Yoseph
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Everything posted by Yoseph
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Yes! Well that settles most of the calculation... Except that it it's using 150,000 generations for the calculation which is presumably the number of generations as a human... So that's that section done. I mean I'm happy with that estimate anyway, it would probably become meaningless and inaccurate to calculate it any further.
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Hello! I was wondering if anyone was interested in helping me calculate the probability of being alive as a human. In other words, the probability of you or I being here. For example to start things off it was a one in 300 million (on average) chance that the combination of the sperm and egg involved in your conception grew into you. However most couples attempt to conceive several times until they are successful and may have several kids. So the first thing we need is the chance of you arising from any two people based on the current population (or the population at your birth). We then need a probability of your parents meeting based on the population and in turn a probability of them being born at all, calculated the same way as before but with a respectively smaller population. This calculation I think could be looped back in sections and the probability of each generation multiplied together to get a (very very (very)) small probability. The reason I was posting this here is I think the experts here in evolution will be able to point out certain sections (time periods) where the probability changes. For example before humans the animals will have different mating habits and populations which will affect the calculation. If anyone can fill in any gaps anywhere or contribute any information which will help the calculation that would be much appreciated. Alternatively if you think this is a stupid waste of time or incalculable for any reason I'd prefer you stop me now by letting me know why! Peace.
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Hey guys, I have read and heard a lot about astronomy but I recently realised there's something about the basics I don't quite understand. For us to be seeing galaxies that formed in a comparatively short time after the big bang, how did we get so far away? Would we not have had to travel at near light speeds so that the light from these galaxies now has to catch us up as it were? In fact, would we not have had to travel faster than the speed of light, otherwise the light would have gone past us as the universe expanded? As you can see I'm confused, any help?
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We are immortal in ugly way - philosopher David Lewis
Yoseph replied to Alexander1304's topic in General Philosophy
If the many-worlds interpretation is true it does throw into question where your consciousness ends. You'd surely only ever find yourself in a "world" where you haven't died yet right? I've been wondering about this for years. My first thought was that I could test the theory by playing Russian roulette. After 100 clicks and no bangs you've surely proved the theory correct? Either that or you're just incredibly lucky... How many clicks would it take until you were sure? How many dead versions of yourself are you leaving your relatives to deal with in the other worlds? -
I'm always trying to reconcile consciousness and physics. This is a thought experiment that scrutinises the relationship between our experience of the universe and the idea that consciousness is just neurons firing in a predicatable way due to their position in space (and their connection to each other). Disclaimer: I don't know if this is an old thought experiment or if it just sounds naive and stupid, I am here to discuss the idea and make some progress with what to me seems like a bit of a conundrum. Imagine we create a replicator. With the recent advances of 3D printing it's not completely implausable to think that we might one day have a device that could scan an object of immense complexity and map it atom to atom in a new place. You guessed it, we're replicating a human. This human is you. (Please let's not get into the plausibility of creating such advanced technology) We replicate you atom for atom so that your brain, neurons, neuron relationships are absolutely identical. We atomise you so that you're completely destroyed. Where this new human is standing, are you behind his/her eyes? Are you inside their head, like you are inside your head now? If every neuron was mapped correctly they should surely have all your memories, mannerisms and thought patterns. If no, are you saying that consciousness is not connected to matter and exists in some higher realm? If yes, the experiment continues... We do the exact same thing again but we don't atomise the original "you". There are now two copies of you with the exact same experience up until this moment in time. Which one of them do you experience the world through? Who's experiencing the world through the one that isn't you? My musings on the last questions have pulled up some interesting (slightly crazy ideas). At first you would of course have to experience only one of the people's lives. Which one could be decided randomly, similar to the double slit experiment with particles; when you take the measurement the particle appears in one place despite the pattern inferring that it's in two places at the same time. Now I see there being two possibilities: 1. You live out your life as the one you landed with and when you die your consciousness "jumps" back in time to the moment you split and you then get to experience the life as the other copy. 2. As in the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics you just live the life you landed in and then die. I hope you find the experiment interesting and don't berrate me for it's whimsicality. Any thoughts, insights, comments appreciated. As mentioned at the beginning, my true goal is to find a theory which nicely encapsualtes physics with consciousness. Any further readings/thought experiements which might help me with this are much appreciated.
