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T O P I C    R E V I E W
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 09:49:45
Hey, did you know that there is no eternal heaven or hell? Its true! Its as easy to understand as the difference between 2-D and 3-D! You know, length and width as opposed to length, width and depth.

Think about it like this:

If there were a consciousness in a 2-D plane and a 3-D object passed through it, the consciousness could only percieve the 2-D qualities of the 3-D object. By virtue of the consciousness (lets call it "Noah", just for kicks) being 2-D, it does not have the capacity or ability to percieve the third dimension. If it did, it would become a 3-D consciousness. Make sense? Sure it makes sense!

Now, you can think of yourself- a living, breathing organic thing - as similar to our 2-D consciousness- Noah. You are similar in that you are finite. You are finite because at some point in what you percieve as 'the past' you were 'born' - meaning that the window of consciousness that you are currently experiencing opened. History implies that at some point in 'the future' you will 'die' (true, this is a theory, but it stands a pretty good chance of being proven.)- meaning that the window of consciousness that you are currently experiencing will close. Because of your 'finiteness' you, like Noah not being able to see a third dimension, do not have it within your abilities to see or percieve anything that is larger than finite or, 'in-finite'. Things that are supposed to be 'in-finite' are things like heaven, hell, god or maybe even satan depending upon who you are. You might be able to point at something and say "That thing goes on forever!" but you can't see it go on forever. You can only see it go on as long as you are alive - and that definitely is not infinity.

Basically, this boils down to you having to be honest with yourself about what you are.
The chemicals floating around in your body can do some pretty amazing stuff, like make you feel like a god is telling you what to do or make you feel good after praying or going to confession, but those chemicals become dust when you die and all of those feelings either change into something new or stop altogether. We have no way of knowing if either of these things is even going to happen.
Understand this: I am in no way attempting to offer an explanation for WHY we are alive. I have no idea why and frankly i don't think it matters. All i'm saying is that we ARE alive and only for a while. Naturally, whether or not anything exists at all is debatable in any introductory philosophy course, but in this case we are going to go ahead and say that things DO exist and that we are alive based on the existing definition.
If after we die, our consciousness changes and we suddenly become capable of fully knowing, completely percieving infinite things (at which point, of course, we ourselves will become infinite-like Noah becoming 3D) then that is perfectly okay with me, but it is beyond the scope of this theory. The fact is that we are not dead yet and are currently FINITE beings -which restricts our ability to completely percieve anything that is not finite. So based on this frame of reference, if something begins when i die, then that which begins must also have an end; if i go to a hell, then it is only going to be for a while. Conversely, if i go to a heaven, then it certainly is NOT going to be for eternity. It is best summed up in the statement 'this too will pass.' - and it will!



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the head catatonic from the roller rink
35   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Homers_pet_monkey Posted - 09/29/2004 : 11:00:14
quote:
Originally posted by KimStanleyRobinson

quote:
Originally posted by Little Black Francis

Anyway, have fun talking out your asses. =)



oh, absolutely!

It is all ass talk.

Hawking says the univ doesn't start at a singularity, but sort of curves back there at the origin.
For some reason, I find this to be less than intriguing because I guess I don't really care how it all started. I wasn't there, you weren't there, who gives a shit?




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the head catatonic from the roller rink



And none of us will ever know.

Help me! He keeps making me post!

ramona Posted - 09/29/2004 : 10:57:49
This topic makes my head hurt. All I know is what I have always believed/been told/what have you: everything that has a beginning has an end.

_____________________________________________________________________
No one I ever knew, or have spoken to, resembles you
This is good or bad, all depending on my general mood
Coldheartofstone Posted - 09/29/2004 : 08:26:06
Groovy Baby.

I also used to imagine having to listen to Hymns for all of eternity, because of course Rock & Roll is the devils music. now THAT is hell...
Atheist4Catholics Posted - 09/29/2004 : 08:18:40
quote:
Originally posted by Coldheartofstone

I remember when I was a little girl, my mother used to tell me that when we die we go to heaven, forever. And this scared the shit outta me. I used to sit on the stairs repeating "forever, and ever, and ever..." until I started to hyperventilate. I'd imagine sitting in a large open field contemplating nothing and doing nothing, being bored forever.
Is that normal?



