Thursday, August 30, 2018


Dan Brown’s latest book - Origin

 Where do we come from? Where are we heading?

 A very interesting book that can lead you to interesting reflections.

 Here are some (the most rewarding and interesting) excerpt from Dan Brown's book: Where do we come from? Where are we going? - Our beginning and our destiny.

 Let's be children again, let's lie under the stars with our minds open to all possibilities. Let's be like the explorers of ancient times, those who left everything behind and went out into the wide ocean. Those who first saw the glimpse of a coast no one saw before. Those who fell on their knees and were filled with the wonder that the world was far greater than they imagined in their wildest imagination. All that previously taken for granted was dissolved and destroyed with these new discoveries.
 Brain Operating System - How are modern humans capable of drawing logical and analytical conclusions while accepting religious beliefs that should be crumbled at least rationally? The answer turns out to be quite simple - the human brain. Why does it believe what it believes in? The brain has an operating system like an organic computer. A regulatory framework that organizes and sorts the chaotic flows it recieves throughout the day. Words, a song that sticks, a siren, the taste of chocolate. As you can probably imagine, it infinitely uses a variety of information of different kinds, and the brain must try to make a living. In fact, one's perception of reality is defined by the brain's operating system. Unfortunately, we have been playing a joke, because the programmed human brain had a bad sense of humor. In other words, it is not our fault that we believe in the sources we believe in. Astrological charts, Jesus walking on water, Founder of Scientology L Ron Hubbard, Egyptian God Osiris, Hindu lighthouse elephant god Ganesha and a marble statue of Virgin Mary who cried physical tears. Combating Chaos, Creating Order.
 And as a programmer, I have to ask myself what kind of bizarre operating system would come to such illogical conclusions? If we could look into the human brain and interpret its systems, we would find something like this: fight chaos, create order. This is the basis of our brain programming. Our operation to organize is enrolled in our DNA. Data Vacuum, Faith, Religion and Science - For the human brain, any answer is better than no answer. We feel a great discomfort when we face insufficient data. So our brains begin to invent the facts. Which at least gives an illusion of order and therefore creates a myriad of philosophis and mythologies and religions. To convince us that in any case there is order and reason in the invisible world.
 Because not all religions give the same answer, large groups of people can start fighting against each other over which answers they regard as correct and which version of God is the only true one. Religion has always had exclusive rights to spiritual issues. Something that makes us not question its teachings, even when they seem to be in violation of common sense. But faith means by definition that one trusts something that can not be seen or touched. Accepting some beliefs as facts, even though you do not have empirical evidence for it. In turn, it understands that we choose to believe in different things, because there is no universal truth.
 Research is the true opposite of belief. Research is based on finding physical evidence of what has not yet been known, and replacing superstitions and misconceptions in favor of concrete facts.
 The age of religion is (hopefully?) nearing its end, and the tides of science are beginning to grow. Life and Entropy - How did life evolve? It's not possible to answer that question and that's the point. As for the creation process, going over the threshold where dead chemicals form living organisms, science fails to give us an answer. There are no mechanisms in chemistry that explain how life evolved. In fact, the very idea that cells would merge and form life forms is in direct conflict with the law of entropy.
 Entropy is just a finer way of saying things go from order to chaos. In scientific language, we usually say that an organized system will inevitably sooner or later collapse. "I've just put together millions of sand grains into a castle. Now let's see what the universe has to say about that matter. Just a few seconds later, a wave rinses across the beach and flushes away the castle. Yes, the universe found my ordered sand grains and took control over them, spread them out over the sand. That's how entropy works." Waves rolling over the beach never form the sand to a castle. Entropy dissolves structure. Sandcastles never occur spontaneously in this universe, they just disappear.When you heat coffee and remove a hot-hot cup from a microwave, you focus on heat energy in a cup. If you put the cup on the kitchen counter and allow it to stand for one hour, the heat disappears into the room and distributes it evenly. Just like sand on a beach. Entropy again, and the process is irreversible. No matter how long you wait, the universe will never heat the coffee again, nor repair a broken egg or build a downcast sand castle.
 We live in a universe that is entropic by nature. A host whose physical laws are built by chance, not order (or is there something behind this phenomenon that creates order?). So the question is, how can lifeless chemicals in some magical way organize themselves into complex compounds of life forms?
 The Purpose of the Universe - (Kirch describes a theory of Jeremy England) ... The universe was driven by a single purpose, a goal of spreading energy. One could easily say that when the universe found areas of focused energy it spread that energy. The classic example was what Kirsch mentioned, the coffee cup on the kitchen counter. The coffee always cooled by sending out the heat to other molecules in the room, according to the second principle of thermodynamics. "We know that the universe wants entropy (disorder). Simply put, matter is self-organizing in order to better disseminate energy. In order to achieve disorder, nature creates small pockets of order. These pockets are used to escalate the chaos of a system and thereby increase the entropy factor. In other words, the laws of physics created mechanisms to disperse energy. Lightning sends away the energy of the cloud into the earth, spread it out, thus increasing the system's general entropy. Or Big Bang. A violent proliferation of power. What does entropy have to do with the beginning of life? Well, it turns out that life is an extremely effective tool for spreading energy. For example, a tree absorbs the intense energy of the sun. Uses it to grow, then emits infrared light. A much less focused form of energy. Photosynthesis is an extremely effective entropy machine. The concentrated energy of the sun is dissolved and weakened by the tree, thus creating a general increase in the universe's entropy. The same can be said about all living organisms.
 Sometimes people consume organized matter in the form of food, then transforms it into energy, and then sends back heat energy. In general, I would say life is not subject to the laws of physics, but life began because of these laws. "When strong sunlight hit a piece of fertile soil, the physical laws of the earth would create a flower as a means to disperse that energy.
 If sulfur is ejected down in the depths of the ocean it will create areas of boiling water and life would occur in these places and spread the energy. If Professor England's theory is correct, then the entire cosmos operating system could be summarized in one single command - propagate energy. 
 As for spirituality, I consider this theory as agnostic. I'm just trying to describe how it's in the universe. The spiritual conclusions I leave to priests and philosophers.

