity, secularity, and social health which undermine conclusive 
statements on
religiosity and secularity in developed democracies. ^[15]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_atheism#cite_note-15

^- wikipedia

Maybe it's because atheists have higher intelligence on average, and higher intelligence 
is associated with higher suicide rates in some studies. It's not that hard to see why. 
If you are smart enough to see through religion, you are smart enough to see through the 
spectacle that passes for life on this planet. Without the fear of burning in hell 
forever, a lot of people would probably be more likely to end their lives.


http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-human-beast/201005/the-real-reason-atheists-have-higher-iqs


It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an atheist it may be hard to 
find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where you live, you may be isolated and reviled.


Brent

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Stathis Papaioannou
On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:

 It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an atheist it
 may be hard to find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where you live,
 you may be isolated and reviled.

Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread meekerdb

On 1/24/2013 5:14 PM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:

On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdbmeeke...@verizon.net  wrote:


It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an atheist it
may be hard to find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where you live,
you may be isolated and reviled.

Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time,
Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I
can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps
a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless.




Scottsdale is pretty cosmopolitan - it's where airline pilots go to retire.  NYC of course 
is as secular, diverse, and worldly as any place in the world.  Try visiting small towns 
in Kentucky, South Carolina, Mississippi, Oklahoma,...  It's not called the bible belt 
for nothing.


Brent

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Craig Weinberg


On Thursday, January 24, 2013 9:05:31 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:

 On 1/24/2013 5:14 PM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote: 
  On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdbmeek...@verizon.netjavascript: 
  wrote: 
  
  It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an 
 atheist it 
  may be hard to find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where you 
 live, 
  you may be isolated and reviled. 
  Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time, 
  Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I 
  can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps 
  a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless. 
  
  

 Scottsdale is pretty cosmopolitan - it's where airline pilots go to 
 retire.  NYC of course 
 is as secular, diverse, and worldly as any place in the world.  Try 
 visiting small towns 
 in Kentucky, South Carolina, Mississippi, Oklahoma,...  It's not called 
 the bible belt 
 for nothing. 


It would be more tedious than genuinely threatening to be an atheist adult 
in redneck America - unless you insist upon being as vocal as the Fundies. 
Yes, there's a lot of churches, and people will ask you what church you go 
to, but they will also ask you what sports team you support and think you 
are just as threatening if you are unaffiliated that way.

Craig


 Brent 


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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread Craig Weinberg


On Thursday, January 24, 2013 10:20:25 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:

  On 1/24/2013 6:28 PM, Craig Weinberg wrote: 



 On Thursday, January 24, 2013 9:05:31 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote: 

 On 1/24/2013 5:14 PM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote: 
  On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 4:55 AM, meekerdbmeek...@verizon.net  wrote: 
  
  It's probably a lot simpler than that.  In the U.S. if you're an 
 atheist it 
  may be hard to find a sympathetic ear.  Depending a lot on where you 
 live, 
  you may be isolated and reviled. 
  Is that really true? I was in the US recently for the first time, 
  Scottsdale Arizona and NYC, and other than Christmas decorations I 
  can't recall seeing much evidence of religion at all. This is perhaps 
  a superficial impression but I was a bit surprised nevertheless. 
  
  

 Scottsdale is pretty cosmopolitan - it's where airline pilots go to 
 retire.  NYC of course 
 is as secular, diverse, and worldly as any place in the world.  Try 
 visiting small towns 
 in Kentucky, South Carolina, Mississippi, Oklahoma,...  It's not called 
 the bible belt 
 for nothing. 


 It would be more tedious than genuinely threatening to be an atheist adult 
 in redneck America - unless you insist upon being as vocal as the Fundies. 
 Yes, there's a lot of churches, and people will ask you what church you go 
 to, but they will also ask you what sports team you support and think you 
 are just as threatening if you are unaffiliated that way.
  

 I'd didn't say they'd be threatening.  But if you were an atheist looking 
 for a friendly ear the only ones you'd find would probably want to convert 
 you.


I don't know that not being able to talk to others about your (non) 
religious beliefs would be cause for suicide though. Especially now that 
there's the internet... I can't remember the last time I had a conversation 
with someone about religion IRL. If it was that important to find a 
friendly ear in multiple neighbors and co-workers specifically to listen to 
you talk about being an atheist, then that makes me think about questioning 
the claim that atheism isn't like a religion.

Craig



 Brent
  

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-24 Thread meekerdb

On 1/24/2013 8:43 PM, Craig Weinberg wrote:
I don't know that not being able to talk to others about your (non) religious beliefs 
would be cause for suicide though.


Not a cause, just the absence of a little prevention.

Brent

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-23 Thread Craig Weinberg
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to 
kill seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across 
Yorkshire and Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the 
voice of God, speaking from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, 
telling him to kill prostitutes. 

http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

Albert Fish 1870 – 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
apparently had an array of ‘disorders’ and was judged to be “disturbed but 
sane” by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate 
his victims, and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God 
telling him to kill children. 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in 
Manitoba nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save 
people from an alien attack.

http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He 
was arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By 
mid-1974 he was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that 
followed him around. God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys 
and sever their penises. Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, 
Michael, and proceeded to torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican 
youth. Their next victim was one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had 
previously accused him of abuse. For such a transgression the hapless 
youngster was found drowned in an abandoned building. 


On Saturday, January 12, 2013 5:56:06 AM UTC-5, rclough wrote:


 The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period. 


Period?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/7894536/Yorkshire-Ripper-Peter-Sutcliffe-could-leave-Broadmoor-despite-life-behind-bars-ruling.html

Sutcliffe, now known as Peter Coonan, murdered 13 women and attempted to 
kill seven others during a five-and-a-half year reign of terror across 
Yorkshire and Greater Manchester 1975 to 1981. He claimed he heard the 
voice of God, speaking from tombstones while he was working in a graveyard, 
telling him to kill prostitutes. 

http://listdom.wordpress.com/category/a-serial-killers-view/

Albert Fish 1870 – 1936.  Fish said he had killed around 23 people. He 
apparently had an array of ‘disorders’ and was judged to be “disturbed but 
sane” by a psychiatrist prior to any convictions. Fish murdered then ate 
his victims, and at his trial professed that he heard the voice of God 
telling him to kill children. 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/05/22/mb-vince-li-schizophrenia-interview-manitoba.html

Vince Li, who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus in 
Manitoba nearly four years ago, believed he was chosen by God to save 
people from an alien attack.

http://www.crimezzz.net/serialkillers/K/KALLINGER_joseph.php

On January 23, 1972 he branded his oldest daughter for running away. He 
was arrested for child abuse and found incompetent to stand trial. By 
mid-1974 he was constantly hearing voices from a floating head that 
followed him around. God also spoke to him and told him to kill young boys 
and sever their penises. Eager to comply, Joe enlisted his 13-year-old son, 
Michael, and proceeded to torture and murder a nine-year-old Puerto Rican 
youth. Their next victim was one of his own children, Joe Jr., who had 
previously accused him of abuse. For such a transgression the hapless 
youngster was found drowned in an abandoned building.  

