I’m sorry, but I find the tone of this post a bit off-putting. Too mysterious for my taste. I opened the substack but it only has one unrelated post.
I don’t think there is a secular way forward.
Do you think that there is a non-secular way forward? Did you previously (before your belief update) think there is a non-secular way forward?
We just shamble forward endlessly, like a zombie horde devouring resources, no goal other than the increase of some indicator or other.
I can agree with this, but… those indicators seem pretty meaningful for me. Life expectancy, poverty rates, etc. And at least now we have indicators! Previously there wasn’t even that!
And why does this kind of misticism attract so much people over here? Why are the standard arguments against religion/magic and for materialism and reductionism not compelling to you anymore?
Disease is down. War is down. Poverty is down. Democracy is up (on the timescale of centuries). Photovoltaics are cheaper than coal. This all seems worthwhile to me. If world peace, health and prosperity aren’t worthwhile then what is?
Masters of the contemplative arts are obsessed with compassion. They’re generally supportive of making the material world a better place. The Dalai Lama and Daniel Ingram support scientific advancement.
The QRI is even inventing indicators to quantify weird contemplative stuff. I don’t think there’s a conflict between weird contemplative stuff and making the world better in a measurable way. If the two conflict then you’re doing the contemplative stuff wrong.
Pursuing one kind of good doesn’t invalidate other kinds of good. To the contrary, I think the perceived invalidation is a useful way to distinguish good people from evil. When evil people see good, they try to undermine it. When good people see good, they celebrate it.
Disease is down. War is down. Poverty is down. Democracy is up (on the timescale of centuries). Photovoltaics are cheaper than coal. This all seems worthwhile to me. If world peace, health and prosperity aren’t worthwhile then what is?
These things are worthwhile, but we lack critical stuff. In particular, it does not capture what makes us shudder when thinking of dystopias like the Combine. Which is: how well developed our spirituality is. You can’t pin that down with a number.
I don’t think there’s a conflict between weird contemplative stuff and making the world better in a measurable way. If the two conflict then you’re doing the contemplative stuff wrong.
There is a conflict if the scientistic/materialistic worldview continues its dominance, because that worldview insists only it is valid, and that the spiritual paths provide only psychotherapeutic copes, at best. That state of affairs is unacceptable.
When evil people see good, they try to undermine it. When good people see good, they celebrate it.
How do you think I undermine science? I just point out there is a tenebrous principle currently underpinning it. Science can very easily proceed without that. Science can get back its heart, and its sanity too, probably with increased effectiveness too boot.
The Presence of Everything has two posts so far, and both are examples of the sort of panoramic analogical thinking we need to undo the various Gordian Knots bedeviling us.
Do you think that there is a non-secular way forward? Did you previously (before your belief update) think there is a non-secular way forward?
Yes, I did always think there was a non-secular way forward for all sorts of problems. It’s just that I realized AI X-risk is just one head of an immense hydra: technological X-risks. I’m more interested in slaying that hydra, than in coming up with ways to deal with just one of its myriad heads.
those indicators seem pretty meaningful for me. Life expectancy, poverty rates, etc.
Yeah, the indicators are worth something, but they are certainly not everything! Slavish devotion to the indicators renders one blind to critical stuff, such as X-risk, but also to things like humanity becoming something hideous or pathetic in the future.
Why are the standard arguments against religion/magic and for materialism and reductionism not compelling to you anymore?
The hard problem of consciousness combined with learning the actual tenets of Hinduism (read the Ashtavakra Gita), was the big one for me. Dostoyevsky also did a bang up job depicting the spiritual poverty of the materialist worldview.
I’m sorry, but I find the tone of this post a bit off-putting. Too mysterious for my taste. I opened the substack but it only has one unrelated post.
Do you think that there is a non-secular way forward? Did you previously (before your belief update) think there is a non-secular way forward?
I can agree with this, but… those indicators seem pretty meaningful for me. Life expectancy, poverty rates, etc. And at least now we have indicators! Previously there wasn’t even that!
And why does this kind of misticism attract so much people over here? Why are the standard arguments against religion/magic and for materialism and reductionism not compelling to you anymore?
Disease is down. War is down. Poverty is down. Democracy is up (on the timescale of centuries). Photovoltaics are cheaper than coal. This all seems worthwhile to me. If world peace, health and prosperity aren’t worthwhile then what is?
Masters of the contemplative arts are obsessed with compassion. They’re generally supportive of making the material world a better place. The Dalai Lama and Daniel Ingram support scientific advancement. The QRI is even inventing indicators to quantify weird contemplative stuff. I don’t think there’s a conflict between weird contemplative stuff and making the world better in a measurable way. If the two conflict then you’re doing the contemplative stuff wrong.
Pursuing one kind of good doesn’t invalidate other kinds of good. To the contrary, I think the perceived invalidation is a useful way to distinguish good people from evil. When evil people see good, they try to undermine it. When good people see good, they celebrate it.
These things are worthwhile, but we lack critical stuff. In particular, it does not capture what makes us shudder when thinking of dystopias like the Combine. Which is: how well developed our spirituality is. You can’t pin that down with a number.
There is a conflict if the scientistic/materialistic worldview continues its dominance, because that worldview insists only it is valid, and that the spiritual paths provide only psychotherapeutic copes, at best. That state of affairs is unacceptable.
How do you think I undermine science? I just point out there is a tenebrous principle currently underpinning it. Science can very easily proceed without that. Science can get back its heart, and its sanity too, probably with increased effectiveness too boot.
The Presence of Everything has two posts so far, and both are examples of the sort of panoramic analogical thinking we need to undo the various Gordian Knots bedeviling us.
Yes, I did always think there was a non-secular way forward for all sorts of problems. It’s just that I realized AI X-risk is just one head of an immense hydra: technological X-risks. I’m more interested in slaying that hydra, than in coming up with ways to deal with just one of its myriad heads.
Yeah, the indicators are worth something, but they are certainly not everything! Slavish devotion to the indicators renders one blind to critical stuff, such as X-risk, but also to things like humanity becoming something hideous or pathetic in the future.
The hard problem of consciousness combined with learning the actual tenets of Hinduism (read the Ashtavakra Gita), was the big one for me. Dostoyevsky also did a bang up job depicting the spiritual poverty of the materialist worldview.