Monday, July 4, 2016

Without Purpose - Seven (7) Rules for Existing in Our Universe - (a work in progress)



Without Purpose

7 Rules for Existing in Our Universe

(1)   Appreciate the Inexplicable
(2)   Accept your place
(3)   Celebrate your place
(4)   The Universe is “God”
(5)   Believe in the Scientific Method
(6)   Fear Certainty
(7)   Try Your Best to Simply Exist

Forward:  I have written a lot of pieces on what I believe are the mechanisms and reasons and causes of the existence and purpose of the Universe, life and myself in particular.  This piece is an attempt to consolidate those ideas and further explore them and understand them as I write and edit and re-edit.  This project may go on indefinitely. 

Writer’s Note:  If I bold or underline a word or phrase that is not a title or sub-title, this means that I want you to read that word with extra emphasis.  Nothing more or less, but it is an important tool for the reading of this text.

Another Writer’s Note: I use “the” Universe and “our” Universe interchangeably, sort of like how it was once popular to alternate or randomly assign “he” or “she” in writing to remain gender neutral.  I am attempting to remain neutral on the subject of multiple universes.


Rule #1 - Appreciate the Inexplicable

Subjectivity and Understanding:  Just because you may wish to know as much as possible or for that matter, you may wish to know “everything”, does not mean that you are a lesser person if you don’t.  In fact, I would argue (as many philosophers have) that sometimes less is more and further, I would argue that knowing is very subjective and the capability to know or understand may vary across a collection of people.  So, let us set aside the common view that in order to understand the nature of the Universe, one has to either possess a PhD in physics or be a genius or some sort of spiritual guru.  Nothing could possibly be further from the truth.  The facts are these.  All people of normal intelligence possess the ability to know all that humans currently know about the fundamental nature of the Universe.  There is a very large and profitable genre of books for the common person which adequately explain these fundamentals at a level which requires at most a late elementary or middle school reading and comprehension ability to digest.  So, you can know all that there is to know, if you apply yourself and are interested.  You can also learn about all sorts of exciting and wonderful ideas about the nature of the Universe that have absolutely no basis in fact (see “the Scientific Method”), but are rational and reasonable ideas, worth exploring further.  Lastly, there is a lot of garbage, myth, religion, art and what not that attempt to explain things (see “Fear Certainty”) which while usually off base on 90% of what they claim to be true, usually contain some nuggets of insight, so they should not wholly be ignored.  As I said, in the end, you need to put forth some effort, if you are to learn what is known.

Objectivity and Understanding:  Okay, now comes the sad news (for some) and the happy news for people like me. You are a human being and as such, you possess certain limitations.  Until recently, humans couldn’t fly and we had to use our over sized brains and even larger egos to accomplish that feat with the help of tools.  The bottom line is that we do not innately have the ability to fly.  As far as I know, no human has ever been made significantly sad or contemplated suicide over that fact.  We accept it as one of our many limitations.  We can not see in the Ultra-violet wavelengths, but we build instruments that can.  There is a long list, but my point is, we readily accept that as humans we have limitations.  For some odd reason, we irrationally resist the fact that one of those limitations is to understand fully and completely the fundamental nature of the Universe.  How it began, where it is headed and how did life start on earth?  Now don’t get me wrong, I love science and I am as curious as anyone else about these things, but I have accepted that while we might get closer and closer to understanding, we will never fully understand and even more likely, our brains, as fantastic as they are, may not be equipped to process that understanding, even if a higher intelligence handed us the operating manual.

With Rule #1 “Appreciate the Inexplicable” in mind, let us move on to Rule #2.

Rule #2 - Accept Your Place:

Okay, so now we have embraced the idea that there is a whole lot that we can’t ever understand about our Universe.  If you don’t embrace this either stop reading, re-read the previous chapter or keep reading, it is your life.