There are many, many more of course...

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-13 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 12 Jan 2013, at 15:37, Platonist Guitar Cowboy wrote:




On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 12:11 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 11 Jan 2013, at 21:47, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:



What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is  
meant by me.


I think you need faith to make data into evidence.


That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need  
a theory to make data into evidence which can count for or against  
the theory.


But for making data into evidence, you need to have faith in some  
theory, even if the data will refute some other theory. It might be  
unconscious theory used in the brain, and so it might be (and  
certainly is in most case) an unconscious faith (which is close to  
my suggestion for consciousness, following Helmholtz theory of  
perception).
There is always implicit theories, and we always need to bet on a  
reality behind them, to be able to make interpretations.


Bruno

A large part of this is not always conscious and taken for granted,  
which by default puts the theorist into a mystical situation. A  
point at which, after say her or his child will have bombarded them  
with a chain of why questions? about the nature of their work, at  
which there will be some unverified statement because I have to  
make a living, because I love what I do, because of the advancement  
of knowledge, because I have to survive.


... or because I have the mystical believe that 0 is different from  
s(0), and I accept that pq is true if p is true and q is true, etc.  
Yes.
of course the revelation that 0 is different than s(0) is done in the  
early month of life, so we get blasé about it, and even forget the  
faith, about it.





It's not totally unconscious, and as with religion, there are  
paradigm shifts, differing schools of thought etc. so to pass off  
progress in techne or understanding as purely scientific in the  
disinterested sense, is a flaw.


I am not sure. May be I don't get what you mean by scientific in the  
disinterested sense. Science comes from the interest in (varieties)  
of truth.




Mystic nomads came up with hunting tools despite their deities, and  
I guess many would say precisely because of their faith in deities.  
That a 21st century scientist tends to use working hypothesis,  
theory or some variation thereof does not place him above the  
mystic.


On the contrary, I think it is the only mystical attitude. of course  
we are living a long time of opposition between religion and science,  
but this can only lead to pseudo-religion (and suffering), and bad  
science (and suffering). It is a sort of schizophrenia. We cut our  
social corpus callosum. We separate the heart and reason, but they  
have to work together all the time.


We tolerate lack of rigor in the human science, like we tolerate  
idolatry, in philosophy, theology, etc. We are still in the dark age,  
a lasting coming back since about +500 in occident.




The very act of stating: well, this differs from theism is the  
oldest mystical trick in the book: my religion is more awesome than  
yours because...


In one sense, this distinction between science and theology is more  
deceptive than mysticism: where a mystic will wear her or his  
current unjustifiable belief on a shirt, some scientists will not  
avow to themselves that they have some. I do not care if certain  
scientists do this out of vanity, to place themselves above mystics  
and crazies in their internal narratives about their relationship to  
the world. Fine, we all need a bit of vain hero-narrative for  
motivation. I do care, when this internal negation of a scientist's  
theology is so literal and fanatic, that they start asking things  
like: How many can we fit into a gas chamber? How can we extract  
fossil fuels from even deeper deposits at the lowest cost? How do  
people react to electrocution? - at the mercy of political forces,  
ideologies of markets etc. for example.


For now I stick with Bruno Latour's notion that we were never  
moderns


I am not that pessimist. We have been modern from -500 to +500, and  
modernity is still in the heart of everyone, but a bit sleepy. Some  
people still want to defend truth, instead of searching it. They have  
missed the deepest truth common among (genuine) mystics and (genuine)  
scientist, which is that truth is the last thing needing argument per  
authority.





and that when we reasonably take the correct fork in the road  
after reading the direction sign, some alien observer will state:  
the metallic panel obviously exerts a force on the entity believing  
some propositions, same situation essentially as when we visited  
last time and they were still nomadic mystics taking cues from  
shamanic forces and betting on game, that they now apprehend with  
digital technology on wall street. 

Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-13 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 13 Jan 2013, at 01:40, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/12/2013 3:11 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:



On 11 Jan 2013, at 21:47, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:



What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is  
meant by me.


I think you need faith to make data into evidence.


That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need  
a theory to make data into evidence which can count for or against  
the theory.


But for making data into evidence, you need to have faith in some  
theory, even if the data will refute some other theory. It might be  
unconscious theory used in the brain, and so it might be (and  
certainly is in most case) an unconscious faith (which is close to  
my suggestion for consciousness, following Helmholtz theory of  
perception).
There is always implicit theories, and we always need to bet on a  
reality behind them, to be able to make interpretations.


But you don't have to believe the theory to test it,


You have to believe enough.




you don't need faith in it.


It depends on the applications. If your life can be endangered you  
need some sort of faith, like with the yes doctor, or like in taking  
a plane.






You only need to consider it hypothetically in order to see whether  
data counts for or against it, i.e. for turning data into evidence.   
Betting on isn't the same as having faith if it's provisional and  
subject to refutation.


But it becomes faith in comp and quantum suicide, as it involves  
surviving when the theory is correct or dying when the theory is  
incorrect.


But you need faith also when you put your feet on the ground, but as I  
said, we do have faith like that since so long that we forget the act  
of faith.


Bruno





Brent
“When we come to believe, we have no desire to believe  anything  
else, for we begin by believing that there is nothing else  which we  
have to believe….  I warn people not to seek for anything  beyond  
what they came to believe, for that was all they needed to  seek  
for. In the last resort,  however, it is better for you to remain  
ignorant, for fear that you  come to know what you should not  
know….  Let curiosity give place to  faith, and glory to salvation.   
Let them at least be no hindrance, or  let them keep quiet.  To know  
nothing against the Rule [of faith] is  to know everything.”

--- Tertullian

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread Roger Clough

The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net] 
1/12/2013  
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen 

- Receiving the following content -  
From: meekerdb  
Receiver: everything-list  
Time: 2013-01-11, 15:47:58 
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God 


On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:  
What are its tenets that you believe on faith?  


That there is something different from me.  


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant by me.  


I think you need faith to make data into evidence.  

That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need a theory to 
make data into evidence which can count for or against the theory. 

Brent

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 11 Jan 2013, at 21:47, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:



What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is  
meant by me.


I think you need faith to make data into evidence.


