Saturday, May 31, 2025

The Miracle of Existence

 

The Miracle of Existence

By Henry  Margenau

 

I bought this book on recommendation from Aldous Huxley.  Well, he referenced Margena often in his book.  Margenau, a physicist by education, writes this book from that view.  Which makes for a challenge for a layperson such as me.  The subject matter is very metaphyseal that bends towards the East.   For that I am grateful to Huxley for the recommendation.

Essentially the thesis claims that existence is derived from thought.  This thought in particular:  The universe must therefore have been created, together with the laws that regulate it.  This leaves us with two possibilities (1) a designer, knower, was responsible for its genesis, he designed it like a clock, which is still running.  But the clockmaker disappeared or died; (2) the clockmaker still exists and knows the course of the universe.    And at the same time this clockmaker’s thought is of one mind, in mankind.  This being an abstract idea for many, A new word for me is brought forth reification. 

Reification is the act of treating something abstract, such as an idea, relation, system, quality, etc, as if it were a concrete object. It is the conversion of an abstract concept into something concrete.  And the concreate idea is we are all of one mind, a universal mind.  Thus to sum up the enigma of existence, only Universal Mind, the cosmic consciousness, possesses existence in full unlimited measure.  The Universal Mind confers existence on conscious beings in varying degree, and these beings create, out of the minds bestowed on them and in accordance with principles imposed by the Universal Mind, everything else they call real or existing.

 

 

Excerpts from the book:

1.       Page 2: He then takes force, this power of persistence to be the reality, the metaphysical principle of existence.

2.       Page 2:  Lebnitz’s compete answer, however involves God, the most perfect monad, that is of highest degree of self preservation.

3.       Page 6: Therefore it is equally necessary to make intuition, as it is to make or concepts senses, ie, to add to them their object inn intuition, as to make our intuitions intelligible, ie, to bring them under concepts.  These two powers or faculties cannot exchange their functions.  The understanding cannot see.  The senses cannot think.  By their union only can knowledge be produced.

4.       Page 7:  The faculty allowing us, indeed forcing us, to soar above natural confines of experience Kant calls “pure reason.”

5.       Page 16 (1) The vast rang of application and immense fruitfulness of a law regulating the observable calles symmetry and (2) its abstractness, its lack of referanceto any of the ordinary properties of matter.  The distinguished biophysist Harold Morowitz calls symmery noetic, a term derived from the Greek word vove, which man’s mind of consciousness….. there is no evidence whatsoever that adjustment to the principle requires time. 

6.       Page 16: The discovery and application of Pauli’s exclusion principle is perhaps the most remarkable example of transcendent but comparable elaboration.  One wonders weather further , as yet unknown, noetic principle may not be needed for the fact of life and of consciousness.

7.       Page 17: A law of inanimate nature claims tha entropy never decreases.  Only in processes related to living systems, which are always open, does it decrease.

8.       Page 17: while the story of information says nothing about conscousn3ss, consciousness would be meaningless without information.

9.       Page 19: Darwin’s random genetic propagation and survival of the fittest.  The main philosophic issue ad one that has stimulated controversy ever since 1859, is hidden in the word random.

10.  Page 22: If the reader sees a loophole and argues that after all, Einstein proved equivalence of energy and matter, and matter is therefor universal.  I counter that some fields, such as the probability field of quantum mechanics, carry neither energy nor matter.

11.  Page 24:  This author’s private belief is that the term instinct is very poorly defined and its use by psychologists covers a deficiency of basic understanding.  It is certainly as vague as Jung’s subconsciousness.

12.  Page 24The appearance of the concept of chance in a fundamental theory is by no means unique; we observe its action in most sciences, indeed in all those that feature epistemic feedback.

13.  Page 32: Only a minority of authors explicitly avow the action of purpose in evolution and all processes of life. … Teilhard de Chardin who uses the impressive phrase “paroxysm of harmonized complexity.

14.  Page 35: To me this implies that if the development of man were entirely a result of chance it would be an accident, a sequence of events that a statistician would regard its occurrence as absurd.

15.  Page 40: This circumstance may be responsible for the fact that an increasing number if distinguished philosophers and indeed some of the most celebrated researchers in the field of neurology are discarding the ind-brain identity theory, seemingly approaching the acceptance of a thesis as transcendence with compatibility.