It is vitally important to my belief system that I re-center my thinking to the realization that I am part of the Universe.  I wrote a blog post once that suggested that the 1 step approach to ending our Universe would be if a being of some sort (maybe human) was able to truly transcend the boundaries of the Universe.  At that moment the Universe would cease to exist.  This is sort of the corollary to what I mean here.  While my life may be a ridiculously small and seemingly insignificant part of the vast Universe that we believe we know something about, the Universe does not exist without me in it at this point in time, space or however the Universe actually defines itself as it changes, seemingly at an ever accelerated rate of expansion. That is a HUGE insight. 

Let me repeat this.  The Universe does not exist without me in it.  Sure, it apparently existed for over 14 billions years without me and is presumed to continue to exist for another trillion or so years after I am dead, but without me in it, when and where I am supposed to fit in, it never existed.

We are at once nothing and everything.  I can not change the future by making any decisions for the Universe is unfolding as it was meant to unfold and my puny life has no input into how that works.  However, without me occupying my role, it could never have existed, since we are bound by that predetermination paradox.  In other words, it needs me as much as I think I need it in order to “exist”.  We (our Universe and I) are co-dependent, not in a naturist, save the earth kind of way, but in real concrete terms.  One actually, factually, literally does not and never would exist without the other.

If you truly get this concept the first time through and you believe that you can believe in it, possibly after some serious contemplation, you may want to put the book down and do that contemplation for a day, a month, a year, a decade, however long it takes.

If you find this concept intriguing, but lacking in humph, then read on my friend.  Get your full money’s worth from this epistle. 

Rule #3 – Celebrate Your Place

Whether you honestly and deeply and passionately believe what I wrote in the previous section, if you even humor me or humor the idea, then you have to admit that it is pretty cool that this co-dependency exists in such a concrete way.

Many thinkers and insightful people may try to dismiss this idea and say that, well on some scale there is free will or on some scale what we do is not directly connected to the unfolding of the Universe.  After all, that makes no intuitive sense.  We just haven’t met god yet or we haven’t worked out the math yet, but we will soon and we will show that free will is real and determinism is a bunch of horse crap. 

Well, good for those folks.  I mean after all, up until now, I have been talking mostly about what I believe and not much about the science behind what I believe, so like with all belief systems, they should be challenged and ridicule and fear, certainly are two forms of challenging some one else’s ideas. 

Sadly for those in the “Free Will” camp of thinking (and yes apparently the world of science is quite divided on this subject) there isn’t any data or math to support their feelings.  Seriously, many of those in the free will camp admit that the best and most current ideas about the nature of the Universe debunk the concept of free will, but they wish to hang on to it.  Others create allowances for it in their theories.  I am okay with that, mostly because I am not smart enough or schooled enough on how to face their well thought out and complex challenges.  I only know enough to know that most of the data and more of the theories indicate that free will is a myth and a human construct.  Probably a human construct developed to help us preserve our sanity. 

Back to Celebrating.  Hey, no matter what or who you are, the Universe doesn’t exist if you are not part of it.  That sandwich you had for lunch – necessary.  That bug you obliterated with your windshield driving home last evening – required.

Wooo- hooo  I love you squished bug !!!!

Oh and the time and manner of your death.  Well, that’s predetermined too.  Here is a great self confession regarding what you think your brain/mind know and how your body reacts on those beliefs versus evolutionary wiring.  In my mind, I truly and whole heatedly believe that the manner and time of my death is predetermined and therefore I have no input into that eventuality.  However, I am afraid of heights and I panic when I am off of the ground on a ladder or a climbing rig or zip line (not airplanes though or some carnival rides, but on others, yes).  So, don’t judge those who seem like hypocrites too harshly, the higher thinking parts and the ancient parts of the brain are not always in sync and those behaviors that at times seem hypocritical are simple one part of the brain out muscling the other.

My recommendation is to think about Celebrating Your Place.  If you didn’t exist, nothing would.  This is difficult at times, because the need to accept that you don’t have free will can be a bummer and really depressing and make life feel unbearable, if you don’t counter it with a big dose of, “yeah but this beautiful, wonderful, amazing Universe wouldn’t be here if I wasn’t part of it.” 

