Author Topic: State YOUR worldviews  (Read 6871 times)

liberalismo

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State YOUR worldviews
« on: November 20, 2008, 03:10:07 PM »
I wanted to get a concise idea of everyone's worldview here.
Everyone answer few these questions. Please be specific, but limit responses to 10 sentences. Be clear in your rational and justification for beliefs.


Also, BE PREPARED to defend your views to other board members, whatever they are.




How did the world form?
Why do you believe this?


How old is the world?
Why do you believe this?


Did God play any role in the world being formed?
Why do you believe this?


How did humans appear on earth?
Why do you believe this?


Is evolution by common descent reality?
Why do you believe this?


Is the big bang factual?
Why do you believe this?

Swedish Viking

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #1 on: November 22, 2008, 07:11:00 AM »
 How did the world form?  Don't know
 
How old is the world?  Probably a couple billion years, radio carbon dating is far from the only way we can detect the age of our planet and the various stars and galaxies and stuff.  It's the one that comes under fire the most from the religious community because it does, like most everything else, have it's drawbacks here and there.

Did God play any role in the world being formed?  God is everything and all that is, and maybe even all that isn't, if such a thing is possible.  Either vibration or thought came first...one causes the other, I'm not sure which but thought creates reality.  Belief, I believe, is the child of thought. 

How did humans appear on earth?  Humans as we know them?  Through a process of evolution and what might be called intelligent design.  Souls began incarnating into human 'animals' when they evolved to the point at which souls could derive some kind of life lesson from living their lives in phyiscal bodies. 

Is evolution by common descent reality?  Maybe, but doesn't seem so important whether it was 1 pair or a couple of pairs strung about the Earth...or many coming on the scene at the same time-at least not to me.

Is the big bang factual?  I think so, but more like hundreds of millions of big bangs.  Happening right now as well.

  I believe all of this because I went and looked for information from the people most likely to have it-those that have died and been resussitated, quantum physicists working with things of this nature...etc.  Then I filter it all through my own experiences and the experiences of others and somewhere in there I get a fuzzy picture of the truth.

liberalismo

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #2 on: November 22, 2008, 01:57:06 PM »
How old is the world?  Probably a couple billion years, radio carbon dating is far from the only way we can detect the age of our planet and the various stars and galaxies and stuff.  It's the one that comes under fire the most from the religious community because it does, like most everything else, have it's drawbacks here and there.

Yes. Carbon dating isn't used to determine earth's age.


Did God play any role in the world being formed?  God is everything and all that is, and maybe even all that isn't, if such a thing is possible.  Either vibration or thought came first...one causes the other, I'm not sure which but thought creates reality.  Belief, I believe, is the child of thought. 

What do you mean by "thought creates reality"? What proof do you have for this?

If God is everything and nothing, doesn't "God" lose all meaning?

How did humans appear on earth?  Humans as we know them?  Through a process of evolution and what might be called intelligent design.  Souls began incarnating into human 'animals' when they evolved to the point at which souls could derive some kind of life lesson from living their lives in phyiscal bodies. 

Define "soul".
How did souls incarnate into humans?
Where is your proof?



Is the big bang factual?  I think so, but more like hundreds of millions of big bangs.  Happening right now as well.

How could millions of big bangs happen right now? Proof?

 I believe all of this because I went and looked for information from the people most likely to have it-those that have died and been resussitated, quantum physicists working with things of this nature...etc.  Then I filter it all through my own experiences and the experiences of others and somewhere in there I get a fuzzy picture of the truth.

People who die and are brought back have no authority to say how the universe works or if there is an afterlife. When the brain is dead, and is then brought back, it goes through all sorts of biochemical and electrical changes which distort reality beyond anything close to what it is for the person, and their sense of time is also very distorted.

How many quantum physicists say souls exist, that millions of big bangs occur right now, or that "thought creates reality"? I'm assuming that you're misinterpreting various laws or theories in physics, like Quantum entanglement and wave function collapse.

Also some of it sounds like Scientology.

Swedish Viking

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #3 on: November 22, 2008, 11:55:47 PM »
Yes. Carbon dating isn't used to determine earth's age.


What do you mean by "thought creates reality"? What proof do you have for this?