That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need a  
theory to make data into evidence which can count for or against the  
theory.


But for making data into evidence, you need to have faith in some  
theory, even if the data will refute some other theory. It might be  
unconscious theory used in the brain, and so it might be (and  
certainly is in most case) an unconscious faith (which is close to my  
suggestion for consciousness, following Helmholtz theory of perception).
There is always implicit theories, and we always need to bet on a  
reality behind them, to be able to make interpretations.


Bruno


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



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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread Telmo Menezes
On Fri, Jan 11, 2013 at 8:35 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 10 Jan 2013, at 23:05, Telmo Menezes wrote:




 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 6:10 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:




 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:

  Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


 I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of
 inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).


 Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable truths
 are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


 Why?
 I don't think so. Gödel's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness of
 the elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all machine cannot
 know the whole thing, and not even give it a name.


 Local was a poor choice of words. A better term for what I meant would
 be subjective to the machine. Taking the point of view of the machine: if
 it can't know certain truths about itself, how can it know any absolute
 truth?


 By proving it. (and praying for betting correct, not having confuse a +
 with a *, etc.)


But proving only really works from outside the system. If we are a machine
inside the system, how can we be sure that we are not making a systematic
mistake that we are not able to recognise.



 I assume that you are willing to agree that 17 is prime is an example of
 an absolute truth.


Yes.







 Apart from algebra, since rejecting it would invalidate Godel's theorem?


 Gödel's theorem is a theorem in elementary arithmetic.
 It is both a meta-theorem *on* a formal arithmetic, and a theorem *in*
 that formal arithmetic.
 I might miss your question perhaps. Please say so if it is the case.


Argh, sorry. Of course.
So if we are a machine inside the system, imagine there's something about
us we can't know that makes use commit fundamental mistakes. Is it possible
that arithmetics only makes sense to us because of that flaw?




 Bruno





 This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory where we
 can define absolute and relative.



 That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there are
 things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups feel that
 they just have a correct understanding of reality, and so on.


 I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this just to
 define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of truth cannot be
 communicate as such, unless we first agree on some axioms, and on what
 axioms are.






  Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an
 evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove correct
 arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non trivial
 propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that all axioms of
 infinity are of this type (but this is a strong statement).

 So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from their
 local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be justified,
 when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit like when the
 first animal decided to feed on a vegetal, which is a form of molecules
 stealing, at some level. Then other animals steal the molecules of those
 vegetarians, and so on. This has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to
 eat or to be eaten, and sometimes that hurts.


 Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


 Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be something
 absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if we can doubt the
 primary existence of the head.

 Bruno






 In the main line ...

 Bruno





 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.netwrote:



 According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the
 One
 (ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty,
 I
 sense God's presence.


 [Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
 1/9/2013
 Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 12 Jan 2013, at 12:30, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Fri, Jan 11, 2013 at 8:35 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 10 Jan 2013, at 23:05, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 6:10 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of  
inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable  
truths are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


Why?
I don't think so. Gödel's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness  
of the elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all  
machine cannot know the whole thing, and not even give it a name.


Local was a poor choice of words. A better term for what I meant  
would be subjective to the machine. Taking the point of view of  
the machine: if it can't know certain truths about itself, how can  
it know any absolute truth?


By proving it. (and praying for betting correct, not having confuse  
a + with a *, etc.)


But proving only really works from outside the system. If we are a  
machine inside the system, how can we be sure that we are not making  
a systematic mistake that we are not able to recognise.


We are not. Proof does not lead to certainty, nor to knowledge. That  
is why (Bp  p) obeys a different logic than Bp, even for correct  
machine on p sigma_1. In that case we do have Bp - p, but the  
machine cannot prove that. That is why I said by proving *and*  
praying.


Bruno






I assume that you are willing to agree that 17 is prime is an  
example of an absolute truth.


Yes.






Apart from algebra, since rejecting it would invalidate Godel's  
theorem?


Gödel's theorem is a theorem in elementary arithmetic.
It is both a meta-theorem *on* a formal arithmetic, and a theorem  
*in* that formal arithmetic.

I might miss your question perhaps. Please say so if it is the case.

Argh, sorry. Of course.
So if we are a machine inside the system, imagine there's something  
about us we can't know that makes use commit fundamental mistakes.  
Is it possible that arithmetics only makes sense to us because of  
that flaw?




Bruno





This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory  
where we can define absolute and relative.




That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there  
are things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups  
feel that they just have a correct understanding of reality, and  
so on.


I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this  
just to define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of  
truth cannot be communicate as such, unless we first agree on some  
axioms, and on what axioms are.







Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an  
evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove  
correct arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non  
trivial propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that  
all axioms of infinity are of this type (but this is a strong  
statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from  
their local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can  
be justified, when the goal is to make money locally and quickly.  
A bit like when the first animal decided to feed on a vegetal,  
which is a form of molecules stealing, at some level. Then other  
animals steal the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. This  
has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten,  
and sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be  
something absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if  
we can doubt the primary existence of the head.


Bruno






In the main line ...

Bruno






On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough  
rclo...@verizon.net wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes  
from the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 12 Jan 2013, at 11:56, Roger Clough wrote:



The only tenet to faith is trust in God. Period.


Yes.

That is even why we should never try to convince some others about  
God. We can only trust that God will do that, at the best moment. We  
can teach by example, but not with words, still less with normative  
moral, I think. Hell is really paved with good intentions. God might  
be the good, but the Devil is the good.


Bruno






[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/12/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

- Receiving the following content -
From: meekerdb
Receiver: everything-list
Time: 2013-01-11, 15:47:58
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God


On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:
What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant  
by me.



I think you need faith to make data into evidence.

That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need a  
theory to make data into evidence which can count for or against the  
theory.


Brent

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread Platonist Guitar Cowboy
On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 12:11 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 11 Jan 2013, at 21:47, meekerdb wrote:

  On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

  What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


 That there is something different from me.


 But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant by
 me.


 I think you need faith to make data into evidence.


 That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need a
 theory to make data into evidence which can count for or against the theory.


 But for making data into evidence, you need to have faith in some theory,
 even if the data will refute some other theory. It might be unconscious
 theory used in the brain, and so it might be (and certainly is in most
 case) an unconscious faith (which is close to my suggestion for
 consciousness, following Helmholtz theory of perception).
 There is always implicit theories, and we always need to bet on a reality
 behind them, to be able to make interpretations.

 Bruno


A large part of this is not always conscious and taken for granted, which
by default puts the theorist into a mystical situation. A point at which,
after say her or his child will have bombarded them with a chain of why
questions? about the nature of their work, at which there will be some
unverified statement because I have to make a living, because I love what
I do, because of the advancement of knowledge, because I have to survive.

