Alexiev wrote: ↑Tue Apr 08, 2025 1:22 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Apr 07, 2025 6:35 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 07, 2025 5:57 pm
It is what you find impossible to conceive. And therefore inexplicable.
How is your “right hemisphere” today?
Ah, there it is. The last refuge of the intellectually cornered:
“It’s inexplicable.”
Alexis, that’s not wisdom. That’s a white flag.
You’re basically admitting you can’t explain what you just claimed exists. You invoke a “divine spirit,” but when asked what that even means, you say it’s beyond conception—
even yours. So let’s be clear: you just described something
you yourself can’t describe, and then passed that off as profound. That’s not depth. That’s dodging.
You want to sound like you’re operating on some enlightened plane, but what you’re actually doing is hiding behind the fog of vague mysticism. If your “divine spirit” can’t be defined, can’t be tested, can’t be distinguished from pure fantasy, then what’s the difference between your worldview and a child’s imaginary friend? Seriously. If it’s “inexplicable,” then it’s indistinguishable from
made up.
And let’s not pretend that referencing the “right hemisphere” is some kind of mic drop. That’s just tossing neurobabble at a probi.e. em you’ve already abandoned explaining. If your only defense is that something is
so deep it can’t be understood, then what the hell is the point of saying it at all? You may as well replace your whole argument with “magic,” because that’s what this is: vague, hand-wavy, poetic magic.
You’re not engaging with ideas—you’re retreating into language that no one, not even you, is meant to understand. And you’re doing it with a smug little emoji. That's not just cowardice—it's arrogant cowardice.
So here's your choice: define what you mean, or admit you’ve got nothing but fluff. If you’re going to keep babbling about the inexplicable, then maybe it’s time to step off the stage and let the grown-ups talk.
Hello, Mike. I have no idea whether Alexis can explain himself -- but I can explain in simple, easily understood terms the existence of the "supernatural" (i.e. a reality that exists beyond physics). Culture (for which, I think, "God" is often a metaphor) is supernatural (i.e. "metaphysical") Let's look at one cultural essential: Language. Of course we process language through our brains; of course we invented language using the physics inherent in our brains (and that in our tongues and larynxes). But if all humans disappeared from the earth, language would continue to exist. There would still be books, and recordings. If some extra-terrestrial, intelligent creature discovered the world, they could find this thing -- a very important thing -- that exists outside of the human brain. They could discover its meaning, its grammar and its literature. Meaning, ideas, and knowledge would "exist" independent of human thought.
Whether we could go so far as to say that language exists in and of itself -- without books or recordings or human speech -- is problematic. Maybe it does -- as a concept. But even if we don't grant that, we must surely agree that language exists on its own, independent of any individual brain. And if we grant that for language, perhaps we can also grant it for God, or religion, or other human inventions that, once invented, take on a life of their own outside of the physical world. Mathematics would be another example.
Hey Alexiev, thanks for the thoughtful response—but let’s clear something up right away: what you’ve described isn’t “supernatural” or “beyond physics” at all. It’s just a mix-up between
representations and
real things. Between
syntax and
semantics. Between
the medium and
the meaning. That confusion doesn’t take us into deep metaphysics—it just muddies the water.
Let’s take your language example.
Yes, if all humans vanished tomorrow, there might still be books and recordings scattered around. But language wouldn’t “exist” in any functional way. There would be
symbols—ink marks, pits on a disc, magnetic patterns—but without a brain to interpret them, they’re just
meaningless arrangements of matter. Language isn’t some free-floating essence. It’s a
code, and codes only mean something to
code-readers. If an alien species found our books and had no concept of semantics, those books wouldn’t “contain” language—they’d just be puzzles.
You said, “they could discover its meaning, its grammar…” But that means
they would bring meaning to it. It’s not that language exists outside brains—it’s that new brains can
reconstruct it through pattern recognition, inference, and a lot of trial and error. The capacity for language is always instantiated
physically—in brains, in airwaves, in paper and ink. It's never floating around in some invisible platonic space.
Same goes for math. You can write "2+2=4" in sand, on a wall, or in a neuron firing pattern. But that equation doesn’t
exist outside of a physical system interpreting it. It’s not “out there” in a supernatural realm. It's a
descriptive system, invented and refined by human brains to model patterns we observe. That it’s useful doesn’t make it metaphysical. It just means it
works.
And as for “culture” or “God” being metaphysical because they have staying power or collective belief behind them—that’s a category error. Culture exists in behaviors, artifacts, shared ideas—all physical, all emergent from social brains. And once again, God isn’t a metaphysical entity just because people talk about Him as if He is. Unicorns aren’t real just because someone drew one and gave it a name.
So no—culture, language, and math aren’t examples of the supernatural. They’re just complex products of physical systems that we sometimes romanticize into abstractions. But if you can’t instantiate it in reality, or define a mechanism by which it operates or influences the physical world, then it’s not real in any meaningful or useful sense. It’s just a story. An echo. A symbolic residue of physical processes that once generated it.
So let’s keep our feet on the ground. There’s enough wonder in the
natural world. We don’t need to dress up confusion as transcendence.