An interesting article (https://aeon.co/essays/kurt-godel-his-mo...fter-death) just came out going into the reasons why Kurt Gödel, arguably and well accepted as the greatest or one of the greatest logicians and mathematicians of the twentieth century, was certain of an afterlife, in direct opposition to the fixed dogmatic materialism of contemporary academia. His reasons had nothing to do with parapsychology and the evidence of paranormal experiences.
His rationale for belief in an afterlife was basically metaphysical and philosophical, and is this:
Of course the idea that everything in the world has meaning is controversial - all it takes is enumerating the countless apparently random and meaningless tragedies of disease and other misfortunes that people suffer in this world, plus the myriads of examples of apparently pointless and meaningless "mistakes" of evolution, that never went anywhere with large populations of primitive but sentient beings. However, I think Gödel's views should be given a lot of credence due to his eminence as the greatest logician and probably mathematician of the 20th century.
(This post was last modified: 2024-01-03, 05:22 PM by nbtruthman. Edited 1 time in total.)
His rationale for belief in an afterlife was basically metaphysical and philosophical, and is this:
Quote:"If the world is rationally organised and has meaning, then it must be the case. For what sort of a meaning would it have to bring about a being (the human being) with such a wide field of possibilities for personal development and relationships to others, only then to let him achieve not even 1/1,000th of it?
He deepens the rhetorical question at the end with the metaphor of someone who lays the foundation for a house only to walk away from the project and let it waste away. Gödel thinks such waste is impossible since the world, he insists, gives us good reason to consider it to be shot through with order and meaning. Hence, a human being who can achieve only partial fulfilment in a lifetime must seek rational validation for this deficiency in a future world, one in which our potential manifests."
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As he writes in a letter to his mother dated 23 July 1961:
"Does one have a reason to assume that the world is rationally organised? I think so. For it is absolutely not chaotic and arbitrary, rather – as natural science demonstrates – there reigns in everything the greatest regularity and order. Order is, indeed, a form of rationality."
Gödel thinks that rationality is evident in the world through the deep structure of reality. Science as a method demonstrates this through its validated assumption that intelligible order is discoverable in the world, facts are verifiable through repeatable experiments, and theories obtain in their respective domains regardless of where and when one tests them.
It is this result that shook the mathematical community to its core
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In the letter from 6 October 1961, Gödel expounds his position: ‘The idea that everything in the world has meaning is, by the way, the exact analogue of the principle that everything has a cause on which the whole of science is based.’ Gödel – just like Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, whom he idolised – believed that everything in the world has a reason for its being so and not otherwise (in philosophical jargon: it accords with the principle of sufficient reason)."
Of course the idea that everything in the world has meaning is controversial - all it takes is enumerating the countless apparently random and meaningless tragedies of disease and other misfortunes that people suffer in this world, plus the myriads of examples of apparently pointless and meaningless "mistakes" of evolution, that never went anywhere with large populations of primitive but sentient beings. However, I think Gödel's views should be given a lot of credence due to his eminence as the greatest logician and probably mathematician of the 20th century.
Quote:As the foremost logician of the 20th century, Kurt Gödel is well known for his incompleteness theorems and contributions to set theory, the publications of which changed the course of mathematics, logic and computer science. When he was awarded the Albert Einstein Prize to recognise these achievements in 1951, the mathematician John von Neumann gave a speech in which he described Gödel’s achievements in logic and mathematics as so momentous that they will ‘remain visible far in space and time’. By contrast, his philosophical and religious views remain all but hidden from view. Gödel was private about these, publishing nothing on this subject during his lifetime.