If God is everything and nothing, doesn't "God" lose all meaning?

Define "soul".
How did souls incarnate into humans?
Where is your proof?



How could millions of big bangs happen right now? Proof?

People who die and are brought back have no authority to say how the universe works or if there is an afterlife. When the brain is dead, and is then brought back, it goes through all sorts of biochemical and electrical changes which distort reality beyond anything close to what it is for the person, and their sense of time is also very distorted.

How many quantum physicists say souls exist, that millions of big bangs occur right now, or that "thought creates reality"? I'm assuming that you're misinterpreting various laws or theories in physics, like Quantum entanglement and wave function collapse.

Also some of it sounds like Scientology.

  People who die have more authority than anyone on Earth when it comes to the afterlife, they're the only ones that have done it-whether we believe them or not prior to hearing their story, they are the first people we should go to to get a better understanding.  Many have come back with than just a story about a tunnel and a buzzing sound.
 
  Carbon dating is used to determine the age of things on the Earth, some of which are more than 6000 years old which puts the fundamental understanding of the book of the OT into question-that's why I mentioned it.

  Souls are what I think we are.  Our bodies are what I think we go into.  This is a common concept.  People have out of body experiences, many of which occur at their moment of death or near death, but at other times as well.  This has been somewhat acknowledged in the mainstream-I just watched a long seminar on it in Rejkyavik.   This has also been the subject of many many hypnosis sessions-regression to the moment of death, they're all the same.
 
   God, in my opinion...if God could want, it wouldn't be for meaning or definition, it's just to be and understand 'him'self thus far, which 'he' does through all of us and everything else in existance.  Maybe that's a meaning, but I don't think it's what you mean. 

   I googled 'many big bangs' two seconds ago: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2006/may/05/spaceexploration.universe  I don't think the Big Bang as we know it was as big as we think-I think it was and is a series of big(but smaller) bangs that continues to this day as the universe expands.  I don't know a lot about this particular subject, but you asked so I answered. 

  Not many QPs, but some, Hawking, Wolf, and even if he's not employed as a QP, Langan.  I don't know anything about Scientology, but I'm sure it serves a purpose here on Earth and shouldn't be ridiculed.  If it shares some of the concepts that I just mentioned, then it's similar to many other things in life today-because lots of them do. 
   

   

   

garebear

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #4 on: November 23, 2008, 12:56:46 AM »
If you're makng thousand word posts, perhaps it's time to refocus your energies.
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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #5 on: November 23, 2008, 08:51:47 AM »
no one that has been dead has ever come back. Death is defined by the inability to regain life. Why do you think they are called NEAR death experiences? They were not dead and we do not know much about dying brains as it is unethical to design most studies to examine this phenomenon.

Perhaps quantum coherance via entanglement could explain some hint of consciousness outside the body, but the vast majority of researchers highly doubt it.

liberalismo

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #6 on: November 23, 2008, 05:39:37 PM »
  People who die have more authority than anyone on Earth when it comes to the afterlife, they're the only ones that have done it-whether we believe them or not prior to hearing their story, they are the first people we should go to to get a better understanding.  Many have come back with than just a story about a tunnel and a buzzing sound.

Wrong. You're assuming that there is something "after death", but nothing suggests this. People who die and come back, as I've said, can't be trusted on their "experiences" due to the distortions in reality that they would experience right before death and right after death. Also, plenty have died and come back and experienced nothing. It all depends on what the people believe, it's a dream like state experienced right before and right after death.
 
 
Carbon dating is used to determine the age of things on the Earth, some of which are more than 6000 years old which puts the fundamental understanding of the book of the OT into question-that's why I mentioned it.

Well, Carbon dating only goes so far. Other forms of dating work with much older rocks.

 
Souls are what I think we are.  Our bodies are what I think we go into.  This is a common concept.  People have out of body experiences, many of which occur at their moment of death or near death, but at other times as well.  This has been somewhat acknowledged in the mainstream-I just watched a long seminar on it in Rejkyavik.   This has also been the subject of many many hypnosis sessions-regression to the moment of death, they're all the same.

Where is the proof?

Hypnosis is notoriously unreliable due to suggestion.
 

