Monday, March 30, 2015

How I want to be remembered.

The question of how one wants to be remembered had always seemed to me to be a frivolous one. I should not care, I could not care about that once I am dead. But, it occurred to me that those close to me, like my daughter and my partner if they lived longer than I, would likely care about how others spoke of me. If others spoke well of me, those close to me would likely feel good about it. That's worth a consideration.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Hidden dimensions?

Beginning to watch "Hidden Dimensions: Exploring Hyperspace" on YT (one of the sessions from World Science Fair) and wonder what I would look like if I could perceive myself in all those dimensions, plus, of course, the three-four dimensions that I do perceive myself in. Perhaps even to use the verb "look" is inappropriate. Actually, I should ask myself "what I am like" if I accept the proposition/theory of more than 3-4 dimensions, as it is the question of being not of "looking like."

But then, if indeed there are more than 3-4 dimensions to my being, how can I access those other dimensions of myself? Maybe I am all the time. Actually, I believe I am, but am not aware of it. Maybe that's where the consciousness comes to play.

Let's see what I can learn from, or be inspired by, this video.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

"Nothing"

I  just began watching a YT clip of the discussion about "nothing" and a crazy thought occurred to me. Perhaps that nothing is simply a thing with none of the known dimensions (length, width, etc.) or which has a "zero" value for all the known-to-us dimensions. Perhaps in other dimensions, which are inaccessible to us due to the limitations of our perceptory apparatus, it is not "nothing" and is thus perceptible to creatures that can sense those other dimensions. I find this thought interesting to ponder. What do you think?

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

YT, Wikipedia and the rest of them Internet things

I recall times before WWW was around when users of Internet were few, when we had to know special and sometimes complicated ways (remember Telnet, FTP, Gopher) to get information we were looking for and then mostly always only text. But yet, I was so excited about its availability.

Then when I first time saw WWW in 1993, I thought to myself, yes, here is the way all of us can share information and knowledge with each other. Short time thereafter, I logged into on line radio station from Vladivostok and also one from Harare and had an exhilarating experience of being virtually in those places, hearing the same programming that folks who lived in those two respective places did including weather and traffic reports. I was almost there. Wow.

And, now YouTube, Wikipedia and the rest of them things available on Internet to all with means to access them both as consumers and producers of knowledge. I find so many interesting videos on YT, for example, that it just overwhelms me. I regularly watch videos about science, religion, and history -- those three areas fascinate me and it seems that I could sit forever and watch stuff always new. It is just fantastic how much people share on this thing.

I hope that this medium will only improve and never go away as a pseudo-free superhighway to sharing information and knowledge across the globe. Hurray for Internet!

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Generations

Every people, every age has its moments of inner inspiration, of life full of hope, beauty, explosive creativity, connections that life make tantalizingly sweet. In the time of my youth, a youth that was mindless, with no concept of time, we, in former Yugoslavia, and each one of us too had our moments of beauty, with a story that happened and helped spread itself without knowing. Such is a story of "Selma," a young woman in 1945 Sarajevo that inspired a poet, a bohemian to write about his youthful feelings of enchantment and create "Selma," a song that, I believe there is no person from my homeland does not know. Here's a story from a more recent time that keeps the feeling going.

"Zeljko Bebek nakon 38 godina ponovo pjeva Selmi"

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Sam Harris - Death and the Present Moment

Just heard an interesting (YT clip of the) presentation by Sam Harris titled "Death and the Present Moment" and posted two comments.

"A questioner at around 51:00  mentioned "a right to live." I do not believe there is such a thing outside of human-made picture of life. So, if that is true, if the right to live is a human construct, than it is not a fact, but an unprovable proposition that some accept as the truth and some don't. It may be of some use in certain circumstances, but the "nature" does not honor it."

"Mourning someone's death is really feeling the loss of something we really do not have -- that someone's future impact on our lives. The fallacy hidden in this state of mind is the expectation that the future moment will be the same as some past moment that we enjoyed. It never is and never will be. Everything always changes. That is the wonder of life. Expectations are crutches that our mind sets up. They many times help us along in our daily lives and many other times make us feel miserable. If we accept that the next moment, and all that it may or may not contain, is not guaranteed and accept that if it comes it will not be completely the way we expect it to be and are consequently ready to accept the consequences, we are free of the burden of needing the expectation to come true as the basis for happiness or fulfillment of some sort or actually of the existence itself."

Those sorts of presentations, regardless of the degree to which I concur with their premisses, analyses, and conclusions, always inspire me to study more. Douglass Hofstadter's "Gödel, Escher, and Bach" did that for me many years ago when I first read it. I might look YT Hofstadter's clips next.