This is really a computational model of the universe in "colloquial" form.
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Original Article with links >https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/could-multiple-personality-disorder-explain-life-the-universe-and-everything/
Paper it is based on. >https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/imp/jcs/2018/00000025/f0020005/art00006
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Could Multiple Personality Disorder Explain Life, the Universe and Everything?variety of dissociated personalities (“alters”), some of which claimed to be blind. Using
A new paper argues that the condition now known as “Dissociative Identity Disorder” might help us understand the fundamental nature of reality
By Bernardo Kastrup, Adam Crabtree, Edward F. Kelly on June 18, 2018
Could Multiple Personality Disorder Explain Life, the Universe and Everything? >Credit: Brielle McConnell Getty Images
In 2015, doctors in Germany reported the extraordinary case of a woman who suffered from what has traditionally been called “multiple personality disorder” and today is known as “dissociative identity disorder” (DID). The woman exhibited a
This was a compelling demonstration of the literally blinding power of extremeforms of dissociation, a condition in which the psyche gives rise to multiple, operationally separate centers of consciousness, each with its own private inner life.
Modern neuroimaging techniques have demonstrated that DID is real: in a 2014 study, doctors performed functional brain scans on both DID patients and actorssimulating DID. The scans of the actual patients displayed clear differences when compared to
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There is also compelling clinical data showing that different alters can be concurrently conscious and see themselves as distinct identities. One of us has
The history of this condition dates back to the early 19th century, with a flurry of cases in the 1880s through the 1920s, and again from the 1960s to thelate 1990s. The massive literature on the subject confirms the consistent and uncompromising sense
Although we may be at a loss to explain precisely how this creative process occurs (because it unfolds almost totally beyond the reach of self-reflective introspection) the clinical evidence nevertheless forces us to acknowledge something is happeningthat has important implications for our views about what is and is not possible in nature.
Now, a newly published paper by one of us posits that dissociation can offer asolution to a critical problem in our current understanding of the nature of reality. This requires some background, so bear with us.
According to the mainstream metaphysical view of physicalism, reality is fundamentally constituted by physical stuff outside and independent of mind. Mental states, in turn, should be explainable in terms of the parameters of physical processes in thebrain.
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A key problem of physicalism, however, is its inability to make sense of how our subjective experience of qualities—what it is like to feel the warmth of fire, the redness of an apple, the bitterness of disappointment and so on—could arise from mere
Physical entities such as subatomic particles possess abstract relational properties, such as mass, spin, momentum and charge. But there is nothing aboutthese properties, or in the way particles are arranged in a brain, in terms of which one could
To circumvent this problem, some philosophers have proposed an alternative: that experience is inherent to every fundamental physical entity in nature. Under this view, called “constitutive panpsychism,” matter already has experience from the get-go,not just when it arranges itself in the form of brains. Even subatomic particles
However, constitutive panpsychism has a critical problem of its own: there is arguably no coherent, non-magical way in which lower-level subjective points ofview—such as those of subatomic particles or neurons in the brain, if they have these points
The obvious way around the combination problem is to posit that, although consciousness is indeed fundamental in nature, it isn’t fragmented like matter. The idea is to extend consciousness to the entire fabric of spacetime, as opposed to limiting itto the boundaries of individual subatomic particles. This view—called “cosmopsychism” in modern philosophy, although our preferred formulation of
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You don’t need to be a philosopher to realize the obvious problem with this idea: people have private, separate fields of experience. We can’t normally read your thoughts and, presumably, neither can you read ours. Moreover, we are
And here is where dissociation comes in. We know empirically from DID that consciousness can give rise to many operationally distinct centers of concurrent experience, each with its own personality and sense of identity. Therefore, if somethinganalogous to DID happens at a universal level, the one universal consciousness could,
Moreover, as we’ve seen earlier, there is something dissociative processes look like in the brain of a patient with DID. So, if some form of universal-level DID happens, the alters of universal consciousness must also have an extrinsic appearance. Weposit that this appearance is life itself: metabolizing organisms are simply what
Idealism is a tantalizing view of the nature of reality, in that it elegantly circumvents two arguably insoluble problems: the hard problem of consciousness and the combination problem. Insofar as dissociation offers a path to explaining how, underidealism, one universal consciousness can become many individual minds, we may now
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