It's not totally unconscious, and as with religion, there are paradigm
shifts, differing schools of thought etc. so to pass off progress in techne
or understanding as purely scientific in the disinterested sense, is a
flaw. Mystic nomads came up with hunting tools despite their deities, and I
guess many would say precisely because of their faith in deities. That a
21st century scientist tends to use working hypothesis, theory or some
variation thereof does not place him above the mystic. The very act of
stating: well, this differs from theism is the oldest mystical trick in
the book: my religion is more awesome than yours because...

In one sense, this distinction between science and theology is more
deceptive than mysticism: where a mystic will wear her or his current
unjustifiable belief on a shirt, some scientists will not avow to
themselves that they have some. I do not care if certain scientists do this
out of vanity, to place themselves above mystics and crazies in their
internal narratives about their relationship to the world. Fine, we all
need a bit of vain hero-narrative for motivation. I do care, when this
internal negation of a scientist's theology is so literal and fanatic, that
they start asking things like: How many can we fit into a gas chamber? How
can we extract fossil fuels from even deeper deposits at the lowest cost?
How do people react to electrocution? - at the mercy of political forces,
ideologies of markets etc. for example.

For now I stick with Bruno Latour's notion that we were never moderns and
that when we reasonably take the correct fork in the road after reading
the direction sign, some alien observer will state: the metallic panel
obviously exerts a force on the entity believing some propositions, same
situation essentially as when we visited last time and they were still
nomadic mystics taking cues from shamanic forces and betting on game, that
they now apprehend with digital technology on wall street. Deities morphed
into incorporated corporations and enshrined entities in law, the market,
political systems, and other gurus. All of this stuff still seems very
dreamy and subconscious, still war driven, like last time we visited. They
don't seem like fun just yet.

This is why I avoid strong forms of distinction between scientists and
mystics, and will give both of them benefit of the doubt if they are not
aholes.

PGC
-- No Walter, you're not wrong! You're just an... ahole - Jeff
Bridges in some movie :)






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



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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-12 Thread meekerdb

On 1/12/2013 3:11 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 11 Jan 2013, at 21:47, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant by me.


I think you need faith to make data into evidence. 


That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need a theory to make 
data into evidence which can count for or against the theory.


But for making data into evidence, you need to have faith in some theory, even if the 
data will refute some other theory. It might be unconscious theory used in the brain, 
and so it might be (and certainly is in most case) an unconscious faith (which is close 
to my suggestion for consciousness, following Helmholtz theory of perception).
There is always implicit theories, and we always need to bet on a reality behind them, 
to be able to make interpretations.


But you don't have to believe the theory to test it, you don't need faith in it.  You only 
need to consider it hypothetically in order to see whether data counts for or against it, 
i.e. for turning data into evidence.  Betting on isn't the same as having faith if it's 
provisional and subject to refutation.


Brent
When we come to believe, we have no desire to believe  anything else, for we begin by 
believing that there is nothing else  which we have to believe  I warn people not to 
seek for anything  beyond what they came to believe, for that was all they needed to  seek 
for. In the last resort,  however, it is better for you to remain ignorant, for fear that 
you  come to know what you should not know  Let curiosity give place to  faith, and 
glory to salvation.  Let them at least be no hindrance, or  let them keep quiet.  To know 
nothing against the Rule [of faith] is  to know everything.

--- Tertullian

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-11 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Bruno Marchal 

OK.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/11/2013 
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen
- Receiving the following content - 
From: Bruno Marchal 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-10, 12:04:54
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God




On 10 Jan 2013, at 13:30, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Bruno Marchal 

Could the incompleteness theorem simply be an artifact of
wrong-headedly trying to reach the necessary from the realm of contingency ? 


It is as much an artifact than the fact that there is an infinity of primes. G 
del's theorem concerns all sound machines or theories (or relative numbers). 


Note also that incompleteness is also a quasi-direct consequence of Church 
thesis. 


I often give the proof, and that might happen again :)


Bruno







That is, trying synthesize a system, whereas it is actually already complete
if deduced analytically ?


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/10/2013 
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen
- Receiving the following content - 
From: Bruno Marchal 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-09, 12:10:16
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God




On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:







On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:



On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of 
inconsistency (that is: G?el's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable truths are 
local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


Why?
I don't think so. G?el's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness of the 
elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all machine cannot know the 
whole thing, and not even give it a name.
This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory where we can 
define absolute and relative.






That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there are things 
that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups feel that they just 
have a correct understanding of reality, and so on.


I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this just to 
define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of truth cannot be 
communicate as such, unless we first agree on some axioms, and on what axioms 
are.









Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an evolutionary 
advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove correct arithmetical 
propositions, to shorten the proofs of non trivial propositions, etc. I am able 
to conceive, some day, that all axioms of infinity are of this type (but this 
is a strong statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from their local 
evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be justified, when the 
goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit like when the first animal 
decided to feed on a vegetal, which is a form of molecules stealing, at some 
level. Then other animals steal the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. 
This has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten, and 
sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be something 
absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if we can doubt the 
primary existence of the head.


Bruno









In the main line ...


Bruno









On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-11 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 10 Jan 2013, at 19:30, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/10/2013 7:23 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:



On 09 Jan 2013, at 19:37, John Clark wrote:

On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 7:18 AM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net  
wrote:


 I sense God's presence.

That's nice, but how do you know (and more important how do we  
know) if you are sensing a omnipotent being who created the  
universe or if you are sensing a bad potato that you ate yesterday?


Or the devil imitating God to fail you. Yes.




I've never had a mystical experience, but if I did I'd have the  
courtesy to keep my mouth shut about it if the evidence for its  
validity was available only to myself. Even if I had discovered a  
new fact about the nature of reality there would be no way to  
communicate the truth about it to others. And even if you are  
certain about it you can't be certain that you should be certain  
about it, because you can be 100% sure about something and still  
be dead wrong, in fact it's very common, just look at Muslim  
suicide bombers.


OK. Again this is a theorem in the comp theory. The wise remains  
mute (on the spiritual matter). But the machine can express some  
part in the conditional way, like she cannot prove non provable  
(my-consistency), but she can prove if I am consistent then non  
provable (my-consistency).


But it's only that *she* cannot prove her consistency.  Her  
consistency may be provable by someone other machine - it's not  
'unprovable' in an absolute sense.


Not really. The other machine will give a trivial proof, by assuming  
the consistency of the machine at the start, or it will assume  
something equivalent or stronger, but perhaps not trivially related to  
the consistency of the machine we talk about.