 
God, in my opinion...if God could want, it wouldn't be for meaning or definition, it's just to be and understand 'him'self thus far, which 'he' does through all of us and everything else in existance.  Maybe that's a meaning, but I don't think it's what you mean. 

This doesn't make sense.


 
 I googled 'many big bangs' two seconds ago: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2006/may/05/spaceexploration.universe  I don't think the Big Bang as we know it was as big as we think-I think it was and is a series of big(but smaller) bangs that continues to this day as the universe expands.  I don't know a lot about this particular subject, but you asked so I answered.  

There is no proof for this hypothesis, it's just a hypothesis.

Plus, It doesn't say a big bang every few seconds, it says that the big bangs that occured were cyclic in that they occurred every few dozen billion years.

 
Not many QPs, but some, Hawking, Wolf, and even if he's not employed as a QP, Langan.  I don't know anything about Scientology, but I'm sure it serves a purpose here on Earth and shouldn't be ridiculed.  If it shares some of the concepts that I just mentioned, then it's similar to many other things in life today-because lots of them do. 



When did Hawking say that souls exist?

Wolf is an eccentric.

Chris Langan has zero credibility in any field of science, he's just a bright guy who knows how to take IQ tests and has a lot of crazy theories about the world. He's said "you can prove the existence of God, the soul and an afterlife, using mathematics."


Scientology is a virus.

glen13

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #7 on: November 24, 2008, 06:53:59 AM »
RIP rapper MC Breed

Butterbean

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #8 on: November 24, 2008, 08:09:50 AM »
I wanted to get a concise idea of everyone's worldview here.
Everyone answer few these questions. Please be specific, but limit responses to 10 sentences. Be clear in your rational and justification for beliefs.


Also, BE PREPARED to defend your views to other board members, whatever they are.

Yes Master! ;D



How did the world form?
Why do you believe this?


I believe God created the world.  I believe the bible is true and I also don't have enough faith to believe that everything on earth and the fact that earth supports all kinds of life happened through chaos or chance.  I believe earth has a designer and a sustainer and that is God.


How old is the world?
Why do you believe this?

Don't know.




Did God play any role in the world being formed?
Why do you believe this?

Yes.  See above.


How did humans appear on earth?
Why do you believe this?

I believe God created life which of course includes humans.  I believe the bible is true and I also don't have enough faith to believe that humans, with all of our complexities and wonders could have evolved from a non-seeing, non-feeling, unconscious etc. organism.



Is evolution by common descent reality?
Why do you believe this?

If this is what your definition is:  The common descent of all organisms from a single ancestor then no. 

See above.


Is the big bang factual?
Why do you believe this?
Can you post the definition to which you are referring?
R

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #9 on: November 25, 2008, 09:49:57 AM »
Yes Master! ;D

I believe God created the world.  I believe the bible is true and I also don't have enough faith to believe that everything on earth and the fact that earth supports all kinds of life happened through chaos or chance.  I believe earth has a designer and a sustainer and that is God.
Don't know.

Yes.  See above.
I believe God created life which of course includes humans.  I believe the bible is true and I also don't have enough faith to believe that humans, with all of our complexities and wonders could have evolved from a non-seeing, non-feeling, unconscious etc. organism.
If this is what your definition is:  The common descent of all organisms from a single ancestor then no. 

See above.
Can you post the definition to which you are referring?

I guess you have never heard of self-organisation?

Quote
Self-organization
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Self-organization is a process of attraction and repulsion in which the internal organization of a system, normally an open system, increases in complexity without being guided or managed by an outside source. Self-organizing systems typically (though not always) display emergent properties.

Contents [hide]
1 Overview
2 History of the idea
3 Examples
3.1 Self-organization in physics
3.2 Self-organization vs. entropy
3.3 Self-organization in chemistry
3.4 Self-organization in biology
3.5 Self-organization in mathematics and computer science
3.6 Self-organization in cybernetics
3.7 Self-organization in human society
3.7.1 In economics
3.7.2 In collective intelligence
4 See also
5 References
6 Further reading
7 External links
 


[edit] Overview
The most robust and unambiguous examples of self-organizing systems are from physics. Self-organization is also relevant in chemistry, where it has often been taken as being synonymous with self-assembly. The concept of self-organization is central to the description of biological systems, from the subcellular to the ecosystem level. There are also cited examples of "self-organizing" behaviour found in the literature of many other disciplines, both in the natural sciences and the social sciences such as economics or anthropology. Self-organization has also been observed in mathematical systems such as cellular automata.

