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A Theory of God
Neoperspectives ^ | 1/23/05

Posted on 01/23/2005 12:39:01 PM PST by traviskicks

A metaphysical exploration of Religion, Consciousness, Free Will, Randomness, and, ultimately, the nature of God. Neuroscience, networking (of man, God, and governments), and AI computing are all discussed.

A Theory of God

God has never been defined to the satisfaction of rational man. Indeed, even His very existence has never been universally acknowledged. From Thomas Aquinas's famous '5 proofs of God' (3) and the writings of other great philosophers of the catholic church, to the tautological hierarchical constructions of modern philosophers (1), there has never been a logical argument strong enough to force all the atheists and agnostics of the world to believe.

It has been said that men are only truly passionate about things that are not innately obvious to everyone. (2) The bitter and acrimonious debate over the curvature of the earth that took place in the 15th Century would today be met with laughter and derision because the fact that the earth is a sphere is so obvious to nearly everyone. Although any one religion, or even God Himself, is not universally accepted in the same way, a large majority of people across the world profess a belief in God (over 90% of Americans believe in God (68), (69) ).

However, we must also consider that the vague definitions of God may contribute to His apparent non-universal acknowledgement. If we can't define what something is then how can people communicate their belief in it? It is most interesting is that this lack of definition is present across nearly all the world's religions:

Christianity/Judaism: I am that I am. (Exodus 3, 14) You cannot see my face; for man shall not see me and live. (Exodus 33:20)

(Excerpt) Read more at neoperspectives.com ...


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: buddhism; christianity; computerprocessing; conscious; consciousness; network; religion; theoryofgod; volition
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Thought some folks might find this interesting... and/or have some feedback.
1 posted on 01/23/2005 12:39:02 PM PST by traviskicks
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To: snarks_when_bored; kipita; Travelgirl; Valin; dutchess; D-fendr; DB; JenB; kanawa; ...

ping


2 posted on 01/23/2005 12:41:08 PM PST by traviskicks (http://www.neoperspectives.com/blackconservatism.htm)
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To: traviskicks
However, we must also consider that the vague definitions of God may contribute to His apparent non-universal acknowledgement. If we can't define what something is then how can people communicate their belief in it?

I guess he never read the bible ...
3 posted on 01/23/2005 12:45:54 PM PST by John Lenin (We used to shoot horse thieves)
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To: traviskicks

Greetings to you traviskicks!

I'm looking forward to reading your Theory via your website. I frequently read Kurzweilai's (Kurzweilai.net) work and therefore have the feeling there will be parallels.

Take care!


4 posted on 01/23/2005 12:51:05 PM PST by kipita (Rebel – the proletariat response to Aristocracy and Exploitation.)
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To: traviskicks

many things have vague or unagreed upon definitions. Try to give a concise definiton of what existence is, or what time is, or even what love is. No easy task. Yet we all know when something exists, we all understand the passage of time, and we all recognize the power of love. We can't define these things, but they are indispensible to our whole conception of reality. I don't see why God is any different.


5 posted on 01/23/2005 1:00:39 PM PST by sassbox
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To: sassbox

Another intellectual lightweight exposes himself.


6 posted on 01/23/2005 1:16:14 PM PST by John Lenin (We used to shoot horse thieves)
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To: kipita

Kursweil's claims, although possible, are not supported by evidence and frequently rely on an oversimplification of intellience, consciousness, and human ability. I, too, once believed his claims for the future. Then I challenged his premises.


7 posted on 01/23/2005 1:16:47 PM PST by jdhighness
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To: John Lenin

umm...is that comment referring to my post or the author of the article?


8 posted on 01/23/2005 1:19:54 PM PST by sassbox
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To: traviskicks
I'll randomly latch on to one thing: randomness

This concept is a human abstract thinking tool to deal with the unknown or unknowable, but truly random forces don't actually exist, and therefore neither does free will. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle refers to our inability to observe a subatomic particle without disturbing it. If we *could* observe without disturbing then we could understand and calculate everything that happens using math. The true definition of random is what is currently unknown, and possibly unknowable to humans.

9 posted on 01/23/2005 1:22:01 PM PST by Reeses
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To: traviskicks
...there has never been a logical argument strong enough to force all the atheists and agnostics of the world to believe.

There never will be. They make their own choice, despite all the evidence, both internal and external. Much of their search is simple rationalization to making and affirming their own idols.