Nobody can prove the consistency of arithmetic, from less than  
something equivalent to that consistency. Proof of consistency are  
equivalent to transfinite induction on a constructive ordinal. To  
prove the consistency of an induction made on ordinals, you need an  
induction on higher ordinal. Another machine can prove a consistency,  
but that proof can only be convincing if we believe in the consistency  
of the other machine.


Bruno







Brent

Likewise, a part of the spiritual truth can be proved in the form  
if comp then 


Bruno


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



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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-11 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 10 Jan 2013, at 20:08, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/10/2013 8:10 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 22:03, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/9/2013 7:20 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:




According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes  
from the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who  
will tell you that if beauty is god, then he believes in God,  
but that is not the God he is talking about when declaring  
himself an atheist.


An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus.  
Really.


Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than  
atheism, because with comp, not only the literal Christian God  
does not exist, but the myth or a primitive material universe has  
to be abandoned too. I disagree because comp invite us firmly to  
come back to the scientific notion of God (transcendental truth  
at the root of everything, faith in reincarnation).


Science is always based on a religion.


?? Surely you mean a scientific theory is always based on a  
religion by which you probably mean some basic assumptions.  But  
it doesn't follow that science as a whole is based on a  
(singular?) religion.


Yes it is. Science is based on our faith in some stable reality.  
This is at the root of both Aristotle and Plato Theology.



Ok, I can buy that.  It even assumes that we can know about reality  
in at least some approximate and incomplete sense.


OK.










So what's your religion, Bruno?


I believe that there is something.





What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant  
by me.


I think you need faith to make data into evidence.











Who are the adherents?


The non-solipsistic people. The belief in others is faith, even if  
partially build in in our mammal brain. This makes us hard to  
understand that it is faith, but with some work and introspection  
you can get the point. It is very elementary and widespread  
religion, and then with comp, it specializes a bit into a doctrine  
close to Plato, Plotinus, and most mystics.



Brent
I'm a Solipist, and I must say I'm surprised there aren't more of us.
 -- letter to Bertrand Russell


I'm a Solipsist and I am surprised that some student want to believe  
me. (Brouwer, from memory, not exact terming, it was in Dutch ).



Bruno




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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-11 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 10 Jan 2013, at 23:05, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 6:10 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of  
inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable  
truths are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


Why?
I don't think so. Gödel's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness  
of the elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all  
machine cannot know the whole thing, and not even give it a name.


Local was a poor choice of words. A better term for what I meant  
would be subjective to the machine. Taking the point of view of  
the machine: if it can't know certain truths about itself, how can  
it know any absolute truth?


By proving it. (and praying for betting correct, not having confuse a  
+ with a *, etc.)


I assume that you are willing to agree that 17 is prime is an  
example of an absolute truth.






Apart from algebra, since rejecting it would invalidate Godel's  
theorem?


Gödel's theorem is a theorem in elementary arithmetic.
It is both a meta-theorem *on* a formal arithmetic, and a theorem *in*  
that formal arithmetic.

I might miss your question perhaps. Please say so if it is the case.


Bruno





This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory  
where we can define absolute and relative.




That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there  
are things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups  
feel that they just have a correct understanding of reality, and so  
on.


I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this  
just to define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of  
truth cannot be communicate as such, unless we first agree on some  
axioms, and on what axioms are.







Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an  
evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove  
correct arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non  
trivial propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that  
all axioms of infinity are of this type (but this is a strong  
statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from  
their local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can  
be justified, when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A  
bit like when the first animal decided to feed on a vegetal,  
which is a form of molecules stealing, at some level. Then other  
animals steal the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. This  
has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten,  
and sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be  
something absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if  
we can doubt the primary existence of the head.


Bruno






In the main line ...

Bruno






On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net  
wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-11 Thread meekerdb

On 1/11/2013 10:31 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant by me.


I think you need faith to make data into evidence. 


That would vitiate the concept of evidence.  I'd say you only need a theory to make data 
into evidence which can count for or against the theory.


Brent

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Bruno Marchal 

Could the incompleteness theorem simply be an artifact of
wrong-headedly trying to reach the necessary from the realm of contingency ? 

That is, trying synthesize a system, whereas it is actually already complete
if deduced analytically ?


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/10/2013 
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen
- Receiving the following content - 
From: Bruno Marchal 
Receiver: everything-list 
Time: 2013-01-09, 12:10:16
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God




On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:







On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:



On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of 
inconsistency (that is: G?el's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable truths are 
local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


Why?
I don't think so. G?el's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness of the 
elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all machine cannot know the 
whole thing, and not even give it a name.
This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory where we can 
define absolute and relative.






That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there are things 
that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups feel that they just 
have a correct understanding of reality, and so on.


I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this just to 
define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of truth cannot be 
communicate as such, unless we first agree on some axioms, and on what axioms 
are.









Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an evolutionary 
advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove correct arithmetical 
propositions, to shorten the proofs of non trivial propositions, etc. I am able 
to conceive, some day, that all axioms of infinity are of this type (but this 
is a strong statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from their local 
evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be justified, when the 
goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit like when the first animal 
decided to feed on a vegetal, which is a form of molecules stealing, at some 
level. Then other animals steal the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. 
This has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten, and 
sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be something 
absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if we can doubt the 
primary existence of the head.


Bruno









In the main line ...


Bruno









On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 Jan 2013, at 19:37, John Clark wrote:

On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 7:18 AM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net  
wrote:


 I sense God's presence.

That's nice, but how do you know (and more important how do we know)  
if you are sensing a omnipotent being who created the universe or if  
you are sensing a bad potato that you ate yesterday?


Or the devil imitating God to fail you. Yes.




I've never had a mystical experience, but if I did I'd have the  
courtesy to keep my mouth shut about it if the evidence for its  
validity was available only to myself. Even if I had discovered a  
new fact about the nature of reality there would be no way to  
communicate the truth about it to others. And even if you are  
certain about it you can't be certain that you should be certain  
about it, because you can be 100% sure about something and still be  
dead wrong, in fact it's very common, just look at Muslim suicide  
bombers.


OK. Again this is a theorem in the comp theory. The wise remains mute  
(on the spiritual matter). But the machine can express some part in  
the conditional way, like she cannot prove non provable (my- 
consistency), but she can prove if I am consistent then non provable  
(my-consistency). Likewise, a part of the spiritual truth can be  
proved in the form if comp then 


Bruno


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



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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 Jan 2013, at 22:03, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/9/2013 7:20 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:




According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who  
will tell you that if beauty is god, then he believes in God, but  
that is not the God he is talking about when declaring himself an  
atheist.