Sometimes the notion of self-organization is conflated with that of the related concept of emergence. Properly defined, however, there may be instances of self-organization without emergence and emergence without self-organization, and it is clear from the literature that the phenomena are not the same. The link between emergence and self-organization remains an active research question.

Self-organization usually relies on four basic ingredients:

Positive feedback
Negative feedback
Balance of exploitation and exploration
Multiple interactions

[edit] History of the idea
The idea that the dynamics of a system can tend by themselves to increase the inherent order of a system has a long history. One of the earliest statements of this idea was by the philosopher Descartes, in the fifth part of his Discourse on Method, where he presents it hypothetically.[citation needed] Descartes further elaborated on the idea at great length in his unpublished work The World.

The ancient atomists (among others) believed that a designing intelligence was unnecessary, arguing that given enough time and space and matter, organization was ultimately inevitable, although there would be no preferred tendency for this to happen. What Descartes introduced was the idea that the ordinary laws of nature tend to produce organization[citation needed] (For related history, see Aram Vartanian, Diderot and Descartes).

Beginning with the 18th century naturalists a movement arose that sought to understand the "universal laws of form" in order to explain the observed forms of living organisms. Because of its association with Lamarckism, their ideas fell into disrepute until the early 20th century, when pioneers such as D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson revived them. The modern understanding is that there are indeed universal laws (arising from fundamental physics and chemistry) that govern growth and form in biological systems.

The term "self-organizing" seems to have been first introduced in 1947 by the psychiatrist and engineer W. Ross Ashby. It was taken up by the cyberneticians Heinz von Foerster, Gordon Pask, Stafford Beer and Norbert Wiener himself in the second edition of his "Cybernetics: or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine" (MIT Press 1961). Self-organization as a word and concept was used by those associated with general systems theory in the 1960s, but did not become commonplace in the scientific literature until its adoption by physicists and researchers in the field of complex systems in the 1970s and 1980s.[1]


[edit] Examples
The following list summarizes and classifies the instances of self-organization found in different disciplines. As the list grows, it becomes increasingly difficult to determine whether these phenomena are all fundamentally the same process, or the same label applied to several different processes. Self-organization, despite its intuitive simplicity as a concept, has proven notoriously difficult to define and pin down formally or mathematically, and it is entirely possible that any precise definition might not include all the phenomena to which the label has been applied.

It should also be noted that, the farther a phenomenon is removed from physics, the more controversial the idea of self-organization as understood by physicists becomes. Also, even when self-organization is clearly present, attempts at explaining it through physics or statistics are usually criticized as reductionistic.

Similarly, when ideas about self-organization originate in, say, biology or social science, the farther one tries to take the concept into chemistry, physics or mathematics, the more resistance is encountered, usually on the grounds that it implies direction in fundamental physical processes. However the tendency of hot bodies to get cold (see Thermodynamics) and by Le Chatelier's Principle- the statistical mechanics extension of Newton's Third Law- to oppose this tendency should be noted.


[edit] Self-organization in physics
There are several broad classes of physical processes that can be described as self-organization. Such examples from physics include:

structural (order-disorder, first-order) phase transitions, and spontaneous symmetry breaking such as
spontaneous magnetization, crystallization (see crystal growth, and liquid crystal) in the classical domain and
the laser, superconductivity and Bose-Einstein condensation, in the quantum domain (but with macroscopic manifestations)
second-order phase transitions, associated with "critical points" at which the system exhibits scale-invariant structures. Examples of these include:
critical opalescence of fluids at the critical point
percolation in random media
structure formation in thermodynamic systems away from equilibrium. The theory of dissipative structures of Prigogine and Hermann Haken's Synergetics were developed to unify the understanding of these phenomena, which include lasers, turbulence and convective instabilities (e.g., Bénard cells) in fluid dynamics,
structure formation in astrophysics and cosmology (including star formation, galaxy formation)
self-similar expansion
Diffusion-limited aggregation
percolation
reaction-diffusion systems, such as Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction
self-organizing dynamical systems: complex systems made up of small, simple units connected to each other usually exhibit self-organization
Self-organized criticality (SOC)
In spin foam system and loop quantum gravity that was proposed by Lee Smolin. The main idea is that the evolution of space in time should be robust in general. Any fine-tuning of cosmological parameters weaken the independency of the fundamental theory. Philosophically, it can be assumed that in the early time, there has not been any agent to tune the cosmological parameters. Smolin and his colleagues in a series of works show that, based on the loop quantization of spacetime, in the very early time, a simple evolutionary model (similar to the sand pile model) behaves as a power law distribution on both the size and area of avalanche.
Although, this model, which is restricted only on the frozen spin networks, exhibits a non-stationary expansion of the universe. However, it is the first serious attempt toward the final ambitious goal of determining the cosmic expansion and inflation based on a self-organized criticality theory in which the parameters are not tuned, but instead are determined from within the complex system.[2]

[edit] Self-organization vs. entropy
Statistical mechanics informs us that large scale phenomena can be viewed as a large system of small interacting particles, whose processes are assumed consistent with well established mechanical laws such as entropy, i.e., equilibrium thermodynamics. However, “… following the macroscopic point of view the same physical media can be thought of as continua whose properties of evolution are given by phenomenological laws between directly measurable quantities on our scale, such as, for example, the pressure, the temperature, or the concentrations of the different components of the media. The macroscopic perspective is of interest because of its greater simplicity of formalism and because it is often the only view practicable.” Against this background, Glansdorff and Ilya Prigogine introduced a deeper view at the microscopic level, where “… the principles of thermodynamics explicitly make apparent the concept of irreversibility and along with it the concept of dissipation and temporal orientation which were ignored by classical (or quantum) dynamics, where the time appears as a simple parameter and the trajectories are entirely reversible.”[3]

As a result, processes considered part of thermodynamically open systems, such as biological processes that are constantly receiving, transforming and dissipating chemical energy (and even the earth itself which is constantly receiving and dissipating solar energy), can and do exhibit properties of self organization far from thermodynamic equilibrium.

A LASER (acronym for “light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation”) can also be characterized as a self organized system to the extent that normal states of thermal equilibrium characterized by electromagnetic energy absorption are stimulated out of equilibrium in a reverse of the absorption process. “If the matter can be forced out of thermal equilibrium to a sufficient degree, so that the upper state has a higher population than the lower state (population inversion), then more stimulated emission than absorption occurs, leading to coherent growth (amplification or gain) of the electromagnetic wave at the transition frequency.”[4]


[edit] Self-organization in chemistry
Self-organization in chemistry includes:

molecular self-assembly
reaction-diffusion systems and oscillating chemical reactions
autocatalytic networks (see: autocatalytic set)
liquid crystals
colloidal crystals
self-assembled monolayers
micelles
microphase separation of block copolymers
Langmuir-Blodgett films

[edit] Self-organization in biology
According to Scott Camazine.. [et al.]:

“ In biological systems self-organization is a process in which pattern at the global level of a system emerges solely from numerous interactions among the lower-level components of the system. Moreover, the rules specifying interactions among the system's components are executed using only local information, without reference to the global pattern.[5] ”

The following is an incomplete list of the diverse phenomena which have been described as self-organizing in biology.

spontaneous folding of proteins and other biomacromolecules
formation of lipid bilayer membranes
homeostasis (the self-maintaining nature of systems from the cell to the whole organism)
pattern formation and morphogenesis, or how the living organism develops and grows. See also embryology.
the coordination of human movement, e.g. seminal studies of bimanual coordination by Kelso
the creation of structures by social animals, such as social insects (bees, ants, termites), and many mammals
flocking behaviour (such as the formation of flocks by birds, schools of fish, etc.)
the origin of life itself from self-organizing chemical systems, in the theories of hypercycles and autocatalytic networks
the organization of Earth's biosphere in a way that is broadly conducive to life (according to the controversial Gaia hypothesis)

[edit] Self-organization in mathematics and computer science
As mentioned above, phenomena from mathematics and computer science such as cellular automata, random graphs, and some instances of evolutionary computation and artificial life exhibit features of self-organization. In swarm robotics, self-organization is used to produce emergent behavior. In particular the theory of random graphs has been used as a justification for self-organization as a general principle of complex systems. In the field of multi-agent systems, understanding how to engineer systems that are capable of presenting self-organized behavior is a very active research area.