Wow, I've never heard of anyone other than myself who was insanely afraid of eternity as a child. I had a very similar experiance except my vision when I was five was of a man in heaven opening a door to leave his house over and over and over forever... I wasn't afraid of being bored, just of being alive forever. Fear of eternity haunted me for about 15 years until I finally made the full leap into atheism.

When I was little I used to try and make deals with God. I'd ask him to either let me vanish after I died or let me go to heaven for a little while and then make me vanish. Maybe you and I have a 3D consciousness

For more information on rock, visit www.timfranklin.net
Coldheartofstone Posted - 09/29/2004 : 07:21:47
Are we all really here?
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 16:51:17
quote:
Originally posted by Little Black Francis

Anyway, have fun talking out your asses. =)



oh, absolutely!

It is all ass talk.

Hawking says the univ doesn't start at a singularity, but sort of curves back there at the origin.
For some reason, I find this to be less than intriguing because I guess I don't really care how it all started. I wasn't there, you weren't there, who gives a shit?




--------------------------------------------------
the head catatonic from the roller rink
Little Black Francis Posted - 09/28/2004 : 16:09:47
If I wanted to know about time and space and the life and future of and Models for the Universe, the 1st thing that comes to mind is not to seek the opinions of my people at Fb Dot Net, but rather, I think I would pick up a Stephen Hawkings book. Anyway, have fun talking out your asses. =)

Floops quesedillas zijn te vergelijken met het likken van fatsige Albert's aars nadat hij een fles laxeermiddel heeft leeggedronken.
remig Posted - 09/28/2004 : 15:20:56
The powers of pi is nothing compared to Knights of NI

***********************************************
So you have no point of reference, Donny.
You're like a child that wanders INTO THE MIDDLE OF A MOVIE!
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 15:11:02
I love this place.


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the head catatonic from the roller rink
Homers_pet_monkey Posted - 09/28/2004 : 15:03:20
quote:
Originally posted by harringk

quote:
Originally posted by Cult_Of_Frank

The mysterious powers of pi, and all that...


Mmmmmmmm, pi




Hey, there's an 'e' gone missing here somewhere. You a dealer?



Help me! He keeps making me post!

Cheeseman1000 Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:54:43
quote:
Originally posted by apl4eris

quote:
Originally posted by Cheeseman1000

quote:
Originally posted by Cult_Of_Frank

The mysterious powers of pie, and all that...
So very, very true.

Dean, that post had far too many commas to make any sort of sense.

I dunno, it made a hell of a lot more sense than this:

"Lazy people, without regard for their first experience below the average weight, succumb to deep-fried quesadillas smothered under chipotle-flavored dung beetles scurrying in a fashionable, yet macabre, topping wherein their original turd took leprechauns until confusion set it's [sic - damned apostrophe conspiracy!] mouth as a timepiece instead of a sextant."

Something profound in there.

Or not so much.


You buttered your bread, now lie in it.

And yet, fewer commas.


"You ever seen a man say goodbye to a shoe?"
"Yes, once..."
BLT Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:53:29
"We've got bush, we've got bush!"
"Hair pie!"
-Revenge of the Nerds
harringk Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:49:45
quote:
Originally posted by Cult_Of_Frank

The mysterious powers of pi, and all that...


Mmmmmmmm, pi
apl4eris Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:48:45
quote:
Originally posted by Cheeseman1000

quote:
Originally posted by Cult_Of_Frank

The mysterious powers of pie, and all that...
So very, very true.

Dean, that post had far too many commas to make any sort of sense.

I dunno, it made a hell of a lot more sense than this:

"Lazy people, without regard for their first experience below the average weight, succumb to deep-fried quesadillas smothered under chipotle-flavored dung beetles scurrying in a fashionable, yet macabre, topping wherein their original turd took leprechauns until confusion set it's [sic - damned apostrophe conspiracy!] mouth as a timepiece instead of a sextant."

Something profound in there.

Or not so much.


