Yes, I do agree with what this articles says. There is no way to link QM an experimental science to the traditional notion of consciousness. In a way, it may also have a clue of their relation to the ultimate question, whether there is any reality beyond what QM finds as on date by it’s distinctive scientific method. I am more in an enigma when I think about Einstein’s ability or his thought processes as a phenomenal scientist to be to grasp the nature of a reality to the extent to which he did. Similarly, the minds of great mathematicians who sees mathematical truths in and through their minds. It reminds me Hegel who stated that what is real is rational and vice versa.
Ancient Greek philosophers talk about the law of conformity or the like thing knows the like. Lastly, nature, if at all it exists or at least in the ways in which science finds it, it seems that, it inadvertantly or else is somehow seeking to itself with the mechanism of the great scientists’ brains. Since brain is physical or corporeal, as a part or an evolute of nature, it’s efforts for self-knowledge is a mystery. This is the reformulated view of Dr. S. Radhakrishnan, the Indian philosopher in his book “An Idealist View of Life”. Consciousness or mind seems to be always in the background or as it is said to be the brain’s functional expression or as an epiphenomenon or as an emergent entity etc by experts in the relevant fields during the relentless endeavours of scientists in attempting to have a scientific decoding of the truth, if any behind what it is. I believe that, if time is real, then, since our very act of thinking scientific or otherwise is always temporal, the eventual knownness of the possible truth in it’s entirity will be co-terminus with end of the world as a whole. If time persists in it’s relative fashion, and if the cosmic Dynamics has to go on, then, it’s temporality may ensure that, for the show to go on, truth on whatever in it’s form will forever lie in the ever receding horizon of the knowledge or else.
Yes, I do agree with what this articles says. There is no way to link QM an experimental science to the traditional notion of consciousness. In a way, it may also have a clue of their relation to the ultimate question, whether there is any reality beyond what QM finds as on date by it’s distinctive scientific method. I am more in an enigma when I think about Einstein’s ability or his thought processes as a phenomenal scientist to be to grasp the nature of a reality to the extent to which he did. Similarly, the minds of great mathematicians who sees mathematical truths in and through their minds. It reminds me Hegel who stated that what is real is rational and vice versa.
Ancient Greek philosophers talk about the law of conformity or the like thing knows the like. Lastly, nature, if at all it exists or at least in the ways in which science finds it, it seems that, it inadvertantly or else is somehow seeking to itself with the mechanism of the great scientists’ brains. Since brain is physical or corporeal, as a part or an evolute of nature, it’s efforts for self-knowledge is a mystery. This is the reformulated view of Dr. S. Radhakrishnan, the Indian philosopher in his book “An Idealist View of Life”. Consciousness or mind seems to be always in the background or as it is said to be the brain’s functional expression or as an epiphenomenon or as an emergent entity etc by experts in the relevant fields during the relentless endeavours of scientists in attempting to have a scientific decoding of the truth, if any behind what it is. I believe that, if time is real, then, since our very act of thinking scientific or otherwise is always temporal, the eventual knownness of the possible truth in it’s entirity will be co-terminus with end of the world as a whole. If time persists in it’s relative fashion, and if the cosmic Dynamics has to go on, then, it’s temporality may ensure that, for the show to go on, truth on whatever in it’s form will forever lie in the ever receding horizon of the knowledge or else.