our experience

Holy Crap!
Post Reply
User avatar
hiyymer
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2010 2:18 am

our experience

Post by hiyymer » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:20 am

What has been striking me lately, is how profoundly our experience is NOT what's really there. The experience of colors, sounds, and smells are all created by our brain from wavelengths, moving air, and particles in it. The tree isn't green, the dog is not making a barking sound, the flower is not smelling. It's all being created inside our head. We believe that all our feelings are just bodily chemical states, but are we feeling the bodily state or what the brain does with it? My wife wants a new pocket book. Is there really a wife there with self-caused intentions, or is my brain creating the wife from some fully caused biological process? Is what's out there really organized so neatly into thing-ness? Or is it just a mass of molecules that wouldn't look like much of anything or have any meaning if our brain didn't organize it and make sense of it?

Our experience has evolved over the eons. According to science the process is natural selection. What evolves is what works. Our experience is not an illusion or imaginary, because it works. It has a functional relationship to what exists, or we wouldn't be here. But a functional representation is so profoundly NOT an accurate representation. Why would anyone ever think it should be. When you are being awestruck by the amazing display of the sunset, it is not the amazing display of the sunset out there that is striking you. It is the virtual reality show in your brain that is striking you. Our appreciation of nature and beauty and the wonder of it all has nothing to do with what really exists. We are appreciating our own experience created by our brain.

User avatar
Gawdzilla Sama
Stabsobermaschinist
Posts: 151265
Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 12:24 am
About me: My posts are related to the thread in the same way Gliese 651b is related to your mother's underwear drawer.
Location: Sitting next to Ayaan in Domus Draconis, and communicating via PMs.
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:26 am

We create our own Matrix.
Image
Ein Ubootsoldat wrote:“Ich melde mich ab. Grüssen Sie bitte meine Kameraden.”

User avatar
Rum
Absent Minded Processor
Posts: 37285
Joined: Wed Mar 11, 2009 9:25 pm
Location: South of the border..though not down Mexico way..
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Rum » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:28 am

I agree with this completely and have often thought it. There is no substance 'out there' at all. And when you think of how scatty and disorganised our thoughts and perceptions are and that each person is more or less as ephemeral, it adds up to the world being totally chaotic and without order, except that which we impose on it.

Human beings are amazing when you think about it.

User avatar
Gawdzilla Sama
Stabsobermaschinist
Posts: 151265
Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 12:24 am
About me: My posts are related to the thread in the same way Gliese 651b is related to your mother's underwear drawer.
Location: Sitting next to Ayaan in Domus Draconis, and communicating via PMs.
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:38 am

Rum wrote:I agree with this completely and have often thought it. There is no substance 'out there' at all. And when you think of how scatty and disorganised our thoughts and perceptions are and that each person is more or less as ephemeral, it adds up to the world being totally chaotic and without order, except that which we impose on it.

Human beings are amazing when you think about it.
It's a matter of scale. We're constrained to thing of things we can see as being "real" We can't imagine a billionth of an inch or a billion suns in a cluster.
Image
Ein Ubootsoldat wrote:“Ich melde mich ab. Grüssen Sie bitte meine Kameraden.”

User avatar
Feck
.
.
Posts: 28391
Joined: Mon Mar 02, 2009 1:25 pm
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Feck » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:46 am

Spend enough time in altered states and you get the idea (still waiting for this last bad trip to wear off ,it seems like it's been 20 years)
:hoverdog: :hoverdog: :hoverdog: :hoverdog:
Give me the wine , I don't need the bread

User avatar
Gawdzilla Sama
Stabsobermaschinist
Posts: 151265
Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 12:24 am
About me: My posts are related to the thread in the same way Gliese 651b is related to your mother's underwear drawer.
Location: Sitting next to Ayaan in Domus Draconis, and communicating via PMs.
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:52 am

Feck wrote:Spend enough time in altered states and you get the idea (still waiting for this last bad trip to wear off ,it seems like it's been 20 years)
I once took a long canoe trip in a cave that seemed to be lighted by electric fire. It went on forever and my canoe didn't make any ripples, so the cave was perfectly reflected in the water, a mirror image that convey infinity quite nicely. I had to cut the trip short because I was starving and the bastards there had eaten all the Fritos so I had to in the kitchen for more. :lay:
Image
Ein Ubootsoldat wrote:“Ich melde mich ab. Grüssen Sie bitte meine Kameraden.”

User avatar
Feck
.
.
Posts: 28391
Joined: Mon Mar 02, 2009 1:25 pm
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Feck » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:54 am

Gawdzilla wrote:
Feck wrote:Spend enough time in altered states and you get the idea (still waiting for this last bad trip to wear off ,it seems like it's been 20 years)
I once took a long canoe trip in a cave that seemed to be lighted by electric fire. It went on forever and my canoe didn't make any ripples, so the cave was perfectly reflected in the water, a mirror image that convey infinity quite nicely. I had to cut the trip short because I was starving and the bastards there had eaten all the Fritos so I had to in the kitchen for more. :lay:
:hehe: :paco:
:hoverdog: :hoverdog: :hoverdog: :hoverdog:
Give me the wine , I don't need the bread

User avatar
Hermit
Posts: 25806
Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 12:44 am
About me: Cantankerous grump
Location: Ignore lithpt
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Hermit » Thu Aug 05, 2010 5:23 pm

