Does physics leave room for the spiritual?

sg, you may (or may not) find this interesting…:)

Amazon.com: Mutual Causality in Buddhism and General Systems Theory: The Dharma of Natural System (Buddhist Studies Series): Joanna R. Macy: Books

When The Scientific Method is code for reductive linear one-way causality then it is bound (it seems to me) to fall down when one is considering something complex / profound.

This book takes a different perspective (in fact two, but related…). One is general systems theory and the other is codependent arising.

It seems the simplistic Western model derives from a chap called Parmenides (ancient Greek) who saw the world in terms of substance and permanence rather than process and change. For Parmenides what is real does not change. And from here (you need to read the book!) follows (in science, philosophy, religion) Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas, Descartes…

Mutual causality, interdependent systems, process and change are a whole different ball game however…I hope you can see how this relates to my previous comments.

That’s enough wittering; I’d recommend the book. :)

Joanna Macy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

s.
 
When The Scientific Method is code for reductive linear one-way causality then it is bound (it seems to me) to fall down when one is considering something complex / profound.

This book takes a different perspective (in fact two, but related…). One is general systems theory and the other is codependent arising.

It seems the simplistic Western model derives from a chap called Parmenides (ancient Greek) who saw the world in terms of substance and permanence rather than process and change. For Parmenides what is real does not change. And from here (you need to read the book!) follows (in science, philosophy, religion) Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas, Descartes…

Mutual causality, interdependent systems, process and change are a whole different ball game however…I hope you can see how this relates to my previous comments.

That’s enough wittering; I’d recommend the book. :)

Joanna Macy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

s.

Well, you'd want one way linear causality if you were seeking control. :rolleyes:

Substance and permanance instead of process and change? Form vs. function? {Form is emptiness, and emptiness is form.} :rolleyes: (Noun based vs verb based thoughts: {or lifeless vs. living, as I like to put it.})
 
{Form is emptiness, and emptiness is form.}


Indeedy. This most popular of lines from the Heart Sutra should perhaps be given with the subsequent line (The same holds for sensation and perception, memory and consciousness) as “emptiness” does not only relate to form, but to all five skandhas.


lifeless vs. living, as I like to put it.
:)

s.
 
Well, you'd want one way linear causality if you were seeking control. :rolleyes:

Yes, science (if that's what you are referring to?) seeks control as one of its aims. But if the model you are using (one way linear causality) does not provide it...:rolleyes:

Of course, if you're referring to religion as a means of control...

s.
 
Last night I watched a programme on meditation. The programme was "done" by a scientist. Although she was open minded (cf other famous scientists ;)) and the programme interesting (cos of the subject and content e.g. Matthieu Ricard) the approach was a perfect example of what I'm trying (and failing) to put accross.
Well that's a bad example. Did you see the Myth Buster's episode where they challenged the claims about plants having feelings? I think it may have been the Deadly Straw episode. They reproduced the lie detector experiments performed on plants in the 60's and tested various things, like whether the plants could sense human emotion if it was inside a steel container, etc. They used the exact same model lie detector, etc. The results were surprising, but not identical to the original claims.

I'm really looking forward to the upcoming special on Tigers by BBC. For three years they followed tigers around with cameras mounted on trained elephants!
 
I'm really looking forward to the upcoming special on Tigers by BBC. For three years they followed tigers around with cameras mounted on trained elephants!

The first episode is now available on BBCi
 
Well that's a bad example.

A bad example of what? :confused:


Did you see the Myth Buster's episode where they challenged the claims about plants having feelings? I think it may have been the Deadly Straw episode. They reproduced the lie detector experiments performed on plants in the 60's and tested various things, like whether the plants could sense human emotion if it was inside a steel container, etc. They used the exact same model lie detector, etc. The results were surprising, but not identical to the original claims.
What's this got to do with what I was saying? :confused:

I'm really looking forward to the upcoming special on Tigers by BBC. For three years they followed tigers around with cameras mounted on trained elephants!
It was triff. :D

Looking forward to the other episodes...

s.
 
