stevejazzx wrote: I tend to think sometimes that life is just completely random, particulary in terms of who dies and who lives etc. Obviously I take into account that those who put themselves in vicarious situations put themselves at greater risk therefore more likely to encounter a serious accident etc. What I'm actually talking about are things like freak accidents etc., just random events happening to random people or do some of you still believe in fate even in the abscence of a god?
Funsterdelux wrote: Thats a good one, What I think, well the universe its laws of physics, even them we dont understand at the quantum level to well, so I do think that everything is random, the only thing i think that has fate, is the universe itself.
extract - overview wrote: Synchronicity is an explanatory principle, according to its creator, Carl Jung. Synchronicity explains "meaningful coincidences," such as a beetle flying into his room while a patient was describing a dream about a scarab. The scarab is an Egyptian symbol of rebirth, he noted. Therefore, the propitious moment of the flying beetle indicated that the transcendental meaning of both the scarab in the dream and the insect in the room was that the patient needed to be liberated from her excessive rationalism. His notion of synchronicity is that there is an acausal principle that links events having a similar meaning by their coincidence in time rather than sequentially. He claimed that there is a synchrony between the mind and the phenomenal world of perception.
wiki wrote: It differs from coincidence in that synchronicity implies not just a happenstance, but an underlying pattern or dynamic that is being expressed through meaningful relationships or events.
stevejazzx wrote: This is a heavily criticised theory but I for one believe in it at least partly. There seems to me in life to be a the manifestation of parallel events or circumstances reflecting a governing dynamic. Essentially some overriding design. Not from a god and a complete and perfect design, but maybe the ability of the mind to sense situations therefore make connections, not empty connections like a meaningless coincidence though, something intuitive.
sean_keevey wrote: Consider the number pi Assign each of the letters of the alphabet a number i.e. A=1, B=2 Convert the bible into numerical form using the above rule. It will be found that the exact numerical series found from the bible will appear in pi. This is not some intrinsic element of religion in maths, it is purely due to the fact that pi extends infinitely. Every possible combination of numbers will be found if you search long enough. even 1,000,000 zeros in series. The same is true of the universe. For every person born on a leap year day, thousands will not. For every person unlucky enough to be hit by a falling piano, millions will not. There are so many combinations, that pattens have to occur. For instance, people being hit by lightning multiple times
aidan24326 wrote: It's worth remembering that the human mind loves pattern. We tend to look for pattern and some meaningful regularity in almost everything. This is for the most part a very good thing. It has given us science and mathematics. However we do unfortunately have a tendency to take this too far sometimes, to see some connection in everyday events where really there is just blind random coincidence. Sometimes a simple probabilistic analysis will show that what we believed to be an amazing coincidence did in fact have a much better probabilty of happening than we had imagined. Carl Sagan has an excellent discussion of this in his book 'The Demon Haunted World'. 'Intuition' is just making a connection based on some past experience(s) and/or one's own perception. We often think of 'intuition' as being something strange and ethereal but it isn't really. What is making you feel something intuitively could be just the manifestation of an unconscious mental process. How exactly do you propose that it has anything to with 'some overriding design' ?
Beruthiel wrote: I met my ex husband on the 17th of March. I had my daughter on the 17th of March. I met my second long term relationship on the 17th of March. I met my current partner on the 17th of September. I met him in a night club, which I had went to with my ex second long term b/f (we were just friends at that stage) He met his wife at the same night club on the same night I met my partner. I put all the above down to sheer coincedence, though it's a good one At the end of the day, you make your own fate, stuff is put in front of you all the time, you are the one who decides which to go for and which to ignore.
lostexpectation wrote: so you always go out for paddies night *does spooky noise* :rolleyes:
stevejazzx wrote: I don't accept that intuition is based solely on past experiences, I believe an individual can have an inspired moment which derives from nothing but that persons spirit.
The Atheist wrote: Then what is a spirit, if it is not just a manifestation of brain-power, as a result of intelligent guesswork based on past experience?
stevejazzx wrote: So essentially accessing the untapped resources/potenial of the human mind and consciousness and using them to control the body, transcending experience.
The Atheist wrote: I've seen the whole yoga thing alright. That documentary on "Buddha Boy" was interesting to say the least. I'm a huge believer in mind over matter - but only insofar as the mind is matter too. It's fine to be open-minded about there being a "spiritual state that 'transcends' beyond the physical" one - always good to have an open mind. I just feel that because we have everything still to learn about our grey matter that we have no reason or necessity to make the logical leap to suggest a spiritual state of which we have zero knowledge.
atheist wrote: Isn't that kind of like the leap involved with saying "we don't understand how the universe came to be, so it must be God?"
stevejazzx wrote: Spirituality may well be a creation of the mind, built from experience, but it may also become an independant entity going forward.
stevejazzx wrote: watching us on a 3000 inch lcd screen.
The Atheist wrote: It may be, but in reality we don't have any grounds (that I can see) to base this suspicion on. When I hear hooves, I don't think of zebras. .
stevejazzx wrote: You have nailed this down to cold hard fact, but remember everything in life is subjective. This is my way of saying yeah, you're probably right.
The Atheist wrote: It's fine to be open-minded about there being a "spiritual state that 'transcends' beyond the physical" one - always good to have an open mind. I just feel that because we have everything still to learn about our grey matter that we have no reason or necessity to make the logical leap to suggest a spiritual state of which we have zero knowledge. Isn't that kind of like the leap involved with saying "we don't understand how the universe came to be, so it must be God?"
CiDeRmAn wrote: Just finished a book on superstring theory, the elegant universe, and given that what the book speaks of is true, or at least the basis for the actual way the universe works
CiDeRmAn wrote: Perhaps but it certainly points to a series of serious avenues of investigation where the true scale of reality becomes apparent and the whole arguement of the existence/non-existence of god seems more and more like a school yard debate on whether Santa is real or not.