You buttered your bread, now lie in it.
floop Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:41:53
quote:
Originally posted by Cult_Of_Frank

Yeah, I don't buy into time as a dimension either. It's a construct to organize events and relate their occurence with other events, based on the fact that most things in nature are cyclical. The mysterious powers of pi, and all that...

Eternity is just a definition of infinite time. If time is a human invention, or if time is a dimension is irrelevant in this case, as if time is an invention, then everything is random and is forever changing. Sure, we orbit the sun and have done so for who knows how long, but was it always that way? Surely it won't always be. If time is a dimension, then the fact that we can only perceive bits of it at a time speaks to Kim's planar dimension theory. We see beginnings and ends, even though time must therefore extend far beyond our own perception, and therefore, relative to us, to infinity.


"Join the Cult of Frank 2.0 / And you'll be enlightened (free for 1.x members)"



it took me a long time to read that



ist es möglich für ein quesadilla skrotum zu lecken? beim sprechen der quesadillas von LBF, ja. ja in der tatheheheheheheehehee!
Cheeseman1000 Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:38:43
quote:
Originally posted by Cult_Of_Frank

The mysterious powers of pie, and all that...

So very, very true.

Dean, that post had far too many commas to make any sort of sense.


"You ever seen a man say goodbye to a shoe?"
"Yes, once..."
Cult_Of_Frank Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:35:36
Yeah, I don't buy into time as a dimension either. It's a construct to organize events and relate their occurence with other events, based on the fact that most things in nature are cyclical. The mysterious powers of pi, and all that...

Eternity is just a definition of infinite time. If time is a human invention or a dimension is irrelevant in this case, as, if time is an invention, then everything is random and is forever changing. Sure, we orbit the sun and have done so for who knows how long, but was it always that way? Surely it won't always be.

If time is a dimension, then the fact that we can only perceive bits of it at a time speaks to Kim's planar dimension theory. We see beginnings and ends, even though time must therefore extend far beyond our own perception, and therefore, relative to us, to infinity.

EDIT - Increased comma usage.


"Join the Cult of Frank 2.0 / And you'll be enlightened (free for 1.x members)"
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:11:41
oW!

Dammit!

C'mere you little...*furniture being knocked over, glass breaking, cat, dog, cattle, sheep sounds*

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the head catatonic from the roller rink
Homers_pet_monkey Posted - 09/28/2004 : 14:08:17
quote:
Originally posted by Ebb Vicious

time is a monkey with a watch and he spins it round and round and then he throws it and it bonks you on the head and that's when you get angry.



Yeah so watch out guys, I'm spinning!

Help me! He keeps making me post!

NimrodsSon Posted - 09/28/2004 : 12:46:19
I've got tangible proof that God and Eternity exist:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0002LI11M/ref=pd_nfy_fu_gw_nr_1/102-2170590-8355347

In the words of Will Farnaby [in Huxley's Island], when he takes the moshka medicine and listens to Bach's Brandenburg Concertos: "Eternity, believe it or not, it's as real as shit."


¡Viva los Católicos!
Ebb Vicious Posted - 09/28/2004 : 12:01:11
time is a monkey with a watch and he spins it round and round and then he throws it and it bonks you on the head and that's when you get angry.
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:45:26
Right - I guess if I can analogize 2D/3D and finite/infinite, I guess you can do it with 'time'.

I can see it I think - we remember the past, we theorize the future but we only have 'now'...or did have, just a moment ago.

Perhaps time sits up there on the shelf with eternity...nice and pretty...ethereal.

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the head catatonic from the roller rink
harringk Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:40:20
quote:
Originally posted by Cheeseman1000

I like those lyrics, very poetic. What sort of music is it?


"You ever seen a man say goodbye to a shoe?"
"Yes, once..."



I'm not real good at classifying music, I guess they kind of fall into pop, indie, alternative...who knows. Basically just good guitar rock with excellent songwriting and interesting lyrics.
Ebb Vicious Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:36:08

i have long been a subscriber to the idea that time is not a dimension and just something we use to try to organize reality for ourselves.

but since we were using the 2D v. 3D analogy i extrapolated.
Cheeseman1000 Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:29:07
I like those lyrics, very poetic. What sort of music is it?


