.xbuzzybeex.
Bluelighter
and i no its a bit of a stupid question, but which way is up? i mean ino where it is on earth, but when you get out to space...wtf rite?
buzz xxx
buzz xxx
I used to lament the fact that the world would never be as cools as the books I read, or the movies I watched.
Then I started thinking about it. I looked outside and saw people sitting in machines, taking themselves places in a few minutes that used to take hours. I looked up and saw great winged tubes of steel, weighing tons, defying gravity and soaring through the air.
I looked at the skyline, and saw the natural, ragged coastline punctuated by huge towers of steel and glass, reflecting the world around them and housing thousands of people. Then I pulled out my phone, smaller than my hand, and I searched through a space that doesn't exist physically and picked a specific piece of information out of uncountable masses of other information to learn everything about that building.
Life is a science fiction trip.
The other thing that spooked me as a kid is the idea that there is infinite space in the universe.
and i no its a bit of a stupid question, but which way is up? i mean ino where it is on earth, but when you get out to space...wtf rite?
buzz xxx
Then I started thinking about it. I looked outside and saw people sitting in machines, taking themselves places in a few minutes that used to take hours. I looked up and saw great winged tubes of steel, weighing tons, defying gravity and soaring through the air.
I looked at the skyline, and saw the natural, ragged coastline punctuated by huge towers of steel and glass, reflecting the world around them and housing thousands of people. Then I pulled out my phone, smaller than my hand, and I searched through a space that doesn't exist physically and picked a specific piece of information out of uncountable masses of other information to learn everything about that building.
Life is a science fiction trip.
Well infinite potential space. You could keep going in one direction for ever. But how could you? There would have to be some kind of boundary. But how could there be a boundary?, because of course what is on the other side of the boundary. Unless of course we live in a closed universe (in terms of the shape of the universe) but that doesn't make it any less mind blowing lol.hjj said:there isn't infinite space in the universe.
I pretty much had the exact same realization on my first acid trip...I took everything out of my pockets and looked at it, confused, wondering why I called it my own. I looked at my phone, Ipod, wallet, and I thought, "Why am I keeping track of this stuff?". I compared these seemingly unnecessary physical possessions to unnecessary mental clutter, such as worries, past memories, harbored negative emotions, etc...I think it's an important parallel to make because most thoughts/ideas that you may choose to hold on to are no more than "stuff" themselves, only cluttering your mental headspace until you choose to release them, and thus release the burden. This acid trip also seemed to provide me with an infinite range of comparisons/similarities between the mental and the physical...For example, I realized that cleaning your room is for your physical space, what meditating is for your mental space. And towards the end of the acid trip, I deduced that the trip was an enormously beneficial cleansing/shower for my soul (I actually realized this in the shower).
You might find a book by philosopher Derek Parfit called "Reasons and Persons" interesting.imagine if "you" as a yeast had a consciousness. you'd experience mitosis...you would bud a daughter cell that is genetically identical copy (+ mutations). but MAYBE you're consciousness would divide as well, and "you" would experience life as 1 yeast, then 2, then 4, 8, 16, 32, etc etc until you mutated sufficiently to be a different yeast strain.
You might find a book by philosopher Derek Parfit called "Reasons and Persons" interesting.
In it, he uses actual cases of corpus collostomies--where the two hemispheres of the brain are, essentially, disconnected--to argue that we have no selves. Behavioral tests of the operation subjects show that their consciousness is, in fact, divided. One hemisphere is unaware of what the other hemisphere is experiencing.
There are actual cases of people who have had massive strokes that destroyed half their brain, yet in some cases of survival both they and their friends say they are essentially unchanged. It's not entirely implausible to imagine the other half of their brain could've been destroyed with the same results. So, in a hypothetical case where each hemisphere is symmetrical (has no specialized functions--and there are actual cases that approximate such a condition), both sides of the brain contain a person's essential self.
In a technologically advanced society it's not implausible to imagine that half of one of these person's brains could be removed and put into a physical duplicate body. The same essential self would be in the same essential physical body, yet would be unaware of the life of the other. Now imagine that in 50 years, after each hemisphere leads very different lives, the hemispheres are reconnected into one body using the preserved corpus collosum. Viola, the re-integrated subject has experientially lived 50 extra years in an extra body. Are, or were, any of these subjects the real "self," or "soul"?
Consciousness could feel completely different for every person on earth, and there's no way to know it.
In my experience dealing with and speaking to neurotypicals (I have Asperger Syndrome), I'm already convinced that that is in fact the case.
The notion of subjective color has interested me since I was a child. It always confused me that nobody had an answer.
When I was a youngen I used to get shitscared trying to understand why I was me.
I think most non-colorblind neurotypicals probably experience color in roughly the same way. There are strange correlations and consistent perceptual tests that are difficult to reconcile if it's not about the same. For example, if asked to order primary and secondary colors from darkest to brightest, most people pick roughly the same ordering from dark to bright. Brightness and darkness are less subjective than color, as darkness tends to occlude and brightness reveal (which can be tested behaviorally), yet colors are consistently ordered in similar ways along this dimension. Yes, we can contrive all sorts of situations to make exceptions to these rules, but these tendencies will remain. Also, if asked to assign a color a musical tone, the bright colors are usually assigned high frequency tones and the dark, low frequency--again, suggesting a deeper integration of the senses where correlations arise that are difficult to reconcile if our perceptual experiences aren't roughly the same.The notion of subjective colour has interested me since I was a child. It always confused me that nobody had an answer.
kind of off topic but has anyone ever gotten shit scared in the middle of the night of the concept of the eternity of heaven and what if there really was one. I mean think about, forever means forever. literally billions upon billions of years. I dunno about you but I would get tired of "forever", so whats the other option? End of the soul, a nothingness, well thats not too comferting either now is it.
I use to have these thoughts until I realized they would only occur when I was unhappy with my life. still a trippy thought though
great post man, your going to fit in well here at bluelight