Earlier today I was reading Feynman's letters, and I came across one that reminded me very much of this thread. Seeing now this equation of yours, I realize it fits even more perfectly."Nothingness lies coiled in the heart of a being, like a worm."
"Things are entirely what they appear to be and behind them...there is nothing." (Jean-Paul Sartre)
"Being and non-being create each other." (Lao Tse)
"If there were not the nothing, there could not be anything, because this separation between beings and Being is necessary." (Martin Heidegger)
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0 = ∞
You've posted some quotes you admire. I do not understand them. Allow me to post a quote I admire. I hope you will understand it.
A certain Barbara Kyle wrote to Feynman:
And Feynman replied:To Richard Feynman from an ignorant layman on first hearing (but not yet having read---it's on order) the Messenger Lectures.
What do I understand? That when you go to count which particles through which holes have made their way, the light you shine to let you see, changes the situation and makes them---as who would not---disappear.
I understand that when you want to see how fast they go or exactly what they look like, you alter their speed and change their character.
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The maths give you, you say, infinity when you'd expected (what was it? I didn't catch it) was it zero? Or another number preconceived? If zero---is that so different from infinity? Both of them circles?
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I do not know what you are seeking. After all this talk of Neutral and of Zero, of Being and of Nothing, what have you found? That people have brains, and that people are conscious? But everyone knows this already! What purpose is served by saying so, using more---and more complicated---words than that?Dear Ms. Kyle,
May I thank you for your letter.
From the list of "What do I Understand" I am very happy to see so much really understood. You get a high grade from the professor---perhaps 90%. Not 100% because you didn't understand why getting infinity from a calculation is so annoying.
Thinking I understand geometry and wanting to cut a piece of wood to fit the diagonal of a five foot square, I try to figure out how long it must be. Not being very expert, I get infinity---useless---nor does it help to say it may be zero because they are both circles. It is not philosophy we are after, but the behavior of real things. So in despair, I measure it directly---lo, it is near to seven feet---neither infinity nor zero. So, we have measured these things for which our theory gives such absurd answers. We seek a better theory or understanding that will give us numbers close to what we measure. We are seeking the formula that gives the square root of fifty.
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Can your theory tell us anything about consciousness, besides the simple fact of its existence? Can it explain why my color monitor works, why red light and green light together look yellow? You complain that materialistic science can say nothing about qualia because it denies that they exist, but you say nothing about them yourself besides asserting that they exist.
(My, do I sound pretentious.
But, on the other hand, I'm right.