"You ever seen a man say goodbye to a shoe?"
"Yes, once..."
harringk Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:27:21
quote:
Originally posted by Coldheartofstone

I remember when I was a little girl, my mother used to tell me that when we die we go to heaven, forever. And this scared the shit outta me. I used to sit on the stairs repeating "forever, and ever, and ever..." until I started to hyperventilate. I'd imagine sitting in a large open field contemplating nothing and doing nothing, being bored forever.
Is that normal?



Here is a good description of eternity that would've freaked you out when you were a little girl:

Lyrics from "Randy Describes Eternity" by Built to Spill. CD = Perfect From Now On. Buy it if you don't own it, you'll thank me later.

Every thousand years
This metal sphere
10 times the size of Jupiter
Floats just a few yards past the Earth

You climb on your roof
And take a swipe at it
With a single feather
Hit it once every thousand years

'Till you've worn it down
To the size of a pea
Yeah I'd say thats a long time
But its only half a blink in the place you're gonna be

Where you gonna be?
Where will you spend eternity?
I'm gonna be perfect from now on
I'm gonna be perfect starting now...


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

Seriously though, if you've never heard them, you should check them out. Don't worry they aren't a Christian rock band.

KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:20:36
Memory is the only reason we see time sequentially.

We're not 'passing through' anything if you think about it...or even if you don't think about it.

Time.
Another doozy.
The philosphers say there is no time - we invented the word.

Intersting thing about that, though - the entropy law is based on the assumption that the universe is finite and that the finite amount of energy in the universe will eventually be exhausted. Heat Death= everything stops.
We measure time by occurences - things happening.
No energy = no occurences = no time.

Next time someone tells you to do something faster to save time you can tell them that you're actually wasting time by doing it faster. Doing it slower (using less energy) will actually prolong the existece of the universe as we know it.

lol.

*gets up and walks across undergrad dorm room*

Another beer? I thought those girls were supposed to call...

--------------------------------------------------
the head catatonic from the roller rink
Ebb Vicious Posted - 09/28/2004 : 11:02:59

i think your original post could have used a few more revisions. let me scratch the surface...

i do think our perception of time is very limited. your 2D v. 3D analogy is basically good. the 2D being can only perceive a portion of a 3D object as it passes through his plane. likewise, limited as we are, we can only see one moment at a time. why do we see it sequentially, though, is the question? are we passing through an already existing "time" (4D) object? or are we creating this 4D object as we go?
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:55:43
Yeah, its mine, its old though.
Its my rickety little humanistic science machine designed to free me from eternal damnation.

I layed it out to a preacher once and the conversation ended thus:
Him: "You'll find out soon enough."
Me: "As will you, sir."

Tee hee...

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the head catatonic from the roller rink
remig Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:55:19
CHoS: It's not normal!!!! Go see a schrink now!!! You'll kill your own children!!!

***********************************************
So you have no point of reference, Donny.
You're like a child that wanders INTO THE MIDDLE OF A MOVIE!
Daisy Girl Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:51:48
I think a lot of people are scared of death. Probably more than that would care to admit. So, yes I think it is pretty normal.
Coldheartofstone Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:45:21
I remember when I was a little girl, my mother used to tell me that when we die we go to heaven, forever. And this scared the shit outta me. I used to sit on the stairs repeating "forever, and ever, and ever..." until I started to hyperventilate. I'd imagine sitting in a large open field contemplating nothing and doing nothing, being bored forever.
Is that normal?
Daisy Girl Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:44:30
Did you come up with your theroy all by your self? I think it's cool to think about this kind of stuff.
remig Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:43:57
quote:
Originally posted by harringk

In my best Black Francis scream:

REPENT! REPENT!!!





I'd rather burn in hell than believe in god or satan!

***********************************************
So you have no point of reference, Donny.
You're like a child that wanders INTO THE MIDDLE OF A MOVIE!
KimStanleyRobinson Posted - 09/28/2004 : 10:40:03
No!



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the head catatonic from the roller rink

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