6/18/18

Popper, Feyerabend and Mills

Feyerabend seems to have had more of a phenomenologist's paradigm of a philosophy of science than Popper. Popper's preference for falsification of scientific works is reasonable enough. Falsfication of a scientific idea is still phenomenal and within a Sartrian paradigm of existential, dialectical reason. Science projects require testing and falsification or confirmation. If Cern didn't find a Higgs Bosun some people wouldn't believe it (they) exists. For a while people will believe it does ntil it turns out to be a package made of something else, or an emergent appearance from something unknown today.
If one uses CS Pierce's crterion of pragmatism (does it work) or even MIll's utilitarian and Austin's consequentialism to decide if a scientific presentation has value, maybe that's good enough. One does not need the ultimate hovercraft car that works on hydrogen to have a car; even a Tesla roadster counts as a useful, intermediate vehicle. Newton's theory of gravity was good enough for some time after all.

JS MIll's 'On Liberty' Chapter Three (my comments)


Mills regards custom as the great repressor of individuality and genius. Maybe Mills wanted a society where people could be openly homosexual and smoke opium all day if they preferred, without social approbation. I think it is more likely that the problems of an ant-like hive society of conformity that he regarded as developing in England in his time was the concern.
Farther on in chapter three Mills expresses some of the problems of mass social conformity and the way it represses individuality through pricks and goads, pressure and nodes. In some ways England is still evolving to become other-than-what-it-is 250 years after 'On Liberty' was composed (more or less). Mills saw England evolving the extirpation of individuality. China in that era was considered to be an example of a society with ubiquitous conformity. Being a royal subject of class superiors in England allowed for much greater yet endangered individuality than in China.. Maybe England will be renamed Little China after evolution works on English society long enough.
Mills believed free speech is useful for the advance of society and knowledge social and personal. Some free speech may be reasonably limited when it directly harms others. For instance one cannot shout 'fire' in a crowded theatre when there is no fire because of the stampede and loss of life that might occur. Mills writes about the relation of words to actions. Primarily words that incite select actions are wrong and may be subject to legal constrainsts are the issue. Because he supports idividuality as a summum bonum Mills takes a narrow view of limiting free speech.

Off We Go into the Wild Black Yonder; Space Force!

President Trump’s creation of a space force military branch is a good idea. The High Frontier, as President Reagan called it, needs its frontier patrols like those of the old west. It is unlikely that space force patrols will encounter hostile aliens affiliated with the Democrat Party however they can scout for usable materials for Earth and help establish outposts where civilian ventures may find support.

In a way Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong were Kit Carsons of their day. A space force probably will have numerous drone space vehicles with artificial intelligence and a variety of power modes such as nuclear reactors and ion drives in addition to electro-magnetic linear accelerators, laser beams reacting with the stern of ships and even chemical rockets such as Robert Goddard popularized and that continue to be used notably for launching nuclear warheads on Earth.

A space force with even a modest budget cut loose from Earth concerns and looking forward to actual space and planetary missions might be able to move ahead with pure space travel technology without concern about the friction of Earth.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/06/18/trump-orders-establishment-space-force-as-6th-branch-military.html



Will China Trade War Consolidate Wall Street?

The trade war with China may help deflate market micro-bubbles on Wall Street and renormalize the market at a more solid, sustainable level. Alternatively it could lead to a dissolving slide far down the slope. Instead of being an explosive catastrophe like the Mt. St. Helens eruption that would fertilize and renew the business ecosphere after the disaster, the war might bring a modest market correction and that isn't bad.

https://www.thestreet.com/markets/global-stocks-retreat-as-u-s-china-trade-war-intensifies-14624186