An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus.  
Really.


Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than  
atheism, because with comp, not only the literal Christian God does  
not exist, but the myth or a primitive material universe has to be  
abandoned too. I disagree because comp invite us firmly to come  
back to the scientific notion of God (transcendental truth at the  
root of everything, faith in reincarnation).


Science is always based on a religion.


?? Surely you mean a scientific theory is always based on a  
religion by which you probably mean some basic assumptions.  But  
it doesn't follow that science as a whole is based on a (singular?)  
religion.


Yes it is. Science is based on our faith in some stable reality.  
This is at the root of both Aristotle and Plato Theology.






So what's your religion, Bruno?


I believe that there is something.





What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.




Who are the adherents?


The non-solipsistic people. The belief in others is faith, even if  
partially build in in our mammal brain. This makes us hard to  
understand that it is faith, but with some work and introspection you  
can get the point. It is very elementary and widespread religion, and  
then with comp, it specializes a bit into a doctrine close to Plato,  
Plotinus, and most mystics.


Bruno






Brent

Scientist who pretend to have no religion are person who take so  
much their religion for granted that they cannot doubt it, and so  
becomes pseudo-priest of some sort. It is often the case with the  
(weak) materialist (as almost all people are still today).


Bruno





[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 10 Jan 2013, at 13:30, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Bruno Marchal

Could the incompleteness theorem simply be an artifact of
wrong-headedly trying to reach the necessary from the realm of  
contingency ?


It is as much an artifact than the fact that there is an infinity of  
primes. Gödel's theorem concerns all sound machines or theories (or  
relative numbers).


Note also that incompleteness is also a quasi-direct consequence of  
Church thesis.


I often give the proof, and that might happen again :)

Bruno





That is, trying synthesize a system, whereas it is actually already  
complete

if deduced analytically ?


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/10/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen
- Receiving the following content -
From: Bruno Marchal
Receiver: everything-list
Time: 2013-01-09, 12:10:16
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God


On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of  
inconsistency (that is: G鰀el's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable  
truths are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


Why?
I don't think so. G鰀el's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness  
of the elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all  
machine cannot know the whole thing, and not even give it a name.
This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory  
where we can define absolute and relative.




That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there  
are things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups  
feel that they just have a correct understanding of reality, and so  
on.


I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this  
just to define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of  
truth cannot be communicate as such, unless we first agree on some  
axioms, and on what axioms are.







Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an  
evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove  
correct arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non  
trivial propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that  
all axioms of infinity are of this type (but this is a strong  
statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from  
their local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can  
be justified, when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A  
bit like when the first animal decided to feed on a vegetal,  
which is a form of molecules stealing, at some level. Then other  
animals steal the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. This  
has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten,  
and sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be  
something absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if  
we can doubt the primary existence of the head.


Bruno






In the main line ...

Bruno






On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net  
wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread meekerdb

On 1/10/2013 7:23 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 19:37, John Clark wrote:

On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 7:18 AM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net 
mailto:rclo...@verizon.net wrote:


 I sense God's presence.


That's nice, but how do you know (and more important how do we know) if you are sensing 
a omnipotent being who created the universe or if you are sensing a bad potato that you 
ate yesterday?


Or the devil imitating God to fail you. Yes.




I've never had a mystical experience, but if I did I'd have the courtesy to keep my 
mouth shut about it if the evidence for its validity was available only to myself. Even 
if I had discovered a new fact about the nature of reality there would be no way to 
communicate the truth about it to others. And even if you are certain about it you 
can't be certain that you should be certain about it, because you can be 100% sure 
about something and still be dead wrong, in fact it's very common, just look at Muslim 
suicide bombers.


OK. Again this is a theorem in the comp theory. The wise remains mute (on the spiritual 
matter). But the machine can express some part in the conditional way, like she cannot 
prove non provable (my-consistency), but she can prove if I am consistent then non 
provable (my-consistency).


But it's only that *she* cannot prove her consistency.  Her consistency may be provable by 
someone other machine - it's not 'unprovable' in an absolute sense.


Brent


Likewise, a part of the spiritual truth can be proved in the form if comp then 


Bruno


http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/ http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/%7Emarchal/



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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread meekerdb

On 1/10/2013 8:10 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 22:03, meekerdb wrote:


On 1/9/2013 7:20 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:




According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
sense God's presence.


I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who will tell you that 
if beauty is god, then he believes in God, but that is not the God he is talking 
about when declaring himself an atheist.


An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus. Really.

Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than atheism, because with 
comp, not only the literal Christian God does not exist, but the myth or a primitive 
material universe has to be abandoned too. I disagree because comp invite us firmly to 
come back to the scientific notion of God (transcendental truth at the root of 
everything, faith in reincarnation).


Science is always based on a religion.


?? Surely you mean a scientific theory is always based on a religion by which you 
probably mean some basic assumptions.  But it doesn't follow that science as a whole is 
based on a (singular?) religion.


Yes it is. Science is based on our faith in some stable reality. This is at the root 
of both Aristotle and Plato Theology.



Ok, I can buy that.  It even assumes that we can know about reality in at least some 
approximate and incomplete sense.








So what's your religion, Bruno?


I believe that there is something.





What are its tenets that you believe on faith?


That there is something different from me.


But you have evidence for that - if you can figure out what is meant by me.







Who are the adherents?


The non-solipsistic people. The belief in others is faith, even if partially build in in 
our mammal brain. This makes us hard to understand that it is faith, but with some work 
and introspection you can get the point. It is very elementary and widespread religion, 
and then with comp, it specializes a bit into a doctrine close to Plato, Plotinus, and 
most mystics.



Brent
I'm a Solipist, and I must say I'm surprised there aren't more of us.
  -- letter to Bertrand Russell

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-10 Thread Telmo Menezes
On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 6:10 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:




 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:

  Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


 I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of
 inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).


 Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable truths
 are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


 Why?
 I don't think so. Gödel's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness of the
 elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all machine cannot know
 the whole thing, and not even give it a name.


Local was a poor choice of words. A better term for what I meant would be
subjective to the machine. Taking the point of view of the machine: if it
can't know certain truths about itself, how can it know any absolute truth?
Apart from algebra, since rejecting it would invalidate Godel's theorem?


 This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory where we
 can define absolute and relative.



 That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there are
 things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups feel that
 they just have a correct understanding of reality, and so on.


 I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this just to
 define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of truth cannot be
 communicate as such, unless we first agree on some axioms, and on what
 axioms are.






  Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an
 evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove correct
 arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non trivial
 propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that all axioms of
 infinity are of this type (but this is a strong statement).

