(2017-10-05, 06:48 PM)nbtruthman Wrote: One problem with this is that the Universe comprises an incredibly complex interdependent system of natural laws following many beautiful mathematical constructions, that is also incredibly fine tuned for life as we know it. This gives the strong appearance of design by a focused, sentient superintelligence that creatively invents, not one that is not self-aware. By analogy, in our experience the only source of greatly complex specified information (in the form of intricate machines and mechanisms) is focused sentient human intelligence.
I agree that the impression of a Source that is brimming with self-aware intelligence can be overwhelming, and there's something compelling about such an interpretation. However, phrases such as "natural laws", "beautiful mathematical constructions", "sentient superintelligence", "creatively inventing", "complex specified information", etc. could be akin to icons we use on our "desktop" to grope towards a better understanding of reality.
How do we model the putative self-aware intelligence of Source? Why, on our own experience/understanding of ourselves. But we don't have words to describe how Source experiences Itself except through what could be just rough approximations expressed in language.
Source seems inscrutible, well beyond our present capacity to understand. Just as how we understand the term "intelligence" is well beyond the simple sentience of a paramecium, what we label "intelligence" in Source could well be beyond, and as yet alien to, what we label as intelligence in our own minds. It may not even make sense to make the comparison.
As one example, we think in terms of natural laws, and in using the word "laws", we unwittingly project onto Source the role of a law maker. It's as if the laws are, in a sense, separate from Itself, something with an independent existence. However, to "create" in this way tends to introduce a dualism between Source and Creation, and I instinctively bridle at that: I tend to intuit some kind of monism is in operation that language tends to make a dualism of.
I wonder whether the "mentation" of Source can be described as "intelligent", and whether Source can be described as a "creator" with "intention", modelled on how we understand our own somewhat limited ability to create. I have this sense that such words don't do justice to what It might actually be; but the words are all we have and we have become mesmerised by them.
Occasionally, I seem to get fleeting glimpses of a Source that isn't "intelligent" and "creative" so much as the very embodiment of what such words are feebly pointing towards. Source is being what it is, and that includes qualities we may tacitly see as distinct and separate, "lable-able" if you like.
It's so difficult to put across what I mean, because I, as much as anyone, am limited to what I can communicate in words. It's just that now and then I get those fleeting glimpses, which I experience wordlessly. The process of trying to translate them into everyday language more often than not leaves me frustrated.
Maybe poetry helps. One villanelle I wrote sometimes seems (on good days), to encapsulate something of what I'm trying to get at:
Riddle (reality)
Like ermine kissed by candlelight,
like breath on skin, but softer still,
it’s hardly something you could fight:
you’d easier nail a lark in flight
for singing songs that sound too shrill.
Like ermine kissed by candlelight,
but calculating, if polite,
it cultivates a marksman’s skill.
It’s hardly something you could fight:
exploding suns can flare less bright;
be thankful for its muted thrill--
like ermine, kissed by candlelight?
An owl’s stoop in blackest night?
Whether you think it warm or chill,
it’s hardly something you could fight;
absurd to thrash, as if it might
come crashing in to steal your will.
Like ermine kissed by candlelight,
it’s hardly something you could fight.