Sorry I wasn't clear, Snoopy.

Mythbusters, unlike the show you watched, really seemed to do objective (if not perfected) experiments to test the ideas put forth in The Secret Life of Plants, which was written in 1973 and influenced a lot of people towards conservation, earth awareness, etc. The Polygraph scientist, Cleve Backster put forward data suggesting that plants have feelings and can experience our emotions telepathically. The Mythbuster's show put these ideas to the test, running identical tests with identical equipment and plants. Plus, they did additional experiments just for fun. It seems that plants do undergo an electrical reaction to the emotions of the creatures around them. The Mythbuster's did things like isolate the detection equipment from electromagnetic interference, etc. to see if the plants still picked up on human emotions. It was a cool show, but without all of the mystical assumptions that you saw on that other show. The most mystical assumption in The Secret Life of Plants was that all living things have a spirit that is concentrated into an extremely small dot somewhere in their living tissues -- a very popular 60's idea.
 
People often refer to ghost and spirits and all the religious like as supernatural. Meaning outside the realm of science, so it can't be proven or disproven. But what if it's not?

I mean, with all the stuff I read about quantum mechanics(with even that, it's still pretty confusing to me, but I love it), it seems more that ever science has become mystical.

I was just thinking. Even though we can many things in electrons proton and neutrons and the element made from them, we've learned there's much more to the universe than just the stuff on the periodic table. There's gravity, there's dark matter, there's dark energy. Could there be room in there for what would be the spirit?

If there's more more to the universe than atoms, maybe that leaves room for the spirit too, right? And maybe someday, it can be scientifically found and proven. And then we'll have a name for it, just like we have names like "quarks", "axion", "glueball", "meson", "plasmon" and so forth.

Am I right here? Or just completely ignorant about science?

If by "the spiritual" you mean ghosts, spirits, gods, etc. I think science, not necessarily physics, (or scientific thinking rather--looking at the universe as a quantifiable thing that must be studied analytically) is an alternative to this "classical" way of thinking. I personally don't believe in anything supernatural.

I love science. It provides the best way to understand everything around us. There is so much more I want to know.

On the other hand science ultimately doesn't explain anything. In order to "understand" anything you need to "put it in a box"--isolate it and separate it from other things. There lies the great lie. Nothing is separate from anything else, all boundaries are arbitrary. This applies not only to science, but any way of thinking. I know that I know nothing.

Oh jeez, I hope I wrote that in an way that makes sense. lol
 
Just wanted to ad that the double-slit experiment has been successful with more than just electrons. Buckyballs (and possibly other large molecules) have been tested to pass through more than one place at the same time in diffraction grating experiments. Its actually not news, because the test was performed back in '99.(Fullerene Diffraction) Buckyballs are spherical molecules made of 60 carbon atoms and are significantly larger and more massive than just an electron. 60 carbon atoms cumulatively possess 7 electron volts of internal energy and buckyballs have 174 vibrational configurations, which is another way of saying they definitely have mass and shape. This proves that larger objects definitely (not just maybe) have a deBroglie waveform equivalent and suggests all things might have diffraction characteristics similar to quantum particles.
 
Just wanted to ad that the double-slit experiment has been successful with more than just electrons. Buckyballs (and possibly other large molecules) have been tested to pass through more than one place at the same time in diffraction grating experiments. Its actually not news, because the test was performed back in '99.(Fullerene Diffraction) Buckyballs are spherical molecules made of 60 carbon atoms and are significantly larger and more massive than just an electron. 60 carbon atoms cumulatively possess 7 electron volts of internal energy and buckyballs have 174 vibrational configurations, which is another way of saying they definitely have mass and shape. This proves that larger objects definitely (not just maybe) have a deBroglie waveform equivalent and suggests all things might have diffraction characteristics similar to quantum particles.

