Air has molecules and a measurable density, although slight, it still is something.
Never mind, you're all kind of missing the point. lol.
Air has molecules and a measurable density, although slight, it still is something.
I think that's where you go astray, it's the same place you went astray and I began to disagree with you in the "So what does happen when you die" thread (which I WILL get back to eventually... ), offering unfounded speculations as facts, as when you claimed a tree has consciousness.If you go along this way of thinking, that means that even atoms have consciousness...
Oh, I think he's probably got a little more than that on his mind....Stephen Hawking ...All he does is sit around and wonder about alien life forms and worry about the messages we're sending extra terrestrials with our radio signals..
Oh, I think he's probably got a little more than that on his mind.
I wouldn't bet the farm on that. Anybody watching what passes for entertainment these days, or watches the news, would quickly see that humans can be pretty aggressive and hostile, and that's the message we're broadcasting. Whether anyone's listening, or has managed to decode the signals, is another matter, but Hawking's right about this much at least: that IS what we're broadcasting.
I think that's where you go astray, it's the same place you went astray and I began to disagree with you in the "So what does happen when you die" thread (which I WILL get back to eventually... ), offering unfounded speculations as facts, as when you claimed a tree has consciousness.
Now I do understand there is a huge leap between our ''body awareness'' and my supposed awareness of an atom. But the point is that consciousness is clearly not something that you can put a little box. There a different levels and states of consciousness and the question is... where do you draw the line. I choose no line at all in my metaphysical understanding of the world. But from a scientific point of view, I understand that we need to draw lines. It's useful to differentiate an amoebas awareness from a human's because there is clearly a difference. We certainly can draw lines in the spectrum.
What we do know though, is that, if consciousness was a 'something', then it must qualify as matter or energy. An if science could identify distinctly what that type of energy that was and harness that energy, then one could effectively control the conscious states of all beings. In which case, it could (admittedly this is a slippery slope) also be argued, that an omnipotent being - like a God - can exist to influence the conscious states of all other beings in some sort of deterministic fashion.
Lots of ifs and coulds and woulds, yes, but if consciousness can be controlled, then that seems like a +1 for the God camp.
Does the number two have matter or energy? Not that I know of, yet I don't deny its existence.
What about Pythagor's theorem? What is that made of? Surely not matter... Can it be described in ''energetic'' terms?
Does the concept of acceleration have matter or energy? You need energy to accelerate, but the concept itself is made of ''nothing''.
What about a poem? What is that made of? Of course, it's made of words, symbols and metaphors. And they are all made of letters. But these letters are just symbols of phonems. They're made of nothing, yet they exist right?
Does something necessarily need to qualify as energy or matter to exist?
All things exist. If it is anything, from a noun to a verb, it exists in some context. There's nothing that doesn't exist.
Is this a denial of anyone's post or an affirmation?
Well nothing is nothing, imo. I can see how it can be treated like something even if it is still nothing. Like, when I think of 'outside the universe' if there is such a possibility, I think it's infinite nothingness. That makes it sound like something, even though it's not.
Grammatically, the word "nothing" is an indefinite pronoun, which means that it refers to something. One might argue that "nothing" is a concept, and since concepts are things, the concept of "nothing" itself is a thing. This logical fallacy is neatly demonstrated by the joke syllogism that contains a fallacy of four terms:
The four terms in this example are
- Nothing is better than eternal happiness.
- A ham sandwich is better than nothing.
- Therefore, a ham sandwich is better than eternal happiness.
The error in the conclusion stems from equating nothing-as-a-thing with nothing-as-absence-of-a-thing, which is invalid logic.
- Eternal happiness,
- A ham sandwich,
- Nothing-as-a-thing, which a ham sandwich is better than, and
- Nothing-as-an-absence-of-a-thing: 'no-thing' or 'not-some-thing', i.e., no entity exists that is better than eternal happiness.
Nothing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia