by gg3 » Thu 09 Dec 2004, 06:18:14
Madpaddy, I love your sense of humor & the way you think! BTW, I ran across FLARP some years ago. Bought one for my brother as a joke. We did in fact have endless fun with the stuff. I guess Saint Peter is going to bring that up with me when I die or something.
The purpose of existentialism is to sell Prozac by making people depressed.
Re. "purpose" in the "cosmic" sense: Technically the term for that is "teleology," the study of ultimate goals or purposes. However, y'all who dismiss the concept as anti-scientific, are using out-of-date science.
The implicit rationale for the arguement that teleology is anti-scientific, is that teleology presupposes that a future state (goal) can affect a present state (behavior), and "as we all know," "the future doesn't cause the past" because "time only runs one-way."
However, if you study quantum theory, you find that there is a solid theoretical basis for the idea that certain phenomena do propagate "backward" through time: tachyons, entangled states (instantaneous action at a distance is equivalent to a nonlocal signal arriving "before" its local counterpart, i.e. as if from outside the local universe of the destination point) etc.. Time is a dimension, which is nothing mysterious at all: a dimension is simply an axis of measurement; and as it happens, the math for any axis of measurement works equally well in any direction (e.g. "backward" and "forward" and even "sideways" and "up" and "down").
And as a matter of mundane psychology, humans as individuals and societies, are motivated by goals: land a human on the moon, wipe out Al Qaeda, invent a new power source, invent a new birth-control pill, etc. As above, so below, and the reverse is also true:-).
Now here's a bit of wild speculation that for me operates in the same realm as religion, i.e. a matter of faith if one is so oriented:
Consider that this particular universe is uniquely favorable to life (six key numbers, each of which has to be within 1/2 of 1% of its observed value, else *poof!* or perhaps *FLARP!* our universe wouldn't even exist). As far as we know, living organisms evolve along an axis of increasing degrees of complexity and order. The societies created by conscious organisms at or above a threshold level of intelligence, also evolve along an axis of increasing degrees of complexity and order. So it is not unreasonable to speak of the evolutionary tendency as a causal principle. And it is not unreasonable to consider that our life-infested planet is not unique, and that there are many more throughout this and other galaxies.
Consider that if the evolutionary tendency continues unabated, and if a species has sufficient intelligence (develops science & technology, doesn't crash its ecosystem along the way), the result will be that the species will eventually spread to other planets.
Given enough planets full of intelligent life, and a continued accumulation of knowledge among them, they eventually gain the capability to influence matter and energy on a cosmic scale. You've heard of Dyson spheres but those are only the beginning.
Okay, you've heard that before. But what you haven't heard before is:
Intelligent life forms at that stage would have long-since known about the expansion of the universe toward ultimate entropic heat-death, and they would have recognized that two end-states are possible: One, heat death as a permanent end, or two, contraction and collapse back to a single point from which a new Big Bang would occur, thereby setting the whole thing in motion again.
They would recognize the potential to do something about it, and they would seek to develop the technology to reverse the expansion, cause the re-collapse, and thereby "reboot" the universe. If they succeeded, the whole cycle from big bang forward, would occur again. And, it would only take *one* of the universe's many intelligent species, to pull it off.
For all we know, our present universe is only the most recent in a long series of "reboots," each of which has been successful.
And that, folks, is what I think our ultimate purpose is. Prevent heat-death, reboot the universe, so that somewhere in the uncountable future, another intelligent species can do it again; and another after that; forever. I think we're hardwired for it, evolved/created for it, and the role of each of us in the 21st century is simply to keep passing the evolutionary torch forward, so that our descendants in the unimaginably far future have a chance of pressing the Reboot button.