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Psychoactive Substances and the Meaning of Life
Yoseph replied to Vexen's topic in General Philosophy
Tar, I like your philosophy, I hadn't thought about that perspective in much depth before. Ironically in terms of this thread you've mentioned an ideology that might be easier to come across (whilst musing about life) when on drugs. I'm not saying you have found those beliefs this way, but drugs let you see things from a different perspective from time to time, and if you are constantly challeging your philosophy with the use of drugs, you are more likely to come up with a new perspective (such as the reality you are talking about) rather than if you stuck to your routine of normal living. -
I made a second account a while ago and only have close friends on it, I only use it now and have kind of left the old one hanging around just in case. The benefits are is that you're actually interested in most of the stuff that appears and there's far less BS from people you don't care about. You also feel like people are going to understand your statuses more and are less bothered about what you write.
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Psychoactive Substances and the Meaning of Life
Yoseph replied to Vexen's topic in General Philosophy
The world (humanity) only has a meaning if you believe it does. It doesn't have a meaning in the eyes of the universe, again, unless you believe in a sentient God who's watching us and cares about what we do. Either way, it requires you to make up a belief. There is no testable purpose of humanity so you may as well make up what ever meaning you like with or without the help of drugs. Sure we all have our roles: doctors, street cleaners etc. but as a sum total, we are not working towards any divine end goal, we are just existing. To go back to Alan Watts, life is just a song and you're just meant to dance while the music is being played. -
Something taking an infinite amount of time to happen seems like an illogical statement to me (maybe I'm wrong). I'm stating the odds are 1 in an extremely high number, but if we have an infinite amount of time, then it will eventually happen. Let's change the argument... we have decided that it is possible that we have an infinite amount of time. Assuming we do, is conciousnes just tied to your brain structure/workings? Will we each experience conciousness again a long long (very very long) time from now?
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But does that mean it can happen again??
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Psychoactive Substances and the Meaning of Life
Yoseph replied to Vexen's topic in General Philosophy
tar, I was merely saying that how long ago someone dies doesn't invalid their opinion on ANY subject. In response to what you last said, I would make a few points. Drugs don't "short circuit" the brain, they change the way it operates. They change what it focuses on, what it's interested in, how it perceives stimuli. I do agree that they don't provide any new logical insight into a "meaning for humanity" which seems to be what you're referring to when you're talking about "the rest of us". I would also say that there is no "meaning for humanity" unless you believe in god, so that's kind of irrelevant. Supposing that "the meaning of life" is completely subjective and different for each person I'm sure psychoactive drugs can provide insight into it. For example, some people who suffer from depression believe that they lack the capacity to be happy. Mushrooms have successfully been used to treat some of these people by giving them hope and seeing the world from another perspective. Read more about that here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybin_mushroom#As_medicine). Marajuana can do similar things, as well as being effective pain relief and motivator (in small amounts). You only have to look towards the Arts if you want examples of drugs as inspiration. And if you're going to mock meditation, there are millions of people that can vouch for that giving meaning to their lives. Drug addiciton wasn't in the topic but I agree, some people let the drugs become their meaning of life and end up miserable and lonely. Happiness will always be a fleeting feeling, but drugs can and do help people on their path towards being a balanced person but unfortunately they don't help everyone. In small amounts, used from time to time, I believe psychoactive drugs can be beneficial in bringing meaning to people's lives. -
Do you think animals have less genetic variety than humans?
Yoseph replied to SiameseSam's topic in Speculations
From what I've heard we have actually evolved to notice the differences between each other more acutely than those of animals as a means of determining friend or foe and building a social structure. I vaguely remember seeing an experiment in a documentary that suggests that babies recognise the differene between animals just as well as between humans. I also remember hearing this, and have thankfully found evidence that I didn't just imagine it on wikipedia: "There is about 2–3 times more genetic diversity within the wild chimpanzee population on a single hillside in Gombe, than in the entire human gene pool.[121][122][123][124]" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human -
Ok so let's rephrase it to "Anything that has already happened could happen again". Your pendulum example only holds true if no external energy is inputted, which the universe has plenty of. Because of entropy we know this energy will eventually dissappate, but is it foolish to assume the universe will eventually be reborn, if not a different universe created. If the universe ceases to exist don't we have the following principal? I guess the idea relies on either a multiverse, or this universe to be reborn. The counter argument being this is the only universe and will eventually become dull and empty and remain that way forever. Which leaves the big question of it's origin open.
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There is no premise, only a question. So you're saying you don't think there is an infinite amount of time?