6/17/18

Nathan the Wise and The Ring Parable


Reading Lessing’s play Nathan the Wise was interesting. I read the first couple of chapters aloud. Lessing was a talented writer. His play reminds me qualitatively of Shakespeare’s work. As a literary work it is worthy of better analysis than mine. I am not sure that it is especially relevant today philosophically for understanding more than the history of literature; if it is, the primary value is as an early work of abstract existential analysis (18th century).
The Ring Parable is part of the play. It may be said to be central and the central point for the play and occurs in the third of five acts. The leading dramatis personae are Nathan, Saladin, the Templar, and Nathan’s daughter Recha. There are a few supporting characters. The play involves two interwoven themes and perhaps a greater unifying theme. The plotting is excellent and pace of story development excellent with increasing disclosure and revelation right unto the end.
I have a different philosophical point of view about language, theology, philosophy and history than did Lessing or skeptics that a priori dismiss the veracity of religions with an assumption of equality (like algebra literals) in order to be tolerant. I regard language as data used to communicate information. It has an epistemological role in the way pointillism has in painting for semiotic value for others and for oneself. One does not to be Mihail Tal to evaluate chess positions over-the-board. Quick wits and deep learning helps win games. Evaluating religious veracity is comparable to chess. Lessing uses the analogy. It is perhaps the underlying truth for Lessing about things-an interesting game. Some pawns are not very thoughtful, have deep biases inertially and can only move forward in space-time while rulers (Queens and etc.) have more complex possibilities like the King's Gambit.

I don’t tend to regard religious content as a literary narrative or history as incapable of providing the possibility of confirming or falsifying religious content. Neither would I place all religions upon an equal abstract footing without the prospect for objective evaluation of inherent true meaning any more than I would say that physical theories cannot be evaluated or confirmed for accuracy, or historical essays for accuracy. Lessing didn’t have the benefit of much of the scholastic material available today for critical analysis in the field of comparative religion. It is easy to read the Talmud and Cabala, Koran and Pentateuch in addition to the New Testament, The Tales of Gilgamesh, of Pure Land Buddhism, Shinto, The Analects of Confucius and Lao Tzu and think about the content and how it fits into history. One can read the Bhagavad Gita and Buddha’s noble eightfold path and consider how military and social structure have a co-evolutionary dialectic with religiosity. The Ring Parable is used to consider three religions as bacteria in petri dishes of equal value for research and of implicit use for inoculation against social psychological maladies that may or may not work and that could only be found to have worked or not after a thousand years of generations reproducing. The great doctor examiner at the Level Four religious facility could examine the three dishes of bacteria for himself then and find how the inoculations had worked out.

Of course some or all of the religion-bacteria could have been placebos. If the Doctor-god had an evil streak; possibly Zoroastrian or even the Demi-Urge of Arthur Schopenhauer, the inoculation may really have been a malevolent virus (that is my inference about false religions being allowed to be created).
Lessing’s play nearly turns out to be a tragedy with the Templar interested in wedding Nathan’s daughter who really was adopted and is the Templar’s sister, yet luckily for Nathan who might have been burned by the Christian patriarch for kidnapping a Christian child (he didn’t-the infant was given by the Patriarch’s friar who was a friend of the father of the kid who was a Templar killed in war who in turn was given the child when the mother died), Saladin who was the slaughterer of Crusaders and filled Acre with their blood had spared the life of the young Templar after capturing him because he looked like his diseased brother and turned out to be a son of his dead brother, Saladin and the wise Nathan were able to clear matters up to all the interested parties. They learned that they were all inter-related and so should love one another.

Blood and adoption are thicker than religion, yet maybe not baptismal water. Infant baptism was another issue of the era (and still is). Illiteracy was also a large issue in the era of the Crusades yet most people couldn’t read about the problems it presented to society in that time.

Feudalism and social organization around religion, land and loyalty to rulers didn’t place a great need on individuals besides clerics being literate. Only slowly did literacy arise after the invention of the printing press. In Germany during the second year of book publishing 400 copies of the Bible went out and the numbers went up markedly each year. That was hundreds of years after the conclusion of the crusades though.