Rule #4 – The Universe is “God”

I am an atheist and as such do not believe in a god, a deity or other singular or plural set of supreme beings that directly or indirectly interfere with the lives of humans.  In my view of the Universe, we are like the petulant child in the argument with a care giver (our Universe) – “ I am the adult and you don’t get to decide”.  The unfolding of the Universe gets to decide all things and all of these things have been known from day one and are entirely inevitable.  Therefore, it is somewhat convenient to think of the Universe as “God”.  The ultimate rule maker, judge, jury and executioner.  However, unlike most gods that have been dreamed up by mankind, this “God” has no actual or perceived human-like characteristics.  The Universe is not narcissistic, glutinous, good, evil, jealous, angry or loving.  It just is. As we should be, it just is.

There are people who worship our Universe and view it, its study and its secrets as something to be awed at to the point of worship.  I suppose that it could be possible to become so enthralled with the majesty of the galaxies or the complexity, yet vulnerability of life that one may consider these manifestations of the Universe to be worthy of devotion and worship.  In fact, it has always been supposed that this is actually how most religions began.  Before humans become specialists and lived in mostly agrarian societies, it was not that necessary for any one tribal leader to have control over a large portion of the population.  So interpersonal relationships and bonds of friendship, love and mutual dependence were enough to hold things together in small groups.  In those times, it is often assumed, humans did worship the Universe in very native ways, simply giving in to the awesome spectacles witnessed above our heads at night and in our sight line during the day.  Religion really only took hold when humanity required some order and control over larger and more diverse populations and a device was required to generate this control.  Fear of the unknown and especially of the afterlife became the seeds that grew into organized religion.  Awe and the ecstasy of experiencing the beauty of the natural world was replace with the dread of shame, guilt and eternal punishment.

So for the first tens of thousands and maybe hundreds of thousands of years, mankind worshiped our existence.  Then for the last ten thousand years or so, we came to worship ruling gods and put our faith in them to heal us, preserve us and protect us.  Lately, thankfully as we become more aware of what the Universe actually is, that trend is finally reversing as organized religion is slowly beginning to fall out of favor.

Writer’s note:  I also consider Nationalism, Governance and Economic Infrastructure to be part of what I call “organized religion”.  They are part of the network of control that exists to keep people in line and to shift power over the many to the few.

In the end, long after humankind is extinct, the Universe will move onward, continuing to unfold, with us having served our purpose and it continuing to reveal its own.

Rule #5 – Believe in the Scientific Method

Everything in our culture is created within our minds, however occasionally we create or discover something and create analogs that are more precisely akin to the reality of the Universe than most things we imagine.  Two such things that come to mind are Math and the Scientific Method.  

The Scientific Method is simple enough to write about, but not always easy to adhere to.  Simply put, an idea is hatched, which could be based on one or more observations, a hunch, a feeling or an insight acquired from another person’s work.  I am sure that there are other ways to generate a hypothesis, but those seem to cover the basis spectrum. 

Then you take this idea and you devise a hypothesis, classically a null hypothesis – meaning I am going to assume my idea is wrong. This is the first beautiful thing about the Scientific Method, if you use it correctly, you are not trying to prove your idea to be correct, but rather you are trying to see how “not wrong” it is on a scale of “not wrongness” often referred to as statistics, probability, standard error or a confidence interval.  All of these measures are the same thing.  How likely is it that my idea, based on a rigorous set of observations or symmetrical mathematics (more so in modern times) is not as wrong as the most recent idea on this subject matter.  In the best case, you have BOTH a set of observations and symmetrical mathematics that support your idea as being the least likely to be wrong.

This in fact is where Einstein had and continues to make a name for himself, because most of his ideas (even those that he did not like) have consistently been shown to be the least likely to be wrong, when new information has come forward in the fields of physics, quantum mechanics and cosmology.

This is the second beautiful thing about the scientific method.  The Scientific Method encourages failure and wrong ideas.  The need to ply the doers and the thinkers with the requirement to come up with new, fresh concepts and ways to either make observations or to utilize symmetric mathematics to demonstrate whether or not those new ideas are more or less likely to be wrong than the best known theory to date is remarkable. 

