- Posts: 2014
Naturalism and Jediism
It has not been my experience that the Force is widely interpreted as in some sense anthropomorphic, be it in form or in spirit. Even when something like a "will" is alleged for it, it seldom is framed as anything comparable to the kind of will a mortal might have. I would for this reason say that, at least in a significant portion of, possibly even in most interpretations, the Force is not itself understood to be a deity and I am unaware of interpretations that pose any other deities beside it. Process theology seems to me to assert properties of God. I don't understand why this is helpful or necessary from a Jedi perspective shy of the specific interpretation involving the Force as a kind of being in its own right - which of course is as welcome as any of them...
Ground-of-Being Theism is a bit more sympathetic, I find, simply because it renders God as something properly abstract and impersonal. Again, I think that one can possibly interpret the Force in this way, the only question is "to what end?". Where without it the Force might be seen as an aspect of reality, or a purely conceptual reminder (a useful fiction, perhaps) of its coherency and omnipresence, GoB forces it to be something properly foundational. As before, this is not in principle in conflict. I couldn't claim that this is not what the Force means to you, nor could I argue why it shouldn't be. I just don't understand why it would be in the first place.
Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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I took a shot in the dark there. I might be wildly wrong, but it seems we are in search for an umbrella label that meshes well with Jediism... and everything else.
The pessimist complains about the wind;
The optimist expects it to change;
The realist adjusts the sails.
- William Arthur Ward
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The first problem comes in this being how you can show that this was actually the case. Namely, how do you show that a God was necessary or even probable in this creation? Secondly even if God did exist at one time and became the universe that would mean god no longer exists and we already have a name for what we experience as just "The Universe" making the concept of needing yet another name beneath that redundant. Further more if this were an ongoing act of evolution instead of a static event then there would be no means to ever ground anything in our reality as truth. reality would be subject to constant modification and interruption of continuity. I see no means by which either of these ideas really hold much water.
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Why not? And if indeed so, how is that different for a "static event"?Kyrin Wyldstar wrote: ... if this [creation?] were an ongoing act of evolution instead of a static event then there would be no means to ever ground anything in our reality as truth.
It is a common trope I hear usually from presuppositionalists, who insist that if there be no rigid, static reference point there might as well be no standard at all. I don't understand that. Whether reality is ever changing or not, we are still stuck with it and we have better chances of coping with it the more of it we can bring ourselves to understand. The fundamental incompleteness of that understanding is a part of our condition and that is neither alleviated nor exaggerated in either model of the universe's coming into being or subsequent being. One may argue that we do as a matter of fact have some unchanging laws we can rely on, be they rules of inference or physical relations. But then with only having one universe to look at, who is to say that our amount of "statics" is a necessary or a sufficient one? Algebraically it is not much of a deal to project a variable space down to a subspace of less dimensions, a slice of the total space at some otherwise variable thing's value being some arbitrary function of others or constant. It becomes more philosophical when considering what can be learned of a variable space that has no laws or constants in it at all. Can one meaningfully speak of something like a toplogy of that space, of any kind relation when we deliberately exclude it having any... I think so. At any rate, surely there is plenty of dependencies we can introduce, plenty of constants we can relax into being variables long before that extreme limit case becomes a concern.
Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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Gisteron wrote:
Kyrin Wyldstar wrote: ... if this [creation?] were an ongoing act of evolution instead of a static event then there would be no means to ever ground anything in our reality as truth.
Why not? And if indeed so, how is that different for a "static event"?
The very point of the thought is one in which the existence of some underlying supernatural phenomena that we cant measure, study or grasp and is under some dynamic process of constant change is something we can never know anything about and as such could be capable of changing the very laws of physics as we know them on a whim. Our reality could be one that is constantly being recreated, modified or even just put into existence 5 minutes ago with only the appearance of having existed millennia. Given such a scenario it would be impossible to arrive at any truth in the reality we experience because we can never have direct access to it in any way.
Now given, a supernatural and yet static creation might bring about the same results, But still the static nature of this type of creation lends itself better to something put in motion that must work its course through to finish and therefore one can conclude in this case that, even though true nature of reality can never be known, at least we can discern some truth in the function of the reality we do experience as a constant function.
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I also do not understand how looking for the connections is a "why" question. Perhaps I am too focused on the connections but I think there is something important to finding archetypes. From my understanding, Joseph Campbell did the same (looking at the commonalities of myths) which, ultimately, influenced the story from which the terms we use arose. But, as I mentioned, perhaps I have a leaning to do this?