Today the widespread profusion of cheap scholastic material hasn’t coincided with a necessary increase in social wisdom so far as to overcome the domination of certain thematic directions given by the preference of the most wealthy. Nathan was quite wealthy as was Saladin. Today they might be billionaires. Those with worldly wealth may place philosophical and spiritual concerns as minor concerns. Today, Sunday, Google feature hand prints of paint made with little dinosaurs. That is a rather evolutionary anti-religion theme for a Sabbath day; one of a zillion trivial and sometimes sharp jibes against Christianity and people of faith generally.

Maybe the best value of Lessing’s Ring Parable is in its facility for forming an abstract way of viewing major concepts and hence all concepts. Knowledge is conditional and comprised of data and some is accurate and meaningful and other not so. Pierce’s [pragmatic approach applied to epistemology might be in one form evaluated by the actual use of it. Can a map for instance actually lead one to water to drink in a desert; can Christianity and faith in Jesus Christ actually lead one to salvation, etc. Europe in Lessing's time was a tensioned, boundaried collective of cells with membranes jostling about the body. I believe Sartre wrote much of the Critique of Dialectical Reason after visiting the Soviet Union. He had been a prisoner of war; like the Templar and was liberated by his captors. A collection of his essays was named; 'Between Existentialism and Marxism'. I think he felt the same sort of tension East-West as Lessing felt of Europe, beliefs,epistemology and war in the abstract.

Prejudices are a belief about data. Data is however conditional and its validity follows its use. Consider writing artificial intelligence programs without prejudices or pre-written modules that perform various functions. They are the equivalent of automobile engine parts and it is difficult to get anywhere in a vehicle without them. Prejudices are like actualized D.N.A. and stem cells that have taken form into becoming a body that can’t morph into something else. Good programs can be made to adapt to new information though and perhaps even rewrite code. Human bodies have a tougher time with that although Bruce Jenner tried for some reason. Philosophers need to have some concepts in language that work, as must all language have structure to carry meaning. One needs to know what it is that one knows and its relevance for one’s personal being.

One may develop personal values about moral issues that are simply a matter of will, and that is valid if one knows that it is personal will though one may wonder why one wills something. One needs to construct data values with as much accurate content as possible (in physics or mathematics for instance) if logic and language are to be of practical utility for-oneself and for-others. It is wrong to leave everything in a Symphonists paradigm and deny the value of data constructs altogether as if words could not present accurate word-pictures of the world of experience more often than not (if it is less often than 51% language would be rather challenging to use for much besides making good sounds like music).

In Lessing’s story the Ring Parable might give Saladin a better insight into Nathan’s character. It's a nice story yet no other people heard it and the narrative plays out as it would have as fate or god would have it. I don't think it brought Saladin to act differently. In a sense he seems to be Nathan’s brother in wisdom already. It’s too bad that the west never actually gave a Kurdish homeland to the Kurds as they were promised after the end of the First World War. A small piece of Syria would be a place to start. Saladin's brother Assad fought as a Templar himself, and lost his life and his order Acre too. People of Germany in the 1930s did not view things in a terribly religious way and the romanticism and skepticism may have led to the holocaust and the annexations of the Sudetenland and as much of Eastern Europe as possible. That was about money, race and super-power; winners and losers. Saladin didn’t care much about money in the play. In real life maybe he was not so detached from wealth and public accounts.







Scripturally Speaking, Obeying the Law is Correct


Recently the broadcast media yippees of the day trotted out the war-wagons of palaver to chastise the Attorney General for his opinion that Christians should obey the laws, as should other people. Equal protection of the law is an important concept for democracy and justice; illegal aliens and citizens in the United States have equal protection of and accountability to the law; or should.

Governments can pass unjust laws. The U.S. Declaration of Independence explains how natural law provides an inherent right-of-revolt against unjust laws and rulers. It is a rational criterion that must be used by thinking people though about when it is right to revolt rather than to be a subversive because everything doesn’t follow one’s own political preferences. Too far to the non-conformist side and one finds the realm of sociopathic and tyrannical cult behavior.

