Notvacka wrote:Bernard wrote:I don't get why some people think that life had a beginning.
Well, the only life we know of is life here on earth, an the earth itself has a finite history. How do you suppose life exists here now, unless it began at some point? Or are you talking about life in some other sense?
Well I for one cannot be included in those who believe that what we have here is the only life we know of. The earth for one is alive, and far more aware than we are. It's an awareness that we can only glimpse with our own awareness, and not with our reason at all. The sun, all those planets, stars and galaxies are beings in possession of, what is to us, extreme forms of consciousness and awareness that are unspeakably different from our own, yet which have all the same markers as our own: experience of self, mortality, wellbeing, etcetera - but not as we experience those things at all. The universe - whatever it is - is itself, I believe, a conscious being
As for the rise of organic life on earth, I think there was a certain point for sure from which it began historically on earth. But I also believe in the recycling of consciousness via the phenomena of death and conception. I don't believe that consciousness can just kick start from nothing; it has been forever, and will be forever, through the infinite replacement of living forms. To extrapolate: when a being dies the form it was in discards and
being becomes pure, timeless. The very instant this occurs it gets a new form. Because the nature of conciousness/being is to evolve and grow, the new form will be of more a capacity to house consciousness, therefore the old form will not be repeated. Also, when being is freed from form via death it is not bound by time, so it re-enters form without the dictates of time interfering, so it could be in the past or future of its previous form. I don't believe in devolution.
If one then imagines that one can take the whole of all the organic beings that have lived, are living, or are yet to live on earth and can lay them all out [call this layout 1]. Then, starting, for arguments sake, with viruses, you lay them out in perfect order in terms of capacity for consciousness right through to the most evolved specimen of homo-sapiens. By doing this you would have a different view of evolution than were you to lay them out [call this layout 2] in perfect order according to when they historically occurred on earth (you would have to break this down into many chronological zillionths of a second if you consider how quickly things like bacteria on earth are coming into being in any given second... but I think its still theoretically possible). Layout one is, in my view, what evolution most truly is, whereas Layout 2, which is still truly evolution, is more like a consequence or, at worse, a reflection of layout 1.
If you have been bothered to follow the idea this far, from all that I've said, layout 1 of organic life on earth can be seen as one of many, many similar layout 1's right across the cosmos, so that when layout 1 is exhausted here it begins again somewhere also in space and time on some other sort of earth dictated by its evolutionary mandate, just as layout 1 here is the result of a previous layout 1.
Clear as mud? Call in the whitecoats if you please, but that's sort of how I see it.