[edit] Self-organization in cybernetics
Wiener regarded the automatic serial identification of a black box and its subsequent reproduction as sufficient to meet the condition of self-organization.[6] The importance of phase locking or the "attraction of frequencies", as he called it, is discussed in the 2nd edition of his "Cybernetics".[7] Drexler sees self-replication as a key step in nano and universal assembly.

By contrast, the four concurrently connected galvanometers of W. Ross Ashby's homeostat hunt, when perturbed, to converge on one of many possible stable states.[8] Ashby used his state counting measure of variety[9] to describe stable states and produced the "Good Regulator"[10] theorem which required internal models for self-organized endurance and stability.

Warren McCulloch proposed "Redundancy of Potential Command"[11] as characteristic of the organization of the brain and human nervous system and the necessary condition for self-organization.

Heinz von Foerster proposed Redundancy, R = 1- H/Hmax , where H is entropy.[12] In essence this states that unused potential communication bandwidth is a measure of self-organization.

In the 1970s Stafford Beer considered this condition as necessary for autonomy which identifies self-organization in persisting and living systems. Using Variety analyses he applied his neurophysiologically derived recursive Viable System Model to management. It consists of five parts: the monitoring of performance[13] of the survival processes (1), their management by recursive application of regulation (2), homeostatic operational control (3) and development (4) which produce maintenance of identity (5) under environmental perturbation. Focus is prioritized by an "algedonic loop" feedback:[14] a sensitivity to both pain and pleasure.

In the 1990s Gordon Pask pointed out von Foerster's H and Hmax were not independent and interacted via countably infinite recursive concurrent spin processes[15] (he favoured the Bohm interpretation) which he called concepts (liberally defined in any medium, "productive and, incidentally reproductive"). His strict definition of concept "a procedure to bring about a relation"[16] permitted his theorem "Like concepts repel, unlike concepts attract"[17] to state a general spin based Principle of Self-organization. His edict, an exclusion principle, "There are No Doppelgangers"[18] means no two concepts can be the same (all interactions occur with different perpectives making time incommensurable for actors). This means, after sufficient duration as differences assert, all concepts will attract and coalesce as pink noise and entropy increases (and see Big Crunch, self-organized criticality). The theory is applicable to all organizationally closed or homeostatic processes that produce endurance and coherence (also in the sense of Reshcher Coherence Theory of Truth with the proviso that the sets and their members exert repulsive forces at their boundaries) through interactions: evolving, learning and adapting.

Pask's Interactions of actors "hard carapace" model is reflected in some of the ideas of emergence and coherence. It requires a knot emergence topology that produces radiation during interaction with a unit cell that has a prismatic tensegrity structure. Laughlin's contribution to emergence reflects some of these constraints.


[edit] Self-organization in human society
The self-organizing behaviour of social animals and the self-organization of simple mathematical structures both suggest that self-organization should be expected in human society. Tell-tale signs of self-organization are usually statistical properties shared with self-organizing physical systems (see Zipf's law, power law, Pareto principle). Examples such as Critical Mass, herd behaviour, groupthink and others, abound in sociology, economics, behavioral finance and anthropology.[19]

In social theory the concept of self-referentiality has been introduced as a sociological application of self-organization theory by Niklas Luhmann (1984). For Luhmann the elements of a social system are self-producing communications, i.e. a communication produces further communications and hence a social system can reproduce itself as long as there is dynamic communication. For Luhmann human beings are sensors in the environment of the system. Luhmann put forward a functional theory of society.