 So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from their
 local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be justified,
 when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit like when the
 first animal decided to feed on a vegetal, which is a form of molecules
 stealing, at some level. Then other animals steal the molecules of those
 vegetarians, and so on. This has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to
 eat or to be eaten, and sometimes that hurts.


 Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


 Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be something
 absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if we can doubt the
 primary existence of the head.

 Bruno






 In the main line ...

 Bruno





 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net wrote:



 According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the
 One
 (ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
 sense God's presence.


 [Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
 1/9/2013
 Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Telmo Menezes
Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net wrote:



 According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
 (ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
 sense God's presence.


 [Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
 1/9/2013
 Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Roger Clough
Hi Telmo Menezes  

In the Christian tradition, Satan.  
  
In the Platonic tradition (which Bruno knows  
much better than I do), I think the Demiurge. 


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net] 
1/9/2013  
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen 
- Receiving the following content -  
From: Telmo Menezes  
Receiver: everything-list  
Time: 2013-01-09, 07:26:45 
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God 


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from? 



On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough  wrote: 



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One 
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I 
sense God's presence. 


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net] 
1/9/2013 
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen 

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:




According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who will  
tell you that if beauty is god, then he believes in God, but that is  
not the God he is talking about when declaring himself an atheist.


An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus. Really.

Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than  
atheism, because with comp, not only the literal Christian God does  
not exist, but the myth or a primitive material universe has to be  
abandoned too. I disagree because comp invite us firmly to come back  
to the scientific notion of God (transcendental truth at the root of  
everything, faith in reincarnation).


Science is always based on a religion. Scientist who pretend to have  
no religion are person who take so much their religion for granted  
that they cannot doubt it, and so becomes pseudo-priest of some sort.  
It is often the case with the (weak) materialist (as almost all people  
are still today).


Bruno





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1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of  
inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).  
Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an  
evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove  
correct arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non  
trivial propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that all  
axioms of infinity are of this type (but this is a strong statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from their  
local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be  
justified, when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit  
like when the first animal decided to feed on a vegetal, which is a  
form of molecules stealing, at some level. Then other animals steal  
the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. This has generated the  
evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten, and sometimes that hurts.


In the main line ...

Bruno






On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net  
wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 Jan 2013, at 14:29, Roger Clough wrote:


Hi Telmo Menezes

In the Christian tradition, Satan.

In the Platonic tradition (which Bruno knows
much better than I do), I think the Demiurge.



Platonists are not so good on the bad, and the bad is really a complex  
problem. I suggest an answer in my post to Telmo.


To give you a bad example, Plotinus explains that the bad occurs  
only to bad people. It warns that if you rape a woman, you will be  
punished. How: by becoming a woman in your next life, and by being  
raped.


This is unfortunate, as it might gives the idea that if a woman  
attracts you up to the point you will rape her, it is OK, as it can  
only mean that you are raping some guy who raped a woman in his/her  
preceding life! But this will only justify and perpetuate the bad.


It is not entirely nonsensical, and may be Plotinus was to quick. It  
can be related to the buddhist notion of karma, but here too, a danger  
remains to make sick and miserable people, if that was not enough,  
also feeling guilty. It leads to the idea that whatever bad happens to  
you comes from bad thing you did in a preceding life, and this means  
that it is always your fault. Basically, the idea of sin comes from  
this too. But this can be used by people who want to manipulate you,  
as history illustrates.
With the explanation suggested to Telmo, I would say the bad exists  
due to its logical closeness to the good. Also good can be a  
protagorean virtue, meaning that if you try to define the good in some  
normative way, then the bad will be guarantied to happen.


Bruno







[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen
- Receiving the following content -
From: Telmo Menezes
Receiver: everything-list
Time: 2013-01-09, 07:26:45
Subject: Re: Sensing the presence of God


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?



On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough  wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Telmo Menezes
On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:

 Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


 I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of
 inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable truths
are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?
That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there are
things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups feel that
they just have a correct understanding of reality, and so on.


 Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an
 evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove correct
 arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non trivial
 propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that all axioms of
 infinity are of this type (but this is a strong statement).

 So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from their
 local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be justified,
 when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit like when the
 first animal decided to feed on a vegetal, which is a form of molecules
 stealing, at some level. Then other animals steal the molecules of those
 vegetarians, and so on. This has generated the evolutionary heuristic: to
 eat or to be eaten, and sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.



 In the main line ...

 Bruno





 On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net wrote:



 According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
 (ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
 sense God's presence.


 [Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
 1/9/2013
 Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread John Mikes
Dear Bruno,
you know we agree (mostly), you wrote lately that you are more agnostic
than myself - what I doubt since your religion includes numbers and
math(logic)  and mine not.
What I take for granted is our limited capability to learn them all about
the *infinite complexity* of which we formulate a 'model' of the (already)
knowable - as *adjusted* to our present level mind-function.
There is 'evidence' of a steady growing of such knowledge over the
millennia of (human) enlightenment. There is * N O *
evidence about it's qualia - i.e. that we CAN comprehend any facet of
that *infinite
complexity*. We think in 'facts' and their factual(?) relations what may be
absolutely false.

I am not an atheist: I just do not fall for hearsay. I say it in all
honesty that I dunno. Nor am I a materialist - consider the physical
world (and conventional sciences) figments how our human mind (??) explains
the not-understood phenomena we get a glimps of. You do it by math: an
unexplained arithmetics, I do not do it at all.
The best for the New Year
John M




On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 10:20 AM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


 On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:



 According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
 (ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
 sense God's presence.


 I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who will
 tell you that if beauty is god, then he believes in God, but that is not
 the God he is talking about when declaring himself an atheist.

 An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus. Really.

 Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than atheism,
 because with comp, not only the literal Christian God does not exist, but
 the myth or a primitive material universe has to be abandoned too. I
 disagree because comp invite us firmly to come back to the scientific
 notion of God (transcendental truth at the root of everything, faith in
 reincarnation).

 Science is always based on a religion. Scientist who pretend to have no
 religion are person who take so much their religion for granted that they
 cannot doubt it, and so becomes pseudo-priest of some sort. It is often the
 case with the (weak) materialist (as almost all people are still today).

 Bruno





 [Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
 1/9/2013
 Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:03, Telmo Menezes wrote:





On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 4:29 PM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:26, Telmo Menezes wrote:


Where does hate, falsehood and ugliness come from?


I am not quite sure, but it comes probably from the consistency of  
inconsistency (that is: Gödel's second incompleteness theorem).


Doesn't the second incompleteness theorem imply that all knowable  
truths are local and that absolute truth is unrecognisable?


