I also think that believing rocks are conscious is a mistake.
Some people may think rocks may be conscious... and some are pretty sure that is not the case.
The first part of your statement sounds exactly like what scientists say when they discuss the importance and depth of science. While I do not disagree and feel that yes, computer programming will eventually model everything, that really doesn't mean anything as models are not real. It's the same issue I have with certain areas of science and modern Economics in totality. Reality is not a "perfect model", when you create a "perfect model" (perfect vacuum, perfect supply/demand correlation, etc) you are not proving anything concrete about reality, as benzyme already said, you're "proving" a concept. While this does not make the data gained irrelevant in all cases, it is important that we remember that these models ARE NOT the real world.cellux said:This discipline will eventually model everything we know. We will understand reality by creating perfect models of it. The interesting question is whether there are limits to this exploration. I believe there are, and when these limits are found, they will serve as indirect pointers to what we call spirituality.
That's my opinion. Capsaicin produces different results than DMT. That's it, different. By what authority can anyone say either is more significant? Attaching any greater meaning or significance to either substance, and the result of its ingestion, is purely subjective. I don't believe in Objective Significance. It doesn't exist. We attribute significance to what we encounter based on our experience (or whatever BS we've been brainwashed with). There is no universal scale of absolute objective significance.gibran2 said:Different substances have different effects on the body and mind. And they do have effects. A breakthrough dose of DMT doesn’t produce the same effects (either immediate or long-term) as eating a chili pepper. I don’t understand why you would say mescaline (or other psychoactive substances) has no more significance than capsaicin?freethinker said:...I've generally always felt the same way about psychedelics. I've spent a lifetime with hippies, ravers, new agers, trancers, freaks, etc. I speak all forms of gobbledygook but don't particularly believe a word of it. The trip is in us, not the substance. The magic is in us, not the substance. We awaken, not the world around us. Many people put far too much reverence in the substance and the imagined perceptions of the world around us, instead of in ourselves...
There is no universal scale of absolute objective significance.
By what authority can anyone say either is more significant?...We attribute significance to what we encounter based on our experience
That sort of significance and meaning is created, subjectively, by us.
sure DMT has more powerful physiological effects than capsaicin (although even that is arguable since capsaicin is capable of producing high level hallucinations and out of body experiences
Different substances have different effects. That’s what I said before, and I don’t see how it can be argued.freethinker said:That's my opinion. Capsaicin produces different results than DMT. That's it, different. By what authority can anyone say either is more significant? Attaching any greater meaning or significance to either substance, and the result of its ingestion, is purely subjective. I don't believe in Objective Significance. It doesn't exist. We attribute significance to what we encounter based on our experience (or whatever BS we've been brainwashed with). There is no universal scale of absolute objective significance.
Now if you only define 'significance' in terms of strength of physiological effects, then sure DMT has more powerful physiological effects than capsaicin (although even that is arguable since capsaicin is capable of producing high level hallucinations and out of body experiences). But this entire thread is about questioning DMT's 'significance' in terms of having some importance and meaning regarding the spirit and its subsequent elevation to sacred substance because of this. That's what I argue against. That sort of significance and meaning is created, subjectively, by us. It doesn't exist, a priori, within the substance. From that perspective, no substance holds any more or less significance, meaning, or sanctity than any other.
Cool discussion BTW. Not attacking you or anyone at all here, just chatting.
clouds said:You see, in chemistry BS doesn't work, and in philosophy everything in permitted. You don't have to be smart to be a philosopher, you don't even have to study... you can say anything and some people will believe it. On the other hand, in chemistry you better be bright and clear (intelligent) to get your "truths" working, and people don't even have to believe it if they don't want to, it's a fact anyway...
....when facing real life problems, drugs are not THE answer, but they can HELP YOU finding it.
And I would also like to finish this writing with this quote from a person waaaaaay smarter than me:
"Drugs don’t do things, they only catalyze what’s already there. No drug has skill. It’s you who has skill. You only have to know it." - Alexander Shulgin
cellux said:I am a computer programmer. The essence of what I'm doing is building "living" mathematical models of reality. During this process, I learn about reality, because successfully modeling something is only possible by understanding that thing.
This discipline will eventually model everything we know. We will understand reality by creating perfect models of it. The interesting question is whether there are limits to this exploration. I believe there are, and when these limits are found, they will serve as indirect pointers to what we call spirituality.
The equations that science pumps out are divine truth and this is evidently where religion conflicts with science - people don't like being told that what they have been told in the past is horse tranquiliser. Whereas of course, in scientific circles one is used to the notion that one's beliefs are subject to change in light of new found truth. Science is the true religion.