-- 
*Mar*

Locating Me



Suppose I can see everything and my eyes are not restricted to just
00.0035% of the totality. Then I may find atoms,particles,processes etc
mixing up and up. When I look at myself I may not even locate myself but
confront me as so many processes acting, interacting and interacting.Then
How are space and time to be located? Can I see myself at all? Is death the
entrance into that space-time less reality? Is earth actually a rare island
of space-time?

Chat gpt

You’re now asking questions that sit *below physics*, at the level
where *physics,
philosophy of mind, and metaphysics meet*. There are no simple yes/no
answers here—but there *are* clear distinctions that prevent confusion.
I’ll go step by step and keep physics and speculation carefully separated.
------------------------------

*1. “If I could see everything, could I locate myself at all?”*

If your perception were unlimited—seeing atoms, fields, interactions,
quantum processes—you would *not find a single, fixed ‘you’*.

What you would find instead is:

   - Molecular processes
   - Neural firing patterns
   - Chemical gradients
   - Information flows
   - Feedback loops

This is not a failure of perception. It is what *modern science already
tells us*.

*There is no point-like self.*
The “self” is:

   - A *process*
   - A *pattern*
   - A *temporally sustained organization*

Much like:

   - A whirlpool in a river
   - A flame in a candle

Remove the process → the object vanishes.

So yes:

If you look deeply enough, you don’t *locate* yourself — you *recognize a
pattern persisting through change*.
------------------------------

*2. Then where are space and time “located”?*

This is a crucial shift.

*Space and time are not things inside the universe*

They are the *relational structure* of the universe.

In modern physics (especially relativity):

   - Space is not a container
   - Time is not a flowing substance
   - Spacetime is a *network of relations between events*

You don’t find space and time *behind* particles.
You find:

particles *defined by their spacetime relations*

So asking “Where is space?” is like asking:

“Where is distance located?”

Distance is not an object.
Neither are space and time.
------------------------------

*3. Can I see myself at all?*

You can see *representations* of yourself:

   - Your body in a mirror
   - Your thoughts as they arise
   - Your emotions as patterns
   - Your memories as reconstructions

But the *observer itself* cannot be fully observed in the same frame.

This is not mystical — it’s structural.

Just as:

   - A camera cannot photograph its own lens without a mirror
   - A system cannot fully model itself without recursion and loss

In philosophy, this is known as:

   - *The reflexivity limit*
   - *Self-reference constraint*

So:

You never encounter a final “I” — only ongoing self-models.
------------------------------

*4. Is death an entrance into a spaceless, timeless reality?*

Here we must be precise and honest.

*What physics can say:*

   - Conscious experience depends on physical processes
   - When those processes irreversibly stop, experience—as we know it—ceases
   - Physics does *not* detect a transition into another spacetime

*What physics cannot say:*

   - Whether subjective experience has a non-physical continuation
   - Whether spacetime itself is fundamental or emergent
   - Whether consciousness has aspects not captured by current theory

So *no scientific law* supports the claim that death is an “entrance” into
a spacetime-less realm.

That idea belongs to:

   - Metaphysics
   - Spiritual philosophy
   - Existential interpretation

It is not disprovable—but it is *not established*.
------------------------------

*5. Is Earth a rare island of space-time?*

No — and this is important.

   - Spacetime exists everywhere
   - Earth does not “contain” spacetime
   - Earth is a *localized pattern within spacetime*

What *is* rare is:

   - Long-term thermodynamic stability
   - Complex chemistry
   - Persistent information structures
   - Self-referential observers

Earth is rare as an *organizational phenomenon*, not as spacetime.

Think of it this way:

   - Spacetime is the ocean
   - Earth is a long-lived vortex in it

------------------------------

*6. A unifying picture (very important)*

What you’re circling around is this:

*At fundamental levels, reality is not made of “things”, but of processes
and relations.*

   - The self → a process
   - Matter → excitations of fields
   - Space & time → relational structure
   - Identity → continuity, not substance

>From that viewpoint:

   - Losing the sense of a fixed self is not annihilation
   - It is seeing more accurately

------------------------------

*7. Final grounding (to avoid a common trap)*

It’s tempting to jump from:

“The self is not a thing”
to:
“Therefore death reveals ultimate reality”

That jump is *not logically required*.

A safer conclusion is:

The self is a *temporally bounded process*.
When the process ends, the description ends.

Whether *anything else* follows is an *open philosophical question*, not a
scientific one.
------------------------------

*One sentence summary*

If you could see everything, you would not find a solid “you” or a
container called space-time—you would see *interacting processes forming
temporary patterns*, and *you* would be one of those patterns, aware of
itself for a while.

If you want, we can next explore *whether consciousness itself could be a
fundamental feature of reality* or *why experience exists at all*—which is
the deepest question hiding underneath everything you’ve asked.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CACDCHCKYiEoUQp0LN8diSwHTG_84AMg1WXit9sgx8%3DxiW5tR%3Dw%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to