If everything is in constant change, what is keeping it from changing drastically? Is the rock constantly on the verge of changing? If so, what is keeping it from changing? And if not, what is keeping it from the possibility? Process-relational theology states that God is constantly trying to lure reality towards what is best. This means that God is the solution to the problem of perpetual change while yet there is some continuity. This God does not have to be agential, but it does make God the thing necessary for keeping the world together and balanced. This is why Alfred North Whitehead even stipulated that there was a God, not out of a confession.
"The Light, It will guide you."
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Kyrin Wyldstar wrote:
Gisteron wrote:
Kyrin Wyldstar wrote: ... if this [creation?] were an ongoing act of evolution instead of a static event then there would be no means to ever ground anything in our reality as truth.
Why not? And if indeed so, how is that different for a "static event"?
The very point of the thought is one in which the existence of some underlying supernatural phenomena that we cant measure, study or grasp and is under some dynamic process of constant change is something we can never know anything about and as such could be capable of changing the very laws of physics as we know them on a whim. Our reality could be one that is constantly being recreated, modified or even just put into existence 5 minutes ago with only the appearance of having existed millennia. Given such a scenario it would be impossible to arrive at any truth in the reality we experience because we can never have direct access to it in any way.
Now given, a supernatural and yet static creation might bring about the same results, But still the static nature of this type of creation lends itself better to something put in motion that must work its course through to finish and therefore one can conclude in this case that, even though true nature of reality can never be known, at least we can discern some truth in the function of the reality we do experience as a constant function.
Imagine a world of intelligent beings that live in two dimensions, say, on a plane in a larger 3D space, where every point (x,y,z) they can walk or observe satisfies ax+by+cz=0 with some constants a, b, and c. They can see far from all directions of motion, but everything they can see is a projection onto their "existence plane". The equation above may well be something they'd call a law of the universe, a law of nature, of physics, if you will. Every observation they make is mostly consistent with it. Not only that, they are able to construct models to predict, say, not motion trajectories in the 3D space they are embedded in, but rather the projections of those trajectories onto their plane. Much like for us it is helpful to consider spacetime as a composite space, so it may be to them helpful to model their plane as if it were embedded in a three-dimensional space. Maybe it is not a plane exactly but slightly curved, maybe further correction laws will be discovered down the line.
Now, is it true that the world is two-dimensional? Is it true that it is three-dimensional? No, I don't think so. I don't think that the study of nature is a study of truth. They should be no more - nor less - confident in their pursuit of truth for having an additional law, an additional constant, an additional restriction to what the universe can be like to them, than we are. The laws and constants we have describe what we observe, they help us foresee the future. They do not describe what the world is truly like, if it even is "truly like" anything. And if "in truth" we live in but a slice of an n-dimensional parameter space, defined by the laws we identified, if "in truth" there are far fewer constants and laws than apply to us, that means nothing. We are still stuck in the world we live in. These laws apply to us either way. They are arguably not even "truths" about reality so much as models of what we can observe. Their purpose is then not to inform us how things generally are, but to help us work particularly with our experiences. There is nothing to tell us that the laws we perceive are general, fundamental truths. Nor are things that seem whimsical or probabilistic to us necessary without any rhyme or reason also in some submanifold of our variable space.
One way or another, we are stuck with the world we happen to be in, and there is no telling if there even are genuinely different perspectives on it, let alone different worlds altogether. Pragmatically we can speak of lawfulness and whimsy and discover what parts of our world behave in which of those ways. There is definitely some philosophical discussion to be had whether or not any truth can be discovered in a world that is entirely chaotic, but there is quite a number of laws to shave off before conceiving of such a world, and I don't think that any one of the worlds inbetween necessarily yield less truth for its explorers.
Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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In this environment it stands to reason that a natural reality would remain consistent as it has no will nor the power to change its nature. However a sentient reality creating entity or one with unlimited power over reality would not only have this power but also quite possibly the inclination to change the nature of the reality it controls as it desires. So this would mean that in your two dimensional world that the beings there would be capable of moving in longitude and latitude only one minute while conceiving of a dimension of height. And then the next minute be capable of moving in all 3 dimensions and never even realize they could once only travel in 2. As well in this sort of reality controlled by a sentient will with unlimited power, time could stop or even go backwards and forwards each time unfolding a different series of events and we in our limited capacity would never know it. This is the sort of changeable reality that I speak of.
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