Rum wrote:There is no substance 'out there' at all.
Accepting that proposition for the moment, what do you think is the practical upshot of it?
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops. - Stephen J. Gould

User avatar
FBM
Ratz' first Gritizen.
Posts: 45327
Joined: Fri Mar 27, 2009 12:43 pm
About me: Skeptic. "Because it does not contend
It is therefore beyond reproach"
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by FBM » Thu Aug 05, 2010 5:34 pm

Seraph wrote:
Rum wrote:There is no substance 'out there' at all.
Accepting that proposition for the moment, what do you think is the practical upshot of it?
My unsolicited and probably unwelcome upshot is that the proposition should neither be accepted nor rejected. I don't know of any way to get evidence to either support or refute it. I'm not sure we can assert anything more than empirical data with complete intellectual honesty. That is, saying "such and such appears to be..." without taking the extra step to say "such and such is..."
"A philosopher is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there. A theologian is the man who finds it." ~ H. L. Mencken

"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."

"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."

User avatar
Hermit
Posts: 25806
Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 12:44 am
About me: Cantankerous grump
Location: Ignore lithpt
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by Hermit » Thu Aug 05, 2010 5:46 pm

FBM wrote:
Seraph wrote:
Rum wrote:There is no substance 'out there' at all.
Accepting that proposition for the moment, what do you think is the practical upshot of it?
My unsolicited and probably unwelcome upshot is that the proposition should neither be accepted nor rejected.
You call that a practical upshot?

I had this kind of scenario in mind:

If you saw a rock in front of you - and were of the opinion that it is of real substance 'out there' - would you kick it as hard as thought it might be safe to do if you thought it is not of real substance 'out there'?

(Scenario borrowed and adapted from Samuel Johnson)
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops. - Stephen J. Gould

User avatar
FBM
Ratz' first Gritizen.
Posts: 45327
Joined: Fri Mar 27, 2009 12:43 pm
About me: Skeptic. "Because it does not contend
It is therefore beyond reproach"
Contact:

Re: our experience

Post by FBM » Thu Aug 05, 2010 5:51 pm

Seraph wrote:
FBM wrote:
Seraph wrote:
Rum wrote:There is no substance 'out there' at all.
Accepting that proposition for the moment, what do you think is the practical upshot of it?
My unsolicited and probably unwelcome upshot is that the proposition should neither be accepted nor rejected.
You call that a practical upshot?

I had this kind of scenario in mind:

If you saw a rock in front of you - and were of the opinion that it is of real substance 'out there' - would you kick it as hard as thought it might be safe to do if you thought it is not of real substance 'out there'?

(Scenario borrowed and adapted from Samuel Johnson)
:ask: No, Sammy had it right in terms of practicality. However, practical considerations shouldn't be allowed to skew our ontology, should they? Otherwise, that which is more convenient is more real.
"A philosopher is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there. A theologian is the man who finds it." ~ H. L. Mencken

"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."

"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."

User avatar
hiyymer
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2010 2:18 am

Re: our experience

Post by hiyymer » Thu Aug 05, 2010 6:45 pm

Rum wrote:I agree with this completely and have often thought it. There is no substance 'out there' at all. And when you think of how scatty and disorganised our thoughts and perceptions are and that each person is more or less as ephemeral, it adds up to the world being totally chaotic and without order, except that which we impose on it.

Human beings are amazing when you think about it.
I'd say "we" don't impose anything. It's not your experience that's running the show. It's your brain.

User avatar
charlou
arseist
Posts: 32530
Joined: Thu Jun 28, 2012 2:36 am

Re: our experience

Post by charlou » Thu Aug 05, 2010 7:57 pm

hiyymer wrote:
Rum wrote:I agree with this completely and have often thought it. There is no substance 'out there' at all. And when you think of how scatty and disorganised our thoughts and perceptions are and that each person is more or less as ephemeral, it adds up to the world being totally chaotic and without order, except that which we impose on it.

Human beings are amazing when you think about it.
I'd say "we" don't impose anything. It's not your experience that's running the show. It's your brain.
I don't think we can separate the two and still function.
no fences

User avatar
hiyymer
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2010 2:18 am

Re: our experience

Post by hiyymer » Thu Aug 05, 2010 9:06 pm

Charlou wrote:
hiyymer wrote:
Rum wrote:I agree with this completely and have often thought it. There is no substance 'out there' at all. And when you think of how scatty and disorganised our thoughts and perceptions are and that each person is more or less as ephemeral, it adds up to the world being totally chaotic and without order, except that which we impose on it.

Human beings are amazing when you think about it.
I'd say "we" don't impose anything. It's not your experience that's running the show. It's your brain.
I don't think we can separate the two and still function.
I look at it this way. You're experience is like your brain's active view finder. If you have a damaged limbic loop you have no thoughts. What that says to me is that motivation is not conscious. It is the limbic system, after all, that has the reward/pain and action initiation circuits. It's like the view finder is a compulsive thinker that is always filling out the view and attending to what the emotive part of the brain senses needs attention. But it's not our thoughts that animate us. We know that the precursors of action are already happening in the brain before we are conscious that we are deciding to do something. It's like the brain responds and then puts the experience of the representation of self deciding in the view. "Look what I did". After all it's the brain that is creating everything that we experience, so what's really running the show. The only 'I', the only conrtol center, is the one that the brain puts there in your experience. No one has found a control center inside. It's just a bunch of subsystems talking to each other.

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 29 guests