This article comprises a lot of highfalutin arguments strung together here, assuming "nobody" has the truth but only a piece of it and therefore we can somehow search it out through our own intellect and understanding. We can't.

But, in a sense, you're right. Man cannot fully understand God, His purposes or his methods. However, the Bible (not the Koran, not other religious scriptures) does reveal what we need to know and we can therefore act by faith on that knowledge - both historical and spiritual. God has already revealed Himself to us in full measure through His Word and by His Son. God has already done all the work for us and doesn't require us to discover Him by our intellectual or moral efforts.

Most religions try to "find" God. So do rationalists, if they choose to attempt the effort rather than simply being cynical. Those on either avenues are wasting their time. God has done the work for us. He doesn't require us to do it. All this exercise is fuss and feathers. Interesting, maybe, but unnecessary to know all about God - or that part of Him we can understand and need to know. In fact, our vain minds probably throw us off His revealed Truth and onto false rabbit trails wherein we think we can intuit and somehow "discover" Him by our own efforts and reasoning. We needn't bother. The work has been done. By Him. It is freely available to the most simple or the most cerebral. It need not be "discovered" through our further efforts.

Nice try, but no cigar!

10 posted on 01/23/2005 1:23:45 PM PST by Gritty ("the Enlightenment has degenerated to a state religion cult with none of the eternal truths-Mk Steyn)
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To: jdhighness
Kursweil's claims, although possible, are not supported by evidence and frequently rely on an oversimplification of intellience, consciousness, and human ability.

I tend to agree but is he doing so to explain the complexities in simplistic terms so the masses would "get it". Jesus the intellectual spoke in parables so the masses would understand. Confucius was no different. And let's not forget Albert's words of keeping it simple.......but not to simple.

11 posted on 01/23/2005 1:33:01 PM PST by kipita (Rebel – the proletariat response to Aristocracy and Exploitation.)
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To: traviskicks

Have any of you clicked on the link and looked over the entire article? Look at all that gibberish! Whoever wrote this is is need of a long vacation. His brain is scrambled from excessive intellectualism.


12 posted on 01/23/2005 1:35:28 PM PST by marsh_of_mists
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To: traviskicks
Nice article, and I do not have time to read it all or comment on it right now, but there are several parts that are technically off-base. Points worth bringing up:

- The notion of "free will" is well-defined to the satisfaction of just about every rigorous theorist. We can prove mathematically that every algorithmically finite system will perceive itself to have something exactly analogous to "free will", it is a simple consequence of mathematics. The internal uncertainty is mathematically required in any context, but a context always exists in which there is no uncertainty for the same system.
- The human mind is algorithmically finite by every mathematical test for such things. These tests work on "black box" systems; their efficacy does not rely on having any knowledge of the system internals. There is no test for the opposite -- the best one can assert is that the nature of a system is inconclusive -- but this inconclusivity does not seem to be a necessary assertion in this case.
- The brain is computationally inferior to modern silicon in every aspect except one: memory reference rates, which the human brain outstrips silicon by about three orders of magnitude for conventional hardware. The mathematical definitions of general intelligence (see Hutter et al) that have been proven in the last few years and are generally accepted proscribe an implementation that is bound by effective reference rates. We can reengineer silicon to address this, but until very recently not much effort has gone toward this outside of narrow supercomputing domains; a lot of this is the result of basic architectural differences between the human brain and silicon process technologies.
- Among rigorous theorists (i.e. not philosophers playing semantic games and waxing eloquent), consciousness is generally agreed to be a necessary emergent property of all large-scale systems capable of algorithmic induction (the generally proven architectural model of intelligence in mathematics). This is not the "big question" that it used to be, but you dismiss it out of hand and assert that it is something extra and mysterious. Since the architecture of the human brain is a very good match for algorithmic induction (its structures and behaviors map very well into what is expected in that model), it should not be surprising then that the human brain expresses consciousness. Note that quantum mechanics is orthogonal to intelligence and therefore consciousness; QM is purely time-domain, intelligence is purely space-domain, and you cannot translate time-complexity into space-complexity (though you can go the other direction).

Those are my off-the-cuff technical remarks without having read the entire article yet. We now have a fundamental understanding of intelligence and intelligent systems in mathematics that we have never had even five or six years ago. What is interesting is that our understanding now makes it patently obvious why everything we came up with previously was incorrect. The truth is far more elegant and slightly stranger mathematically than what has long been imagined. It surprises most people to discover that we never had a general mathematical basis for intelligence in the 20th century to work from.

