(04-06-2025, 04:58 AM)Anna Wrote: I'm not really convinced the universe is hostile or amoral. I think God is above what humans think is moral or not. I view morality not as something objective and universal but something that evolves with us, changing throughout the ages. The same applies to honor and integrity, which are purely subjective.
Long answer that drifts into pseudoscience probably.
There's a Christian cliche along the lines of "indifference = evil."
And that reminds me of the last line of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon.
"There is no dark side of the moon, as matter of fact, it's all dark."
And it's almost like the default is amoral as you would put it.
As far as the change morality undergoes, I'm not ready to rule something inherent out. I think there's underlying tendencies that influence what changes later.
The Dunbars Number angle.
Under 150 people, humans are still very close to their ancestors in terms of empathetic bonds and family group tendencies. Nomadic clans aren't that far removed. And can easily be reverted to. Ask any resident of a village of 100 people in the middle of nowhere.
But civilization is a biome of its own. A habitat that has all the same evolutionary rules of disordered nature, but exists more or less as secondary.
I think God becomes anthropomorphic when it has the prefixed "anthro" to control in numbers that exceed the natural capacity of our biology. And that's when morality (honor, integrity and definitions therein) drift into the artificial tangent. The hellish slave morality of German philosophers.
Cohesion, and keeping it, requires something EXTRA to go on top of it. God is Government and vice versa.
But what influences that claws back to the primitive clans of old. The territorial rules of boundaries and respect that were always geared towards balance.
And that's where I see the fingerprint of beyond, so to speak. The underlying need to survive through adverse (indifferent) conditions. But go about it in a way that seeks beneficial order and a type of equilibrium.
More coded by thermodynamic laws then we give credit to. Like programmed to grow in complexity and disorder, which looks increasingly
like order.
Consciousness seems like the telescope more than the eye. Secondary. It took a path of mutation and natural selection to get to neurons and omitting brainwaves. Which produce electromagnetism and exist bound by a material universe.
And in my conceived multiverse God is reduced to infinity. It is simply the absolute, given infinite space, for our universe to exist with the laws it has exactly like it does. Even for there to be material-like laws imparted on "not-so-random" randomness. Like animal groups seeking a harmonious separation and equilibrium with resources, like indigenous cultures still practice.
Ordered civilization is the first achievement of transhumanism.
To me, God is the infinity of that multiverse. In a sense it really is everything above and beyond our singular finite universal reality. The laws we have exist because they too are dimensional parameters of existence collapsed from an Alpha/Omega.
Which is why I like M-theory so much. Because it says that in math I can't even pretend to understand or know what the symbols mean. But it requires infinity. And infinities of infinities in equations that supposedly explain how this universe collapsed from this multidimensional manifold.
Multiversalism seems more TOE than universalism.