Matthew Chapter 5 reads; “17 Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill.

18 For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.

19 Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach [them], the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.”

Jesus was speaking about the religious laws of God rather than those of man, and that is a source of confusion to many modern secular people. They do not understand that Jesus was not working to reinforce a theocratic secular government; he created a new legal system where the laws of God were written on the heart rather than in civil code. Even so, he fulfilled the old religious laws rather than destroyed them.

Jesus said in the Gospel according to John Chapter 14, verse 21; “He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him.”

Christians today should share a priesthood of believers church structure where all participate each Sunday as ministers professing faith. The Apostle Paul wrote in Romans 2, verse 13 that; “(For not the hearers of the law [are] just before God, but the doers of the law shall be justified.”

 Even so, traditional, pre-literate era Christian ministers should be aware that Christianity is about sharing Christianity rather than trying to change political affairs. It is a great achievement in a nation saturated with a yippee media, secular godless values and illegal drugs for a congregation to gather on a Sunday to worship God and turn away from secular political concerns. There are a great number of laws today that are against the spirit of the word of God, yet Christians themselves can work affirmatively on a world of Christian concerns civilly that positively affect the body-politic.

The silent majority (as Richard Nixon called it) obey the laws of government. That is good and sometimes bad (as in the slavery era of the south) or the 3rd Reich of the Nazi Socialist Worker’s Party. Bad leadership can take a people far to the gates of hell as in the case of the Bolshevik Party of the former Soviet Union. In this era of mass communication with the masses indoctrinated by a Universe of shallow sound bite silliness and propaganda from the turbo-superficial and short-sighted broadcast media, three scriptural citations are useful to consider on the topic of obeying government (and the U.S. Government is about the people deciding what laws should be made and are just through political representatives);

Romans 13:1-5 – “Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God.”  

Titus 3:1 –“Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and powers, to obey magistrates, to be ready to every good work,”

Galatians 3:11 – “no man is justified by the law in the sight of God, [it is] evident: for, The just shall live by faith.”




6/16/18

What Was Beyond the T=0 SIngularity


There are numerous theories about the singularity at the start of the Universe (or Multiverse) and the paradigm in which it existed. The General Theory of Relativity extrapolation regarding gravity reduced to time=0 has the point infinitely, vanishingly small. No one actually understands what occurs to either mass or energy in such a state. Some believe it stops shrinking to nothing somewhere (maybe because time has stopped too) and is stable, fair and balanced before quantum uncertainty makes it jittery and it explodes then hyper-inflates for a fraction of a second.

That's all speculation. Quantum mechanics don't work at that level. People have invented pre-big bang theories and view the t=0 singularity as a kind of middle of an hour glass that another Universe collapses in to with gravity before exploding outward. There are DeBroglie-Bohm and Everettian versions of quantum mechanics differing from those of the standard model of the Copenhagen Interpretation and they would allow different ideas about the singularity (unless it was a membrane instead of a singularity) to be made.

The mass-energy of the Universe compacted to a singularity could be configured in as many ways as human imagination allows. I like the idea about Divine Mechanics. Some prefer Tegmark's concept of the Universe composed of mathematics in-itself. A point is a zero-dimension thing, If a point with a Universe full of energy-mass existed it seems as if there could be no virtual particles around it since that energy would be attracted to it as should everything else across empty space.

Virtual particles are something like ghost super-positions of particles that actually exist. It could be that the singularity had a quantum cloud extending in all possible positions across the empty space where it was not. Even the quantum cloud would have used some energy-perhaps equal to the amount of energy in the singularity; yet I am skeptical of that.

One wonders what sort of energy would contain or define the limits of superpositioned particles of the cloud centered on the singularity; if there is a Multiverse would the superpositoned cloud be limited to just one Universe or all possible Universes? Would the quantum cloud of any particular Universe interfere with the cloud field of others?