 Life, codes, patterns and DNA 

 Physics laws alone can give rise to life. Edmund's discovery was fascinating and definitely explosive, but for Langdon it gave rise to a supplementary question that he was surprised to observe that no-one asked: If the laws of physics are so powerful that they can create life, who created the laws?
 To me the question of God or who/what created life, lies in understanding the difference between codes and patterns. Codes and patterns are two very different things. Most people mix them together and are confused. A pattern is a distinctly organized sequence or structure. Patterns are found everywhere in nature, the spiral-shaped flowering bushes of the sunflower, the hexagonal cells of the bees honeycomb, the circular rings on the water when a fish speaks and so forth.
 Codes are special, codes must contain information. They have to do something more than just form a pattern. Codes must transfer facts and information. Examples of codes are 1) written languages 2)music notes 3) mathematical equations 4) data languages ​​and even 5) simple symbols like the crucifix. All of these examples can convey a message in a way that spiral-growing sunflower seeds can not. The other difference between codes and patterns is that codes do not occur spontaneously in the world. Music notes do not grow on trees and symbols do not draw themselves in the sand. A code is a fully conscious idea of ​intelligence. Codes do not grow organically, they must be created. The genetic code, it's a paradox. The genetic code obviously contained information, specific instructions on how to build organisms. Conclusion: DNA has been created by an intelligent consciousness!
 Ever since I was a child, I have suspeted that there is a consciousness behind the universe. When I study the accuracy of mathematics, the reliability of the physics and the symmetry of cosmos, it does not feel like it's a cold and unfeeling science I see. But the footprint of something alive. Shadow of a greater force we can not understand.


Man has created a number of codes - the alphabet, the numbers and symbols of mathematics and the tones of music. So who / what created the DNA code? Who created the atoms, which are a code for chemistry?

 Nila Pihl 2018  - check: www.duga.se (If you do not read Swedish – use Google translate)

No comments:

Post a Comment