Why?
I don't think so. Gödel's incompleteness relies on the absoluteness of  
the elementary arithmetical truth. It only entails that all machine  
cannot know the whole thing, and not even give it a name.
This can be made more precise in model theory, or set theory where  
we can define absolute and relative.




That makes sense with my empirical understanding of realty: there  
are things that I find beautiful and others find ugly. Hate groups  
feel that they just have a correct understanding of reality, and so  
on.


I am OK with this, except on elementary arithmetic. You need this just  
to define formalism, machine, etc. But even such kind of truth  
cannot be communicate as such, unless we first agree on some axioms,  
and on what axioms are.







Actually it comes from the fact that Bf (inconsistency) gives an  
evolutionary advantage. Like the true Dt, Bf can be used to prove  
correct arithmetical propositions, to shorten the proofs of non  
trivial propositions, etc. I am able to conceive, some day, that all  
axioms of infinity are of this type (but this is a strong statement).


So basically the hate, the falsehood and the ugliness comes from  
their local evolutionary advantage. A bit like robbing a bank can be  
justified, when the goal is to make money locally and quickly. A bit  
like when the first animal decided to feed on a vegetal, which is  
a form of molecules stealing, at some level. Then other animals  
steal the molecules of those vegetarians, and so on. This has  
generated the evolutionary heuristic: to eat or to be eaten, and  
sometimes that hurts.


Ok - at the evolutionary level of abstraction.


Well, OK. It still hurts, and the hurting feeling seems to be  
something absolute. We cannot doubt a feeling of headache, even if we  
can doubt the primary existence of the head.


Bruno






In the main line ...

Bruno






On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:18 PM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net  
wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.


[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread Bruno Marchal

Dear John,


On 09 Jan 2013, at 17:30, John Mikes wrote:

you know we agree (mostly), you wrote lately that you are more  
agnostic than myself - what I doubt since your religion includes  
numbers and math(logic)  and mine not.


My religion (I prefer to say: my favorite working hypothesis) is  
that we are machine (to be short). But this cannot even be explained  
if you doubt things like 43 is prime, etc.
Then we can try refuting that theory, especially that I expain that  
the physical laws are theorems in that theory.


I will be franc John, I have no clue by what you mean when you say  
that numbers are not part of your religion.


We agree on the deep, I think. We disagree on the amount of agreement  
between us. I think it is greater than you think :)





What I take for granted is our limited capability to learn them  
all about the infinite complexity of which we formulate a 'model' of  
the (already) knowable - as adjusted to our present level mind- 
function.


Terms like limited, capacity are more complex to me than 2+2=4. I  
can hardly imagine an explanation of limited capacity which does not  
rely on natural numbers relations or something Turing equivalent.




There is 'evidence' of a steady growing of such knowledge over the  
millennia of (human) enlightenment. There is  N O
evidence about it's qualia - i.e. that we CAN comprehend any facet  
of that infinite complexity. We think in 'facts' and their  
factual(?) relations what may be absolutely false.


I am not an atheist: I just do not fall for hearsay. I say it in all  
honesty that I dunno. Nor am I a materialist - consider the  
physical world (and conventional sciences) figments how our human  
mind (??) explains the not-understood phenomena we get a glimps of.  
You do it by math: an unexplained arithmetics, I do not do it at all.


It is nice to recognize our ignorance, which can only be abyssal  
(probably so with comp). But this is not a reason to try theories, as  
this is the only chance to be shown wrong, and to learn a little bit.  
If you don't do it at all, which is quite wise, you get the empty  
theory, which is irrefutable, but explains too much. I am just  
*trying* to get an idea of what is going on.





The best for the New Year


?

I thought you were not believing in arithmetic :)

Best wishes,

Bruno






John M




On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 10:20 AM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:



According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from  
the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or  
beauty, I

sense God's presence.

I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who  
will tell you that if beauty is god, then he believes in God, but  
that is not the God he is talking about when declaring himself an  
atheist.


An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus.  
Really.


Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than  
atheism, because with comp, not only the literal Christian God does  
not exist, but the myth or a primitive material universe has to be  
abandoned too. I disagree because comp invite us firmly to come back  
to the scientific notion of God (transcendental truth at the root of  
everything, faith in reincarnation).


Science is always based on a religion. Scientist who pretend to have  
no religion are person who take so much their religion for granted  
that they cannot doubt it, and so becomes pseudo-priest of some  
sort. It is often the case with the (weak) materialist (as almost  
all people are still today).


Bruno





[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread John Clark
On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 7:18 AM, Roger Clough rclo...@verizon.net wrote:

 I sense God's presence.


That's nice, but how do you know (and more important how do we know) if you
are sensing a omnipotent being who created the universe or if you are
sensing a bad potato that you ate yesterday?

I've never had a mystical experience, but if I did I'd have the courtesy to
keep my mouth shut about it if the evidence for its validity was available
only to myself. Even if I had discovered a new fact about the nature of
reality there would be no way to communicate the truth about it to others.
And even if you are certain about it you can't be certain that you should
be certain about it, because you can be 100% sure about something and still
be dead wrong, in fact it's very common, just look at Muslim suicide
bombers.

  John K Clark

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Re: Sensing the presence of God

2013-01-09 Thread meekerdb

On 1/9/2013 7:20 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 Jan 2013, at 13:18, Roger Clough wrote:




According to Plato, all love, all truth, and all beauty comes from the One
(ie God). That being the case, when I experience love, truth or beauty, I
sense God's presence.


I can be OK with this, but this will not convince an atheist, who will tell you that if 
beauty is god, then he believes in God, but that is not the God he is talking about 
when declaring himself an atheist.


An atheist is just someone who does not believe in Santa Claus. Really.

Some people suggests that comp is two times more atheistic than atheism, because with 
comp, not only the literal Christian God does not exist, but the myth or a primitive 
material universe has to be abandoned too. I disagree because comp invite us firmly to 
come back to the scientific notion of God (transcendental truth at the root of 
everything, faith in reincarnation).


Science is always based on a religion. 


?? Surely you mean a scientific theory is always based on a religion by which you 
probably mean some basic assumptions.  But it doesn't follow that science as a whole is 
based on a (singular?) religion.


So what's your religion, Bruno?  What are its tenets that you believe on faith?  Who are 
the adherents?


Brent

Scientist who pretend to have no religion are person who take so much their religion for 
granted that they cannot doubt it, and so becomes pseudo-priest of some sort. It is 
often the case with the (weak) materialist (as almost all people are still today).


Bruno





[Roger Clough], [rclo...@verizon.net]
1/9/2013
Forever is a long time, especially near the end. - Woody Allen

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