Self-organization in human and computer networks can give rise to a decentralized, distributed, self-healing system, protecting the security of the actors in the network by limiting the scope of knowledge of the entire system held by each individual actor. The Underground Railroad is a good example of this sort of network. The networks that arise from drug trafficking exhibit similar self-organizing properties. Parallel examples exist in the world of privacy-preserving computer networks such as Tor. In each case, the network as a whole exhibits distinctive synergistic behavior through the combination of the behaviors of individual actors in the network. Usually the growth of such networks is fueled by an ideology or sociological force that is adhered to or shared by all participants in the network.


[edit] In economics
In economics, a market economy is sometimes said to be self-organizing. Friedrich Hayek coined the term catallaxy to describe a "self-organizing system of voluntary co-operation," in regard to capitalism. Most modern economists hold that imposing central planning usually makes the self-organized economic system less efficient. By contrast, some socialist economists consider that market failures are so significant that self-organization produces bad results and that the state should direct production and pricing. Many economists adopt an intermediate position and recommend a mixture of market economy and command economy characteristics (sometimes called a mixed economy). When applied to economics, the concept of self-organization can quickly become ideologically-imbued (as explained in chapter 5 of A. Marshall, The Unity of Nature, Imperial College Press, 2002).


[edit] In collective intelligence
Non-thermodynamic concepts of entropy and self-organization have been explored by many theorists. Cliff Joslyn and colleagues and their so-called "global brain" projects. Marvin Minsky's "Society of Mind" and the no-central editor in charge policy of the open sourced internet encyclopedia, called Wikipedia, are examples of applications of these principles - see collective intelligence.

Donella Meadows, who codified twelve leverage points that a self-organizing system could exploit to organize itself, was one of a school of theorists who saw human creativity as part of a general process of adapting human lifeways to the planet and taking humans out of conflict with natural processes. See Gaia philosophy, deep ecology, ecology movement and Green movement for similar self-organizing ideals. (The connections between self-organisation and Gaia theory and the environmental movement are explored in A. Marshall, 2002, The Unity of Nature, Imperial College Press: London).

None of the reasons you presented are cemented in evidence, they are all faith claims.
I hate the State.

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #10 on: November 25, 2008, 10:47:43 AM »
I guess you have never heard of self-organisation?

None of the reasons you presented are cemented in evidence, they are all faith claims.

thank you, the increase in complexity of simple molecules displaying emergent phenomenon is well documented. It takes no faith and explains the complexity or life, along with evolution we have an explanation.

To think anythign otherwise is ridiculous and to ignore reality.

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #11 on: November 25, 2008, 12:22:33 PM »
thank you, the increase in complexity of simple molecules displaying emergent phenomenon is well documented. It takes no faith and explains the complexity or life, along with evolution we have an explanation.

To think anythign otherwise is ridiculous and to ignore reality.

Head meet wall.
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Necrosis

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #12 on: November 25, 2008, 02:22:53 PM »
Head meet wall.

hardcore all the way hardcore

Deicide

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #13 on: November 25, 2008, 03:21:04 PM »
hardcore all the way hardcore

The fundies definitely are.
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Eisenherz

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #14 on: November 25, 2008, 03:55:51 PM »
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liberalismo

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #15 on: November 25, 2008, 04:20:23 PM »
Yes Master! ;D

I believe God created the world.  I believe the bible is true and I also don't have enough faith to believe that everything on earth and the fact that earth supports all kinds of life happened through chaos or chance.  I believe earth has a designer and a sustainer and that is God.

What suggests to you that a God exists and that the Bible is true?


The scientific view is not that live evolved through chance. Natural selection is the antithesis of chance. That which can survive best, is more likely to survive, and added up means a lot of diversity.

Don't know.

Does the bible suggest an age for the world?

Can you post the definition to which you are referring?

12-13 billion years ago the universe was a tiny thing and then started expanding very fast.

Eisenherz

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #16 on: November 25, 2008, 05:12:57 PM »
12-13 billion years ago the universe was a tiny thing and then started expanding very fast.

Yip Yip

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #17 on: November 26, 2008, 02:21:40 AM »
How did the world form?
A huge start once exploded, the fusion reactions that occurred in its core provided all the elements that are so abundant on Earth. Earth formed within a perfect distance away from the new forming star to accumulate matter containing these life friendly elements, plus a nice distance as to be not so hot / cold. Asteroids, and the collision with the huge object that would result in the creation of the moon also helped shape Earth, maybe even pushing it in an more suitable orbit to produce life.