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I made a post about this a few years ago (I think it's been deleted now), but never really resolved the argument. Well the first question is in the title... and for debating purposes, my standpoint on the answer is yes. If it takes until the end of this universe, or the creation of 10^10^10^10 universes later, anything which is at least physically possible in our current universe is possible. The "therefore" is about conciousness and reincarnation... If conciousness is nothing more than a sort of emergent phenomenon based on the configuration of particles and therefore workings that make up your brain then there is no reason that this configuration couldn't happen again, no matter how remote the chances. If you argue that conciousness is not to do with the brain, you are saying that it is somewhat supernatural, and exists outside the realm of physics...?
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Psychoactive Substances and the Meaning of Life
Yoseph replied to Vexen's topic in General Philosophy
Sorry, what Prometheus said below was my exact point... -
Psychoactive Substances and the Meaning of Life
Yoseph replied to Vexen's topic in General Philosophy
So did Einstein... -
Cryptocurrencies just like real currencies are trust based systems where the value of the currency is just to do with consensus. They are therefore as abstract as each other. The two main differences at the moment are 1. Real currencies are more secure from hackers because they are in the bank. Ironically they therefore have their own threat, which are the banks themselves and in some countries the government, where the tax man can forcefully empty your bank, or the government can go bust and take your money to bail itself out. 2. Cryptocurrencies are only accepted by certain providers and retailers, which limits it's usefulness and therefore value. The more places accept cryptocurrencies, the more they'll be worth. Some countries have banned the use of cryptocurrencies (because they can't do the things mentioned in point 1) so this is an apposing force to their growth. I believe that cryptocurrencies will go up in value (although I don't have money myself to invest), but only time will tell!
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Hey guys, been a while since I've posted here. I hope this post doesn't look like an ad, I genuinely just need a few people to do some testing and give me some feedback on my latest site. You can find it at fix tomorrow dot org. When it's properly finished I hope to have community of smart people such as yourselves suggesting good ideas to make the world "a better place". I hope the moderators see the positivity behind the site and don't delete this post, i must also add that it's non-profit, no-advertising, no personal-data-collection so nothing malicious here! Post feedback here if you will, any comments appreciated.
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Yes, that's the one, completely forgot the name. But why should I universe allow for technology at all? Or I guess the universe has to be significantly complex to allow for life so these extra quirks emerge from pure chance? The question for me stems two implications. One is that either there have been many universes before with different balances of physics or that a universe can only exist in the way this one does. What sets these rules? Dice? Who rolls the dice?
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A common philosophical discussion I have with people is based on the question "why are we here?" and I tend to lean towards the argument of "by complete chance". The chances of life developing (especially to such a level as to have consciousness) are very slim and require a universe with the exact right laws and physics for it to happen. The question that arises from this is why are there all the extra quirks of the universe that had no direct part in the evolution of humans yet allow us to do all sorts of complex and things. I'm talking about things like electricity and material properties which allow us to create such advanced technology. Is it just a conincidence? Or can it be explained with the said theory?
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For all the pessimists, the misanthropes, the cynics, the mathematicians, the people who think there is no meaning of life... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gz5xoIoomz4 Feel free to write your proposed equations for this one (I'm not trying to be a dick here, I am some of the above, and this song makes me feel better about life)
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This is a thought I've had since I was a kid, and met someone with brain damage for the first time. The question is, if you are in an accident, or have a stroke or anything that could give you brain damage, is your "inner self" still intact? I don't want to start talking about "souls", but is it like you're the same person, but when you try and think of something which requires part of your brain that's been damaged you just can't? Are you still you deep down?
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I tend to believe the universe is inside something, some call it the "multiverse". This makes the most sense to me because of the almost impossible balance and complexity of the laws of physics; if there was just one big bang out of nothing, what are the chances that the universe created could produce life? Unimaginably small. This could either mean that universes evolve cyclically as mentioned, where maybe black holes lead to big bangs of new universes with slightly different laws of physics. Or it could mean that there's a multiverse of say 10 dimensions and universes are like lifeforms inside it that evolve and change and procreate. But then where did the multiverse come from? God knows.
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I haven't had time to read every post thoroughly but the first answer I thought to the topic is that philosophy isn't crap; it's link to morality means that it affects human behavior, and if like science it's constantly being improved and built upon through discussion, it can hope to bring justice and fairness. Having consciousness, we all have our own philosophy and views no matter how educated we are, and discussing them helps people understand each other. The philosophies and ideas discussed by people accumulate and ultimately affect big decisions to do with war, healthcare, education etc. for better or worse, so long as we learn and progress as a race. Saying that, the reality seems to be that we are not progressing as a species, but it's nice to be optimistic. Hope I don't sound like a "delusional idiot", just some thoughts.