16.  Page 40: Penfold concludes that the mind, as an independent agency, can give direction to the brain in advance of the brains action

17.  Page 42 the substance of physics is no longer single and uniform but multiple yet compatible and coherent.

18.  Page 44: Where then does consciousness reside?  The best answer might be: no where.  The mind is something sui generis.  The fact that it cannot be located does not worry the physicist , for he know of other onta that defy locatability.

19.  Page 47: Transcendental dualism is a term Eccles assigns to his philosophic view.

20.  Page 48: What is the external world?  In what sense does it exist?  Can it be explained without a mind?  To answer these questions requires an excursion in epistemology, into the way we gain knowledge of the world, an to the features of this knowledge stable, objective , and independent of the mind.

21.  Page 50: reification, making a thing out of sensations.  Obviously if there were no mind, there would be no reification.  In the strictest sense, therefore, mind creates the external world. … So far as the single mind is concerned the continued identity, stability, the cohesion among reified P-states are inexplicable, are an aspect of the miracle of existence, for which no simple scientific reasoning can account. 

a.       Reification is the act of treating something abstract, such as an idea, relation, system, quality, etc., as if it were a concrete object. It is the conversion of an abstract concept into something concrete. Reification is also known as concretism, hypostatization, or the fallacy of misplaced concreteness. It is a fallacy of ambiguity, when an abstraction is treated as if it were a concrete real event or physical entity

22.  Page 51:  Noncognative experience is charactistic of ab explored in the arts, the humanities, and all the ethical religions concerns and involves feelings and mental acts of remembering, willing, and certain kinds of analytical reasoning. 

23.  Page 52:  Northrop calls our rules of correspondence epistemic correlations;

24.  Page 53:  The term construct suggests a measure of creativity,of participation on the part of the scientist, and was intended for, as we shall see, the passage of P to the field of constructs is not wholly unique but subject to selection under rational principles.

25.  Page 58:  This passage, which in essence a rule of correspondence leading from a complex of P-facts to a construct belonging to the class of external objects, I have called reification.  … All this combined in the rule  of correspondence ® called reification, and it is the rule thatfills the world with innumerable external objects … uninterpreted complex of sensations.

26.  Page 64: In other words, our construction, and hence our recognition of reality, or the world, depends on compulsive features that are not of our arbitrary choice.

27.  Page 70: Lateral extension suggests two things (1) there are many minds, each of which constructs the same C-field if it proceeds along the lines of our epistemology suggests.  Beyond this observation we account legitimately go at present. Later, however, I shall have occasion to suggest and elaborate on the existence of a Universal Mind. I therefore list here suggestion (2) the lateral extension of the figure may mean a merging of all individual minds into a universal one.    … Could this account for inspiration of scientific genius which leads to bizarre conjectures that are ultimately verified empirically? 

28.  Page 83:  Let us be reminded that consciousness, despite the desire of many physicists to adopt it, has not yet found a in physics.

29.  Page 93: From what has been said it appears the concept of mind or consciousness resembles most closely what physicists call a field: it is not necessarily localized in a limited region but is capable being located  predominantly withing a given space, say the human body….Although science no longer forces us to regard mind as material, or even as associated with matter, we do know that it interacts with matter, primarily the brain.

30.  Page 97: The mind may be regarded as a field in the accepted physical sense of the term.  But it is a nonmaterial field; its closest analogue is perhaps a probability field.  …The mind has no mass at all. 

31.  Page 98: My thesis was that primary (P) experiences, the edge  of the C-field, are subjective, contingent, qualitative, and by themselves in coherent, the form part of the rhapsody of perception.  Because of the lack of rational relations among them, P-Facts require to be organized, made stable, objective, rationally tractable, by translation into constructs via rules of correspondence.

32.  Page 100: Scientific time, which characterizes scientific reality, is an abstract idea employed in the description of observable processes. It is represented bya line space and has an arbitrary origin denoting the present, but the present has no absolute significance and can be located by choice anywhere on the line.

33.  Page 102: The other solution to the problem of evil, the one I prefer is simply this.  Suffering is mistake for evil.  … Further I discuss the view that religion may be a meta science, a discipline with its own structure that ponders the somewhat miraculous circumstance that man ai able to apply the scientific methd and that the unruly mass of factual (P) experiences can be made to obey simple rules and laws.