You will be hearing a lot more about this in the next three years or so. It still has not filtered out of the hardcore research circles, though it IS moving into development phases.

13 posted on 01/23/2005 1:43:12 PM PST by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: Reeses
. . . . but truly random forces don't actually exist, and therefore neither does free will. . . .

In what way does free will depend on the existence of randomness?
14 posted on 01/23/2005 1:43:19 PM PST by Logophile
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To: Gritty; John Lenin; sassbox

um... I have a feeling that you all read the excerpt and not the full paper.

This is 'A Theory of God', not 'a theory of no God'. One cannot deny the difficulty in defining God. That is merely where this paper starts.

I suggest you all read the whole thing before making assumptions.

Gritty, I largely concur with what you wrote. I don't think it is in any way contradictory to the excerpt.


15 posted on 01/23/2005 1:43:36 PM PST by traviskicks (http://www.neoperspectives.com/blackconservatism.htm)
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To: Reeses
Two excerpts that deal with your point: In fact, it might be the case that the very predictability of a computer restricts it's ability to process the more abstract concepts that we Humans juggle daily. So a computer that needs to be told what to do, (in a specific manner via programming etc..) will be incapable, by definition, of abstract thought, Volition, and human type Consciousness, no matter how powerful it may be. And it will be impossible to construct a computer capable of fully simulating the abstract thinkings of a human being, without it being: 1. unpredictable 2. conscious in a human sense. 3. possessing Volition. From this analysis we see Zombies are impossible. This concept is reminiscent of the famous, Heisenberg 'uncertainty principal' regarding small particles; The more precisely the position is determined, the less precisely the momentum is known in this instant, and vice versa. (26) As computers advance to the point where they are capable of human like functions they will becoming increasingly harder to control. It puts a bit of a limit on the power of conventional computing (as shown by the second Chart). Our discussions about predictability were very important in our analysis of computers, but have been since been somewhat ignored. Is this a mistake? The nature of randomness is as mysterious as Consciousness, Free Will, and God, and just as neglected by scientific study. (60), (61) Many of these mysterious entities seem correlated and linked together. Predetermination is a much simpler and logical concept to accept then any attained by delving into the instable nature of randomness. Is all randomness caused by Free Will, or elements thereof? In other words, might the same physical interactions that give rise to Consciousness, give rise to randomness? btw, an interesting book on this sort of thing is Wolfrom's 'A New Kind of Science'.
16 posted on 01/23/2005 1:49:45 PM PST by traviskicks (http://www.neoperspectives.com/blackconservatism.htm)
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To: jdhighness; kipita
Kursweil's claims, although possible, are not supported by evidence and frequently rely on an oversimplification of intellience, consciousness, and human ability.

Kurzweil is respected as a person in the AI community, but most core research theorists find his grasp of some fairly fundamental issues to be lacking. He makes a good pop-sci figurehead for more mundane aspects, but his understanding of the fundamental theoretical nature of the problem is quite poor. His theory is stuck in a 1980s era model, which we know is broken.

These models are like religion for many researchers, and once they latch on they never let go. Part of the problem is that there are many theoretical paths to intelligent implementations, but very few tractable paths. Yet once a path is proved to be intractable, many researchers continue on that path, neither addressing the intractability nor switching to a better model. Human nature I guess.

17 posted on 01/23/2005 1:51:23 PM PST by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: marsh_of_mists

Look at all that gibberish! Whoever wrote this is is need of a long vacation. His brain is scrambled from excessive intellectualism.
---

LOL thnx. Yea, I think your right in that if you over analyze some things you can end up worse than if you don't analyze it at all. Hopefully that is not the case here.... :)


18 posted on 01/23/2005 1:53:18 PM PST by traviskicks (http://www.neoperspectives.com/blackconservatism.htm)
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To: Gritty
But, in a sense, you're right. Man cannot fully understand God, His purposes or his methods.

I tend to agree but how do we know God is a he, she or something we can't understand?

19 posted on 01/23/2005 1:53:32 PM PST by kipita (Rebel – the proletariat response to Aristocracy and Exploitation.)
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To: Logophile
In what way does free will depend on the existence of randomness?

It doesn't. It only depends on subjective uncertainty (limits on predictive accuracy in some context), which looks similar to "randomness" but is not.

20 posted on 01/23/2005 1:54:44 PM PST by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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