These guys, and all Physicists, really need to get off the "Time" kick. . Because "time" as everyone defines it, does not exist at all, except in your imagination. All of these scientists mistakenly incorporate the element of time as a single constant. It is not that at all. In fact, it does not even exist. "measurements of rates of change"(meaning movement or some other alteration of existence) is really the definition of "time", which by the way is a very abstract idea.
@WinterLights7 A very good point indeed. All human experience is perceived within the confines of the skull, and proving an external existence beyond that is honestly quite impossible to do. For those who do not yet realize this truth, it must be like being stuck in a circular loop of some kind, trying desperately to make sense of something whose nature can never be understood in the 'true' reality of the outside world. We are not God.
That makes so much more sense to me than linear cause and affect. For instance, an affect could be that of a cause in the future. I've had too many personal experiences that lead me to believe the future can affect the present, or even the past, and not strictly vice-versa. I love it..
@TheEmotionMachine I think the baseball player example is nonsense. Why? Because when you watch a baseball game, you see the hitters are only able to hit what - 20% of the pitches? Come on. In most pitches, they're not even able to respond with a bat swing, let alone a hit.
Really interesting stuff, but could some of those phenomena (baseball player) be explained as a projection of the future influencing present events, not necessarily "future information." For example, the hitter is reading the outcome of the pitch immediately when it leaves the pitchers hand (if not beforehand, based on pitch count, previous pitch, etc.)
@Smashinz2002 This means if I kill you it doesn't matter. Right? Because if time does not exist; you do not exist.
Beejahz 2 weeks ago
These guys, and all Physicists, really need to get off the "Time" kick. . Because "time" as everyone defines it, does not exist at all, except in your imagination. All of these scientists mistakenly incorporate the element of time as a single constant. It is not that at all. In fact, it does not even exist. "measurements of rates of change"(meaning movement or some other alteration of existence) is really the definition of "time", which by the way is a very abstract idea.
Smashinz2002 3 months ago
@WinterLights7 A very good point indeed. All human experience is perceived within the confines of the skull, and proving an external existence beyond that is honestly quite impossible to do. For those who do not yet realize this truth, it must be like being stuck in a circular loop of some kind, trying desperately to make sense of something whose nature can never be understood in the 'true' reality of the outside world. We are not God.
Smashinz2002 3 months ago
physicists better focus on consciousness rather then the universe outside..because its all functioning from the inside
WinterLights7 4 months ago
That makes so much more sense to me than linear cause and affect. For instance, an affect could be that of a cause in the future. I've had too many personal experiences that lead me to believe the future can affect the present, or even the past, and not strictly vice-versa. I love it..
tonyfalca 5 months ago in playlist Chopra - Hameroff
@TheEmotionMachine I think the baseball player example is nonsense. Why? Because when you watch a baseball game, you see the hitters are only able to hit what - 20% of the pitches? Come on. In most pitches, they're not even able to respond with a bat swing, let alone a hit.
amjan 6 months ago
Really interesting stuff, but could some of those phenomena (baseball player) be explained as a projection of the future influencing present events, not necessarily "future information." For example, the hitter is reading the outcome of the pitch immediately when it leaves the pitchers hand (if not beforehand, based on pitch count, previous pitch, etc.)
TheEmotionMachine 11 months ago
I understood that :) i love listening to these talks
TheOverfiendDj 1 year ago
It makes me wonder if many peoples survival instincts work this way.
mikwid 1 year ago
ok...wrap your head around that! ...wow
jofrelly 1 year ago