Hmmmmmmm..... does that make it possible to be in two places at once? And what are the implications for claiming overtime pay?
 
For double pay you will still work twice as hard if not more, and the pay isn't guaranteed. The trick is leaving one time scale and returning to ours at exactly the same time you left. It seems to me that repulsion forces are what govern the particle's departure from our timescale. Perhaps in your job if you were accelerated towards a wall of middle management with two openings it might appear that you did two jobs at the same time, but actually you'd just be doing extra work on your own time. You'd get twice as much done for the same pay probably. I'd stick with an hourly rate.
 
I know it's not relevant to the op but I couldn't resist ;)



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[SIZE=+1] I'm thinking of having my car serviced. Should I take it to a regular mechanic or a quantum mechanic? [/SIZE]
Submitted by Wendy Woollett from Helena, MT

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[SIZE=+1] It clearly depends on your driving habits. If you often drive at faster than light speeds, you'd do well to have it serviced by a certified quantum mechanic. That way you can rest assured that if you hit a pothole at Mach 4 million, the suspension won't disintegrate into fundamental particles. Sure, they charge a bit more than your standard grease monkey, but they stand behind their work. I recall hearing about one case where a graduate student took a research vehicle on a joyride and forgot to check the oil first. He's now stuck in the stone age.[/SIZE]
 
Lunamoth said:
That seems to be impression I get, too. What is interesting is that we can look at the world as being made of Legos, as a smooth painting, or as blinking pixels spewed out of a black hole but the mystery of it still remains.

I am both fragile and complex, yet I exist. I am so insignificant, but everything served me to put me together. If everything is dead, how am I alive? If everything is empty, how was I filled?
 
I joined these forums to ask precisely the same question!

I work in science and, sadly, I am surrounded by the attitude that physics does not leave room for the spiritual. I have a loose idea that at fundamental levels we don't really understand what energy is - life/consciousness may turn out to be (or at least manifested by) some sort of energy that connects us all.

I think that there are interesting properties to quantum mechanics which challenge our perceptions of reality. It seems interesting to me that matter exists in a particle state only when observed and isn't consciousness really just the act of observation? The article (Does Quantum Mechanics Play a non-trival Role in Life? - Paul Davies) links quantum effects to both the spark of primordial life and possibly consciousness through quantum effects occurring during neuron firing in the brain. Prof Fred Alan Wolf also has some interesting, if not a little mind blowing, reading! My quantum is limited but I think its cute to consider if love is really just a form of quantum entanglement and perhaps death is merely a decoherence problem (our consciousness reverts to a wave function(s) and can no longer be observed ... I could extend the argument to parallel universe/dimension theories but would likely just embarass myself :) ...So I am happy to admit that we really know nothing of the nature of reality or energy in terms of physics and while such mysteries exist, there is still room for the divine or possibly a reinterpretation of reality which includes an afterlife.

What scares me though is nueroscience. At what point do we examine/map brain function to sufficiently make the 'soul' and any illusion of free will obsolete? ie prove that we are just highly complex, over evolved machines. I think current brain mapping research renders dualist 'soul portal' theories pretty much impossible. You can then argue that the brain is more of a distributed portal for the soul ... perhaps brain imaging is just detecting the soul's energy signature as it goes about performing specialised tasks (ie frontal lobe activity during emotional stimulus doesn't necessarily mean that emotions are purely a brain function but that this is where the soul resides or works things through when being emotional ? Just because the kitchen light goes on every meal time doesn't mean that the house is empty and fully automated ...) ... you can still rationalise some of these arguments but the fact remains that a lot of neuroscientists are pretty confident that they will eventually reduce the entire human experience to brain function (look up Sorry but Your Soul Just Died). So why does all this matter? If every thought, action, feeling and memory, if every sense of consciousness we've ever had is purely a brain function ... then it's all gone when we die. As some one who has recently suffered the loss of a loved one, I can't even begin to accept that possibility.
 
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