This is Morality

Morality it is said is a description of what people (society) actually do, ethically speaking. Pros can write about an ideal moral system as may anyone else so inclined, yet the prevailing moral system is what people and society actually do and the manner they implement their formal procedures and guidelines for what is named as 'moral'.

There may be moral systems that are true and correct that are not used at all, and their may be divine criteria for human behavior that are true and adhered to by some and disregarded by others. Morality for a society is however an abstract description of the way people behave.

Mind Over Matter

Some wonder if human beinginess is nothing besides biological drives. It isn't a new interest.

 One has biology and one has thought. Thought differs quite a bit from organic matter. For thousands of years people distinguished mind from matter and believed in the rise of thought over matter and soley organic being. Recent times have brought a regressive movement of reductionism wherein thought is regarded as phenomenal and a meaningless rider on matter.

 Actually it is incredble that sophistication can lead to sillyness.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions Thinks People Should Obey Laws; What Next!


The Attorney General of the United States; Jeff Sessions, recently expressed the radical opinion that people should obey laws and that government is good for social order. He compounded the inflamatory rhetoric of his extremist point of view in citing Biblical scripture to support the point. A constellation of mainstream godless atheist media publications soundly rejected his scripture quotes and provided much scripture to indicate the Bible supports their mainstream left-corporatist hatred of Jeff Sessions and all things Donald Trump'd.

Illegal entry into the United States is a crime — as it should be,” he said. “Persons who violate the law of our nation are subject to prosecution. I would cite you to the apostle Paul and his clear and wise command in Romans 13 to obey the laws of the government because God has ordained them for the purpose of order.”

Government may or may not be good. Hugo Grotius in 1625 examined that problem of laws being a good or bad thing in his paper The Laws of War and Peace...

 "For you, who know the fate of men and gods, What is, what shall be, shameful would it be To know not what is just.

3. Such a work is all the more necessary because in our day, as in former times, there is no lack of men who view this branch of law with contempt as having no reality outside of an empty name. On the lips of men quite generally is the saying of Euphernus, which Thucydides quotes, that in the case of a king or imperial city nothing is unjust which is expedient. Of like implication is the statement that for those whom fortune favors might makes right, and that the administration of a state cannot be carried on without injustice.
Furthermore, the controversies which arise between peoples or kings generally have Mars as their arbiter. That war is irreconcilable with all law is a view held not alone by the ignorant populace; expressions are often let slip by well-informed and thoughtful men which lend countenance to such a view. Nothing is more common than the assertion of antagonism between law and arms. Thus Ennius says:

Not on grounds of right is battle joined, But rather with the sword do men Seek to enforce their claims.

Horace, too, describes the savage temper of Achilles in this wise:
Laws, he declares, were not for him ordained; By dint of arms he claims all for himself.
Another poet depicts another military leader as commencing war with the words:
Here peace and violated laws I leave behind."

Antigonus when advanced in years ridiculed a man who brought to him a treatise on justice when he was engaged in besieging cities that did not belong to him. Marius declared that the din of arms made it impossible for him to hear the voice of the laws. Even Pompey, whose expression of countenance was so mild, dared to say: ‘When I am in arms, am I to think of laws?’"

Jeff Sessions cited the Bible in support of his radical notion that government is a good thing. If it was that does not mean that governments cannot do wrong. One  need merely consider the governments of Bill Clinton and Adolph Hitler to realize that. 

In theory, governments do exist for social order and it is incumbent upon citizens of a democracy to obey laws and respect their own self-governing structure. A government needs to upgrade its administrative laws in response to new external challenges to its existence. Illegal immigration and foreign invasion are external challenges to social order.


Humans May Have Evolved From Rats; Adam and Eve Were Spliced In

 Humans May Have Evolved From Rats Named Purgatoriuos 65 Million Years BC I had a concentration in history in college and learned a lot from...