RE: MD Quality as a Possibility Field

From: Case (Case@iSpots.com)
Date: Mon Nov 21 2005 - 17:16:43 GMT

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    [Ian]
    I buy quite a lot of this, or something very like it. It's where I've been
    coming from for 4 or 5 years, with "quantum information" itself being the
    most fundamental level of a physicalism or naturalism-like metaphysics.

    Certainty / uncertainty, causality / non-locality, chaos / coherence,
    patterns / levels, interaction / significance - all quantum concepts fit
    well with both information and quality - static / dynamic. It's why I made
    the original connection between Talbot / Capra / Josephson / Stapp and
    Pirsig et al.

    (The difficulty with metaphors at this fundamental level of physics is
    relating visualisation of the metaphor with common sense reality, between
    quantum scale uncertainty, and terrestrial chaos & causality.
    It's the intangibility of the interactions that we know here as quality that
    is all too easy to pin down with some tangible metaphor, and in doing so to
    kill the beast. Better to keep the intangible possibilities open, than
    collapse the wave function in to tangible "objects" - etc - but caveat
    metaphor.)

    BTW - There are alternative schools of physical thought (eg anthropic
    entropic principle) that say Einstein was right and Heisenberg's uncertainty
    is an erroneous explanation for cosmological evidence - but I'm still on the
    side of "accepted" quantum physics at the moment.

    Anyway, add non-locality to your uncertainty and I think we have quality.

    [Case]
    Thanks for your comments. I would be interested to hear more about you views
    on quantum information. I have long suspected that if something like
    uncertainty rules at the quantum level, then it must manifest itself at the
    macro level as well. It is a terrifying prospect though don't you think?

    Every time I meet Buddha on the road, I at least try to bitch slap him...

    How to you see the anthropic principle or entropy relating to quantum
    uncertainty?

    -------------------------------------
    On 11/18/05, Case <Case@ispots.com> wrote:
    > While we are on the subject of configuration of the MoQ: I would like
    > to propose yet another. This is actually an outgrowth of the MoQ I
    > posed earlier. I have been working with the version I presented
    > earlier for about
    > 15 years now and am very happy with it, thank you. But I think the way
    > I usually express it does not capture its full vitality. So here is
    > another way to spin it minus all the negative reaction to the received
    > view of the MoQ.
    >
    > First comes Quality. Quality remains undefined. It is in principle
    > unknowable. If it is really "the way things are" then it is undefined
    > because:
    >
    > 1. We are equipped through our sense to apprehend only a faction of it.
    > 2. Because of the uncertainty principle there is always something
    > unknowable built into whatever it is.
    >
    > Quality is described if not defined in Pirsig's work. His areas of
    > concern influence the aspects of it that he describes and how he spins
    > them. I have complained in the past that this has led to neglect of
    > other aspects of Quality. Particularly the lack of emphasis on harmony
    > that is central to Taoism. But here I want to focus on this notion of
    > the undefined quality of Quality. Be saying that Quality is undefined
    > we are saying that there is an element of uncertainty at the core of the
    MoQ.
    >
    > We can't know it for sure not matter how hard we try and all
    > definitions have to begin with: "It's kinda like..." So another way of
    > spinning Quality is to say, "It is kinda like the biggest probability
    > field ever." That is Quality is the set of everything that is possible.
    >
    > If Quality is regarded as infinite possibility then it condenses into
    > probabilities. That is things that are likely to happen and things
    > that aren't. Since there is a probability, however unlikely, that
    > anything can happen; the present is where everything resolves into
    probabilities of 100%.
    > (Note here: the present is the only place where all probabilities are
    100%.
    > The future and the past are both subject to varying degree of
    > probability.) We exist in a kind of temporal probability bubble with
    > uncertain ahead and behind us. Much more can be said about this but moving
    along...
    >
    > When regarded in this way and strictly from the perspective of bipedal
    > ape descendants, the ability to approximate probability is of enormous
    > evolutionary advantage. One of the stated goals of science is to
    > enhance our ability to predict and control nature or: to understand
    > and manipulate probability. I have mentioned a couple of times
    > previously that having a temporal buffer aids us in this by helping us
    > transcend that immediacy of the present. It allows us to apprehend the
    > dimension of time in the same way the stereoscopic vision allows us to
    convert two dimensions into three.
    >
    > I think I am jumping ahead a bit and skipping some steps but I never
    > underestimate my capacity to bore the reader so: from the standpoint
    > of the MoQ. Static quality relates to Quality as manifest in things or
    > ideas whose probabilities are well known or can be estimated with a
    > high degree of accuracy. Concepts such as chairness make sense because
    > there is a high probability that English speakers will be able agree
    > on what constitutes a chair. This probability of agreement increases
    > with each new encounter with objects that have chairlike Qualities.
    >
    > Dynamic Quality then relates to objects and events whose probabilities
    > are not well know or to things that can change known or previously
    > estimated probabilities. This arises from the nature of Quality or
    > possibility. Take the chair which is highly static and add a
    > hurricane. The structure and action of the hurricane is fairly static
    > in some sense but its path is Dynamic as are Qualities it introduces
    > into the objects in its path, say a chair. If the chair is sitting in
    > a room and the weather condition are held within certain limits the
    > chair's future is pretty static. But if a hurricane rolls though it
    > creates a very Dynamic environment in which the future location and
    configuration of the chair are less predictable.
    >
    > From the standpoint of the MoQ much can be constructed from this. Anal
    > sizing the four levels (which I continue to regard as a set of static
    > latches inhibiting the advancement of the MoQ) in this manner should
    > prove fruitful. However, one of the source of unfruitfulness is the
    > desire on the part of many here to jump straight into the 4th level
    > with insufficient attention to the others. I am on record as stating
    > that the four levels in no way discrete as Pirsig contends. But lets
    > start with the first level for a change.
    >
    > We exist in a place and time where conditions are such that there is a
    > great diversity in the number of possible physical interactions. We
    > live in Baby Bear's bed were it is not too hard and not too soft. It
    > is just right. It is just right in the sense that physical systems are
    > in the right balance and the distribution of various elements is in
    > the right proportion. But it is also just right because they have been
    this way for a very very long time.
    > This make the environment of Planet Earth dynamic in its constitution
    > but static with respect to time.
    >
    > Ok, I am outta time myself at the moment and I guess before going on
    > with this I would like a little reality check. The main point I am
    > getting at is that uncertainty and probability should be more fully
    > appreciated and explored within the MoQ. I am not really settled for
    > example on whether DQ is all about the change in probabilities or the
    > number of possible interactions of probability. Carbon is highly
    > dynamic because of the number of possible interactions it can have
    > with other elements. Hurricanes are dynamic because they alter existing
    probabilities...
    >
    > Is anyone buying this?
    >
    > Case

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