How old is the world?
4.5 Billion


Did God play any role in the world being formed?
None what soever.


How did humans appear on earth?
Evolution via the means of natural selection, best described by Charles Darwin.


Is evolution by common descent reality?
Why do you believe this?


Is the big bang factual?
Probably, there does seem to be an epicenter to the Universe; which leads me to believe their was a sudden expansion of matter from a small point.
الاسلام هو شيطانية

Nordic Superman

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #18 on: November 26, 2008, 02:28:10 AM »
Carbon dating is used to determine the age of things on the Earth, some of which are more than 6000 years old which puts the fundamental understanding of the book of the OT into question-that's why I mentioned it.

Carbon used as a source in radiometric dating is only capable of going back 60000 years, gotta use different elemental isotopes to stretch back further in time.
الاسلام هو شيطانية

Butterbean

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #19 on: November 26, 2008, 11:11:05 AM »
I guess you have never heard of self-organisation?


Can you summarize your quote to apply it to my post to which you are referring?





None of the reasons you presented are cemented in evidence, they are all faith claims.
Very good. 
R

Butterbean

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #20 on: November 26, 2008, 11:21:53 AM »
What suggests to you that a God exists and that the Bible is true?

I believe that all that is did not just "happen."  I believe we and even a single cell are too complex to have just occurred from nothing.  SOme people may believe that matter always existed and if that was the case I still don't see things like vision springing forth from some life form because it would assist in it's survival.


I see no inexplicable contradictions in the Bible which makes me believe it was divinely inspired.  I know that some people believe that it is full of contradictions but from what I've seen some are not open to possible explanations. 

The salvation message in the Bible and me accepting Christ as Savior has changed my life and others around me (as far as I can tell ;D).  I feel peace like never before in my life, happier than I was before... etc.




The scientific view is not that live evolved through chance. Natural selection is the antithesis of chance. That which can survive best, is more likely to survive, and added up means a lot of diversity.


Do you believe that life began as a single organism and evolved from there?





Does the bible suggest an age for the world?

No.




12-13 billion years ago the universe was a tiny thing and then started expanding very fast.

Why do you believe this?
R

Deicide

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #21 on: November 26, 2008, 04:25:00 PM »
I believe that all that is did not just "happen."  I believe we and even a single cell are too complex to have just occurred from nothing.  SOme people may believe that matter always existed and if that was the case I still don't see things like vision springing forth from some life form because it would assist in it's survival.


I see no inexplicable contradictions in the Bible which makes me believe it was divinely inspired.  I know that some people believe that it is full of contradictions but from what I've seen some are not open to possible explanations. 

The salvation message in the Bible and me accepting Christ as Savior has changed my life and others around me (as far as I can tell ;D).  I feel peace like never before in my life, happier than I was before... etc.



Do you believe that life began as a single organism and evolved from there?


No.


Why do you believe this?


I guess all the leading scientists of the world are wrong and you are right, huh? Why don't you give them your reasons and they might change their minds.
I hate the State.

Butterbean

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #22 on: November 26, 2008, 07:04:21 PM »
I guess all the leading scientists of the world are wrong and you are right, huh? Why don't you give them your reasons and they might change their minds.
Oh brother ;D



Can you summarize your quote to apply it to my post to which you are referring?



bump
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Necrosis

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #23 on: November 29, 2008, 08:31:33 AM »
I believe that all that is did not just "happen."  I believe we and even a single cell are too complex to have just occurred from nothing.  SOme people may believe that matter always existed and if that was the case I still don't see things like vision springing forth from some life form because it would assist in it's survival.


you do beleive that the universe came from nothing, that god just magically made it. Scientists on the other hand do not beleive this and have evidence that nothing never existed.

freespirit

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Re: State YOUR worldviews
« Reply #24 on: November 29, 2008, 08:39:35 AM »
you do beleive that the universe came from nothing, that god just magically made it. Scientists on the other hand do not beleive this and have evidence that nothing never existed.

Do you believe that life just magically started from nothing to something, just like a coincidence? And, what do you mean by evidence that nothing never existed?