Pavlos Maros
Well-Known Member
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
Do you think time doesn't exist?Not the best way to encourage conversation. If that is what you are hoping to find here.
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Do you think time doesn't exist?Not the best way to encourage conversation. If that is what you are hoping to find here.
Einstein never said time doesn't exist, He didn't even say it was an illusion What he actually said was "The distinction between the past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion. "That's okay, I believe he just called Einstein an idiot indirectly too.
Several times I just don't put them down to woo.Agreed @P3. Pavlos, time certainly appears to be linear, but modern physics suggests that it might not be quite that simple; you seem very dismissive of any sort of intuitive sense. Have you never had an inexplicable/mystical/intuitive experience?
Time is a real thing. We may not experience it as it really is. That's the illusory part.Lunchtime doubly so.
People can say what they want. Doesn't mean we can not observe time.
And here's the thing - this is a conversation with people who think God is a real thing, some of whom are suggesting time may not be. We've jumped the shark.
Huzzah! Another thread up me particular aisle-equivalent :3From another thread, quoting myself,
"...A more interesting question, to me, is "can you choose your belief system"? I don't think it's possible. I believe what I believe, not because I chose it, but because this is the vision that life has unfolded before me, based on what I have received via my senses in the past, and how my brain has organized that information. And I'm not entirely talking about our five physical senses. I believe we have at least one more sense - call it intuition, spirit, inner vision - that also informs this logical process in my brain."
Also, if I use the words BS in this particular thread, I'm usually referring to belief system...that is not the case everywhere.

I think if things like caring about others, about equality, about justice, are priority values in values centred people - then belief systems can change, but the values do not. In which case, the beliefs don't matter as much as the values the beliefs are built around. Some people do not have values. Those people might be sociopaths.
No, I wouldn't say that. And that was not my point.Do you think time doesn't exist?
Time is NOT real: Physicists show EVERYTHING happens at the same timeEinstein never said time doesn't exist, He didn't even say it was an illusion What he actually said was "The distinction between the past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion. "
Maybe at certain points in human existence, it was the latter. But the more we learned, I think the poles shifted, in a sense, and it became the former. I don't think values are just a set of beliefs. I think we find the core ones to be central to every major religion. I think they are an intrinsically human need and trait, more necessary to survival and human thriving than competitive hierarchy. At least, I think there are a vast number of humans, and there always has been, who are intrinsically wired that way, and are very unhappy with a world that doesn't support that sort of intrinsic wiring. And, sooner or later we figure that out. I would call that my "come to Jesus" moment. I recognize that not all who figure out the same thing will automatically call it that. They may have completely different belief systems, and they will find language and symbolism for it in their own belief systems. I don't think Jesus would mind. Because he's an embodied essence, whether literally or symbolically - and I think what he lives and dies and lives again for - allegorically - is to spread love and bring about equality, justice and peace. He wasn't about making himself an idol. So coming around to those values is one and the same as believing, essentially, in what Jesus was about. Some will say he's symbolic of it, others will say he is it - and others, like me, will say "both". But what matters are the values.
Are beliefs built around values or are values built around beliefs? If the latter, then the beliefs very much matter. Or are values just another set of beliefs?
Not actually disagreeing with you, just pointing out an obvious question that arises from your statement.
So yes, anyone who says that time doesn't exist is like someone who says the Earth is flat. "Idiot" seems charitable.
Or maybe where the UCCan and Greta are both going wrong is in not recognizing the human problem to be one of values rather than beliefs - and that they have more intrinsically in common, than not.Maybe at certain points in human existence, it was the latter. But the more we learned, I think the poles shifted, in a sense, and it became the former. I don't think values are just a set of beliefs. I think we find the core ones to be central to every major religion. I think they are an intrinsically human need and trait, more necessary to survival and human thriving than competitive hierarchy. At least, I think there are a vast number of humans, and there always has been, who are intrinsically wired that way, and are very unhappy with a world that doesn't support that sort of intrinsic wiring. And, sooner or later we figure that out. I would call that my "come to Jesus" moment. I recognize that not all who figure out the same thing will automatically call it that. They may have completely different belief systems, and they will find language and symbolism for it in their own belief systems. I don't think Jesus would mind. Because he's an embodied essence, whether literally or symbolically - and I think what he lives and dies and lives again for - allegorically - is to spread love and bring about equality, justice and peace. He wasn't about making himself an idol. So coming around to those values is one and the same as believing, essentially, in what Jesus was about. Some will say he's symbolic of it, others will say he is it - and others, like me, will say "both". But what matters are the values.
This is where I think Greta has it backwards. Getting rid of the beliefs will not change the values. The human problem right now - maybe that's always what we've allowed to work against us - is a value problem, not a belief problem.
So now is not the time?I'll answer for myself later.
I see values and belief as completely interdependent. One of my major points of disagreement with Vosper. (Why are we talking about her again?)This is where I think Greta has it backwards. Getting rid of the beliefs will not change the values. The human problem right now - maybe that's always what we've allowed to work against us - is a value problem, not a belief problem.