Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Good Beat, Easy to Evolve To

There were so many distractions while working on this post, it was hard for me to stay in rhythm. It’s all over the place. Oh well. We'll try to recover the groove tomorrow.

Just as there is no adult human who doesn’t arise out of the mother-infant matrix, so too there is no isolated human being outside a social context. Man is a “community,” both inside and outside his head. If that sounds strange, what is that endless conversation inside your head, and to whom is it addressed? 

Which is why it makes no sense to imagine a literal Adam at the root of humanness, since a human without other humans is not and could not be one. The best evidence suggests that modern humans arose some 100,000 years ago “within an interbreeding population that never shrank below approximately 10,000 individuals.

However, Ramage highlights a point we are always making, that there is a significant lag between the emergence of genetically modern human beings and evidence of their humanness, and there is no scientific, empirical, or logical reason to conflate the two, since the most essential attributes of man did not, and could not have, come about by any material process. The process could be a necessary cause but never a sufficient one. 

Obviously we need a brain to think, but this doesn’t mean thinking is reducible to brain activity. 

Likewise, to show how little difference raw genetics can make, they say that humans and chimpanzees share something like 98% of the same DNA, nearly as much as that between us and our nearest relativists (i.e., progressives). A little bit goes a long way, but a material process can go on forever and never give what it doesn’t have, in this case, an immaterial soul.

If we look at the same data from the inside, anthropogenesis is obviously a key juncture in cosmic history. It is as consequential as the genesis of the material cosmos itself, because what is a cosmos with no one there to know it? Just more nothing. 

Nor is there any reason whatsoever to regard these two as radically separate and unrelated, any more than the budding of a flower is unrelated to the seed. Or, if you say there is no connection, at least provide a better explanation. 

Don’t be like David Hume, whose ridiculous philosophy maintained that we couldn’t know about causality, rather, only notice that two events were constantly conjoined. If I hit you in the head with a hammer and you get a headache, best we can do is notice that headaches and blows to the head often occur together. 

Which reminds me of drumming. It’s obvious when you think about it, but they say keeping a slow and steady tempo requires more skill than a fast one. For example, if I ask you to tap your finger every second, you can come pretty close to it. But what if I ask you to do it every minute? Every ten minutes? How about once a year? A billion years?

Is there a cosmic rhythm? If so, is there a drummer? According to Steven Wright, the speed of time is one second per second, but according to less serious physicists, time has no speed because it doesn’t move at all. Clocks and drummers only measure space, not time. Okay, what is the shortest space? Last I checked, 10-35 meters, ⁠AKA Planck distance.  

But there’s more to time than what physics can say. Obviously, physics cannot tell us whether the state of the cosmos at T=0 has an interior relationship to any other time. Like Hume, it can notice that here is a seed and there is a flower, but not any causal connection between them.

There is the time of physics, which is really no time at all, since it is defined out of existence. This is quite different from biological time. You could say that biological time doesn’t violate any laws of physics, but then again, if you have a good time studying physics, physics can never tell you why.

Likewise, maybe you like studying natural selection. I suppose that doesn’t violate natural selection, but then again, what can biology really tell us about the joys of the intellectual or spiritual life? 

8 comments:

julie said...

I suppose that doesn’t violate natural selection, but then again, what can biology really tell us about the joys of the intellectual or spiritual life?

Don't know why, but this reminds me of how Darwin's biological studies were as much about eating as many different kinds of creatures as possible as they were about noticing different species.

Gagdad Bob said...

RIP Jeff Beck:

Mr. Jeff Beck is equivalent to a long career, but he does not take the age of little. I'm already playing from the 1960s, yardbirds, but regardless, how are you? I joined the yardbirds, and the first thing I did was done at the barber, the hairstyle was made to mushroom cut, but hmm, the hairstyle is wolf cut, then Mr. Beck, I can't imagine a bit.

It is an evaluation of the future, even if it is said that I can not listen to it at all, I do not feel any pain itching at all about answering “is it?” But if this “truth” says the same thing, “wait a minute!! It becomes."

Hey, as my own, as a basic idea of that unique guitar phrase, is hope or hope, like that kind of future in the desired form, unpessimistic, it is a so-called predecessor of the times, in the form of saying so, is it a total opinion while cherishing it or permanently immortal aspects also actively try the attitude to go, is it a personality as a result, is it tied to that kind of thing? Hmm, when I try to express it in words, it's pretty dumb.



John Venlet said...

I suppose that doesn’t violate natural selection, but then again, what can biology really tell us about the joys of the intellectual or spiritual life?

I would think not much, with the very important exception of noting that the pleasures and pains we experience biologically can and are recorded as experiences within our minds such that we can think on them, recall them, learn from them, and thus be enlightened by them. Additionally, our minds/intellect, as has been documented, can at times control our bodies biological responses to stimuli, so there's that.

julie said...

Re. the Beck review, I feel those last two sentences. It's hard enough trying to describe something intangible, much moreso in a foreign language.

Gagdad Bob said...

One thing about Japanese reviewers, they may make no sense but they're not frivolous. They take music seriously, even if we have no idea what they're talking about.

Gagdad Bob said...

Just found out I can see Lisa Marie Presley's house from out my window. Helicopters circling like vultures.

Gagdad Bob said...

Biggest news in Calabasas since Kanye came out for Hitler.

julie said...

Crazy. Good luck with the helicopters, you'll probably be hearing them all night. As though there's any more news to be had at her home.

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