Have you ever had the feeling that your life was spinning out beyond control? Or inversely that everything was happening exactly as it should? In both cases, as in all cases, what you are sensing is the predetermined nature of the Universe: an innate background structural radiation, extant since the Big Bang, which surrounds us and within which we live our lives.
I would like from the outset to wrestle the concept of structural predeterminism away from any Calvinistic religious connotations of morality surrounding the God myth and need to sloppily shoehorn the word God into gaps in our understanding. Structural predeterminism is not God and in fact precludes that notion. The simplest way to explain structural predeterminism is as follows. When we conceptualize the Universe we have two options:
The Universe is finite.
The Universe is infinite.
All that humanity has been able to observe so far would point to the Universe, as life, being finite. In current scientific theory the Universe we live in begins with the Big Bang. In order for the Big Bang to have occurred, as with any nuclear explosion, a finite critical mass must have been reached. It follows, if the original mass was finite then so must be the outcome.
-MSM
Thursday, October 30, 2008
oh the humanity!
All societies have the existence of religion in common. It is part of what makes us human. Religion is defined as the beliefs and patterns of behavior which humanity uses to resolve issues that cannot otherwise be solved using known technology. Religion includes not only the rituals which manipulate supernatural powers, but also the story of creation. If every religion has a story about how and why people came to be, then you could say that the function of religion is to answer the currently unanswerable questions of how and why we exist.
If what we, as humans, are seeking is an answer to how and why we exist, and if many of us credit the Big Bang as the precursor to life as we know it, then what effect does existence prior to the Big Bang have, not only on how and why we came into being, but also on what we have become?
-LEH
If what we, as humans, are seeking is an answer to how and why we exist, and if many of us credit the Big Bang as the precursor to life as we know it, then what effect does existence prior to the Big Bang have, not only on how and why we came into being, but also on what we have become?
-LEH
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)