Tangent wrote:DesalationReborn wrote:Nothing has any inherent meaning-- there's no worth unless somebody puts value to it. Even if there's a god to put worth into everything, it's still his opinion, his viewpoint. Just because I like rabbits, doesn't mean you will. Perspective counts for a lot. As Nietzsche said, it is not so much the truth that condemns a man, but how he views the truth. There's a silver lining to everything.
A paraphrased proof (just wiki 'determinism' for more complex stuff): Everything within the universe (at least all observed) affects everything else in the universe in a rational manner. The definition of the universe is everything in existence, so thus it can't be affected by anything outside it. Thus, everything in the universe is made by the actions of the past and affects the actions of the future.
This can be extended into the concept of Eternal Return based on the Law of Conservation of Energy and Matter-- everything repeats an an infinite loop, but that isn't necessarily what's being asked.
Okay, I understand that, it's nice and logical. I didnt mean to ask if any action had an inherent value or worth, I'm bad at explaining.
But if you help explain one more thing. I still dont get how everything in the universe interacting something could affect people, you know, on a really basic level, such as simply agreeing or dissagreing with someone about something. That simple act would affect the future, and be based on expeience from the past. But such thought processes are simple electrical signals the the brain, so how can something such as that be predetermind by the actions of universe as a whole?
Perhaps I have simply missed something...
The problem is, even on the molecular and subatomic level, the exchange of matter and energy in the universe affects what happens, and every individual instance divides and twists in it's rippling affects a thousand over, so it's hard to track. I suggest reading
"A Sound of Thunder." It's a really short story that, although hypothetical and fantasy in many instances, helps broach the subject.
Due to our chemistry, our own disposition and mentality is determined by two things: A) the construction of our brains, and B) the instances that affect the development of it. Since you inherit your genetics from your parents, your own disposition is not only determined by what happened to you today, but your parents meeting, falling in love, and the proper mixing of germ cells into a zygote. They themselves are not only products of their parents, and their parents parents, and so forth, but of the food they and their parents ate, whether they survived long enough to reproduce, and what specific instance sparked their love, etc. And any grouping of the thousands of variables are determined by not only the actions of others, but the environment. They would not have met if their reactions to the world around them didn't lead them to do so, and their reactions are determined by their personal dispostion, which again formed by the actions of the past.
It's not necessarily the cosmo's
direct affect on their brains, but the instances, the things that make them, intertwine so tightly it's hard to distinguish.
Even on a genetic level, many mutations in our DNA rely on a single photon breaking through a cells' membrane to hit a certain area in a DNA molecule, which is determined by, among many other things, it's trejectory, which is determined by it's placement in the sun's surface, which is determined by it's position when gravity fist pulled the molecules together, which is determined by...
It can go on forever. Try to apply this as well to photosynthesis in plants and how it becomes the bread you eat, the gravitational and other forces affecting the earth that allow for our existence, how a few photons at first can lead to the formation of a hurricane, etc.
I think that was what you're asking. Anything I'm not answering?