Can’t you see the beauty in that method?

“Don’t believe me”, it says, “don’t trust me”, it challenges, “try and better the last inspiration”, it implores!!

And yes, a thinker and a doer can be the same person, but today, most scientific concepts are so bizarre and out there, that it takes a person or a team’s whole attention to either develop the ideas and theories or to develop the methods of measuring them, not often both, like back in the “olden days of science” from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries.

Don’t just believe in the Scientific Method – Embrace It.

Rule #6 – Fear Certainty

When someone tells you that something is known, is for sure, is guaranteed, I would suggest that you back away, take a deep breath and don’t ask them for proof, but seek proof of their veracity on your own.

As I mentioned in the section above, the use of measures of uncertainty are the cornerstone of science and in fact the cornerstone of rational thought – period.

Be they clergy, politicians, Aunt Betty or your college professor, never ever take anyone’s view of the Universe for certain.  The more certain something feels, the less likely it is to be true.  The harder something is to comprehend or maybe more aptly, the more work you have to put in to contemplating it until you grasp its true meaning, the more likely it is that it may hold some truth.

However, be aware – some truth is not THE truth.  People study many complicated and confusing things like the Bible, which holds some truths, but not the truth.

In the end, always refer back to Rule #5, however, when you feel great about something that you haven’t worked hard to understand, my guess is that whatever that idea or concept is, must be wrong and likely very wrong to a high degree.

Rule #7 – Try Your Best to Simply Exist

The key phrase components here are “try” and “simply exist”.  Trying is not doing, but trying is all we can do as humans.  There is also a significant difference in the phrases “simply exist” and “exist simply”.  To simply exist means to ride the wave of the Universe, while exist simply means to remove complexity from your life, which sounds very appealing, but not what this text is about.

Again, I must confess that I do a horrific job of Simply Existing and a poor job of even Trying My Best to do so, at times.  This doesn’t mean that I don’t appreciate, understand, or have experienced the benefits of achieving this state, even if it is fleeting for me.

When you realize that our Universe is predetermined and that you are as much a part of it, as it is of you, then you have the basis for wanting to try your best to simply exist. 

When I am at my best doing this, I use meditation, contemplation and expression.

Meditation Calms and Clears My Mind
  • Dark, Quiet, Awareness Moves into Calm Peace
  • Thoughts drift by and are acknowledged, but released
  • Emptiness ensues

Contemplation Focuses My Thinking and Simplifies the Complex
  •  Emptiness if replace by a single purpose
  • Thoughts are not judged
  • Clarity forms around one fundamental insight

Expression Allows Me to Expel my Insights and Release them back into the Universe
  • Writing Blogs, Essays, Poems, Lyrics
  • Talking, debating, discussing ideas with myself and others
  • Creating something material, gardening, cleaning, cooking, building
  • Vigorous exercise, fast walking, jogging, running, boxing

Being in the moment, in the zone, lost in your thoughts, lost in your dreams, losing track of time, feeling exhausted and refreshed at the same time, these are some of the ways we know when we are Simply Existing.  Sometimes overwhelmed or giving in to pain, adrenaline, fear, love, infatuation and sometimes even calm, awe and amazement all can be “symptoms” of simply existing. 

Some describe it as living outside themselves for a moment or a time or a while.  The Buddhist say that it is like that moment when you sneeze, eliminate waste or start to orgasm.  There is nothing else in the Universe than that moment than what you are experiencing.  You cannot think, reason, or even see or hear in some cases, if only for the briefest of seconds or micro-seconds.  THAT is the only reality.

What they are really doing is existing as part of the Universe and not as some socially conditioned animal with defenses and habits and social norms. 

Contemplate this state and think of times when you’ve experienced it and try to recreate those conditions, but this time monitor how it really is and remember it and keep that memory at hand, so you can do it more frequently and with less effort.

Conclusion:

We are the Universe and the Universe is us.  So be it, as it was, is and will ever be.