34.  Page 104: it has now been shown that a sphere of matter having sufficient destiny and thus possessing positive mass energy (MC2) and negative potential energy because of gravitational attraction, may have zero total energy as well as zero momentum.  Hence it would satisfy all known conservation laws if it were created out of nothing.  The Big Bang Theory doe does not contradict this conjecture.

35.  Page 107:  …protons and neutrons.  When these are separated in space and therefore noninteracting, one is charged and the other is neutral.  But at sufficiently close distances their identities disappear, their properties merge, and distinction between them becomes impossible.  But they are still two onta.

36.  Page 109: Thus one is led to a new notion of unbroken wholeness which denies the classical idea of analyzability of the world into separately and independently existent part.  Should this kind of denial also be necessary for conscious, for mind, so that the question of separate mind making up or adding the universal mind become meaningful

37.  Page 110: … the concept of reality, unformed and unfixed by consciousness, is completely meaningless …. The game of give and take that goes on between consciousness and reality.

38.  Page 111  As to the explicit claim that the external world – physical reality – is produced by the mind, I have merely this claim is in harmony with the epistemology developed previously.  Sensations transcribed by rules of correspondence into coherent constructs subjected to certain metaphysical requirements, finally constitute reality, in essence the same for all.

39.  Page 112: In order to establish the reality of external object, the starting point is a protocol called sensation (P-plane)  ..this sensation is translated or converted into a construct by means of rules of correspondence and regulation by certain metaphysical principles.  Everything in the external world…owes its character to this process.  Every entity is a construct of our mind called real because it satisfies this procedure.

40.  Page 113: …time and space are modes of representation of external objects, mdes generated by the mind. …space provides a unity and universality our sensations do not possess.  We are spaces filled with objects, limited to their extents.  Different spaces are differentiated by objects they contain, within a complex of sensations.

41.  Page 113: We experience time directly in the flight of our consciousness, both amid external sensations and internal awareness, both different an efferent, as in introspection, memory, or meditation.   But like space, appears in fragment or pieces characterized by what occurs, the momentary contents of our consciousness, and again, as in the case of space, we proclaim time to be a single and infinite duration: all times are one.

42.  Page 114: On death of any living creature the spirit returns to the spiritual world, the body to the bodily world.  In this however only the bodies are subject to change.  The spirit world is one single point who stands like unto a light behind the bodily worls and who, when any single creature comes into being, shines through it as through a window.

43.  Page 117: In special relativity, time enters as a fourth coordinate.  When this is introduced, space becomes four-dimensional, and its character changes from Euclidian to hyperbolic.

44.  Page 117: The history of the physical universe – provided it is made up of discrete onta – os therefore an immense collection of world lines, represented as an enormously large set of formulas, the aggregate of which I shall call the World Formula

45.  Page 119:  It is clearly wrong to assert tha knowledge implies or requires existence, ot that existence requires knowledge.  For knowledge can be erroneous, incompatible with existence.  True knowledge of an occurrence , however, implies existence.  The occurrence in this case is a segment in te process of the universe.  This leaves us with the question “Does existence imply true knowledge

46.  Page119: The universe must therefore have been created, together with the laws that regulate it.  This leaves us with two possibilities (1) a designer, knower, was responsible for its genesis, he designed it like a clock, which is still running.  But the clockmaker disappeared or died; (2) the clockmaker still exists and knows the course of the universe.  I accept the second alternative.

47.  Page 121: Our human satae inflicts further impediments on us which set us apart from the Universal Mind…. It produces the prevailing sense of individual isolation and gives us an identity as well as an ego.

48.  Page 122: The past is regulated by determinate and determinable causes; the future by probability

49.  Page 127: By way of concluding this book I wish give a summary that relates its title to its content.  The word esistance is not unique in its meaning but admits of a considerable variety of interpretations.  A different one appears in each of the following sentences:  The tree exists.  Electrons exist.  Photons exist. Life exists.   ….God exists.

50.  Page 129:  Thus to sum up the enigma of existence, only Universal Mind, the cosmic consciousness, possesses existence in full unlimited measure.  The Universal Mind confers existence on conscious beings in varying degree, and these beings create, out of the minds bestowed on them and in accordance with principles imposed by the Universal Mind, everything else they call real or existing.

51.  Page 130:  God the creator is also responsible for the laws of nature.  Many forms of evil are the results of physical, psychological and other processes.  Hence we add the quality of consistency, action in accord with the laws he created, to the character of God, the problem of evil may disappear.

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