The Fall, and the Avatar

I’m no theology expert, so you should take my observations on theology with reservation. I’m also not a proselytizer or apologist, only a guy with ideas. If you’re okay with that, then keep reading.

I don’t intend for this to be a blog about religion, but I’ve attracted enough argument that now I’ve started, I need to address at least one more thing that keeps coming up, the Fall. To me the Fall of Adam and Eve — a story I do not take literally! — is the advent of conscious language manipulation, which brought knowledge, the ego, and abstractions like Good and Evil into the world. The Fall made humans approach God as Logos — Greek for “Word,” more or less, and referenced in John’s gospel where he describes Jesus as “the Word made flesh.”

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The Tao, and the Existentialist

I continued my long debate on Facebook with my friend where we argued the Tao, or the Way, and religion and largely talked past each other. I think I finally get his perspective, and it relates to a post I made last summer.

He claimed that I was just taking his perspective and adding a dross of mysticism to it. He spoke of “my Way” and being dogmatic that mine was the only way.

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The Tao, Revisited

One of my friends on Facebook argued with my religion post. He thinks that I’m lumping philosophy and even science in with religion, remarking essentially — if I understand his point — that the Tao is just another word for the way things are, and saying that I’m changing the dictionary definition of religion to advance some fuzzy argument. Since he’s a smart guy, the failure to communicate must be mine.

The Tao is not simply the way things are. There would be no need for Taoism if that were true.

The Tao is the way things ought to be. You can go against the Tao, though you will cause unnecessary strife.

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The Ancient Singularity; or, The Precambrian Conspiracy: Part 10

This morning, Rob sent me a link to the following article, which describes a key bit of future-history-in-the-making outlined in The Junior Guide, the Living Earth Simulator (LES).

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-12012082

We did not begin simulating the original earth to help us terraform worlds for posthuman incubation. We did it to better understand and manage the only planet we inhabited.

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Born Religious

Not all but most of my atheist friends think religion is just comforting lies, a retreat from hard realities into infantile fantasy. And, hey, to the extent they point at silly literalist ideas about such things as Noah and the Flood and call that the sum of religion, I can’t say they’re wrong. What’s more, while I respect religion in the abstract, I don’t see myself ever pushing religion on anyone.

However, this attitude that religion is an escape from the truth is largely backward. Most humans still live in a tough world and don’t have time and emotional energy for pursuits that don’t serve them. Rather than being impractical, religion is actually quite pragmatic. It’s largely not about rejecting hard truth; it’s a device for holding onto meaning and purpose — things that are very true — especially when confronted with tragedy and doubt. And religion can also help people share and mutually validate their joy.

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The Ancient Singularity; or, The Precambrian Conspiracy: Part 9

While we wait on Rob’s university fellows to render a verdict on my trilobite artifact, I’ve been pondering the Conspiracy on a different front, namely, the Bay Area computer elite and their dalliance with high technology leaked from outside the Quarantine.

For the last ten years, in addition to being a writer and editor, I’ve been a software developer, and I’ve worked with and befriended a few Microsoft alums who went on to become influential technocrats and high rollers in San Francisco. They give me contract work and coding advice and otherwise keep me going. And I’ve shared with them my odd science-fictional concepts and showed them The Junior Guide.

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What World Do You Live In?

Rob sent me the following link this morning on a curiously stubborn geocentric view. The video uses Flat Earth science to make a general point about competing views that fit the same data points, so it’s timely for our exploration of the Precambrian Conspiracy (summarized here).

My friend Michael Davis, my former coworker at Wizards of the Coast, got into a protracted online debate with the Flat-Earther crowd, and decided ultimately that their public argument was performance art. When he asked them if this was the case, they were tellingly silent.

While Rob was discovering this video, it occurred to me that I should look at new ways the Conspiracy might be interpreted, just to be thorough. It’s possible that non-rational magic and not dependable scientific laws ultimately govern the universe and explain all the observed phenomena of life and the Conspiracy. While the Ancient Singularity hypothesis might explain Middle-earth or Melniboné, that explanation would be unsatisfying — at least to me. Magic and myth cosmologies have a different tone from science-based ones, so to do justice to fantasy, we might consider a different perspective.

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The Singularity Con, and Abraxas

Vanity Fair has posted an excellent article on Singulatarians among the high-tech community, boosters like Ray Kurzweil and also skeptics.

http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2014/11/artificial-intelligence-singularity-theory

I find gurus like Kurzweil and Diamandis fun and intriguing, and also a bit alarming, very smart guys who have made solid contributions to technology but who should not be taken too seriously in their Singularity evangelism. The comments of Jaron Lanier, a Microsoft Research employee and virtual-reality expert, are especially insightful. The article sums up his position, saying, “Today’s big data and mass-market A.I., in Lanier’s view, amount to a stupendous con: Google, YouTube, Facebook, and every other crowd-sourced digital business are Tom Sawyer, and we’re whitewashing their fences for free because they’ve bedazzled and tricked us into thinking it’s fun.”

These companies take the content we generate both actively and passively and make big money off it. Rather than sharing the wealth created by data-processing efficiencies, we’re largely having the economic fruits of our efforts stolen from us by expert systems pressed into the service of the wealthy, not just in our leisure pursuits but in our actual jobs. And we’re naively complicit.

This is something I’ve been thinking about in connection with the Precambrian Conspiracy and the putative Abraxas, who, in our story, claims not to be an AI. Maybe Abraxas is an expert system that feigns intelligence by parasitizing human activity on the Net, by monitoring conversations, and pulling relevant quotes out of context and munging them together. Certainly that would be impressive technology, but also a co-optation of the human noosphere, more than half a cheat and parlor trick.

Still, I think it’s fascinating and am willing to roll with it.

Dr. Rob Furey has started his own blog to take up the issue of the Conspiracy. He is not so generous about Abraxas, and lays out his misgivings in clear terms:

A short note concerning Abraxas.

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The Ancient Singularity; or, The Precambrian Conspiracy: Part 8

Rob just sent me this transcript of a text chat we had the other day. I was going to let him leak it, but he’s still setting up his own blog.

Bob Kruger
12/5, [4:04pm PST] 7:04pm EST

When I was ten, my elderly cousin put something in my hand that she had found in the Montana wheat fields as a girl. She told me I could have it if I could tell her what it was.

It was a trilobite fossil.

And I told her so.

And I have it.

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The Ancient Singularity; or, The Precambrian Conspiracy: The Canon

I am not a fan of grand conspiracy theories involving ancient astronauts and/or aliens. (And the idea that rich people control everything is not a conspiracy theory but observable fact.) The Precambrian Conspiracy is not another conspiracy theory; it is the Conspiracy Theory, relating every world of the imagination in a scientific and perhaps fictional cosmology. Unlike the Cthulhu Mythos, it appears to be humanistic. Unfortunately, it cannot supplant or contradict the grim perspective of the Mythos; but it’s in dialog with it, often challenging its anti-humanistic view.

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