Ex-User (11125)
Prolific Member
- Local time
- Today 10:32 AM
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2015
- Messages
- 1,532
what do you think of the statement "everything is connected"? do you agree with it? and why?
"I just thought of so-and-so and then they called, how do you explain that?"
Theory of large numbers. Coincidences must happen eventually.
They still don't get it though.
Being an ex physicist and a student of psychology I often get this nonsense. "I just thought of so-and-so and then they called, how do you explain that?" I'll try and point out the thousands of times they thought of somebody and didn't get a call but invariably they don't want to hear it "yes but how do you explain it??"
I remember watching a brian cox video years ago where he tried to show how everything is connected using quantum mechanics and then found out later that it was all false BS...i was seriously disappointed and also kinda sadNothing in QM implies everything is connected,
i find the statement at least mildly annoying, even though i have a high tolerance for the intuitive metaphors that belong to the language of new age/pluralism.
everything is connected with something in it's direct neighbourhood and many things are integrated into holons, like cells in a body.
there are probably undiscovered holons, like morphogenetic fields. i'm not a fan of the guy who may have coined or has popularized this term (rupert sheldrake), but this particular concept makes sense to me.
but saying that "everything" is connected sounds like the expression of a borderline psychosis.
Taken in an absolutist sense it's pretty annoying.
How does one agree (or disagree) with a statement?what do you think of the statement "everything is connected"? do you agree with it? and why?
"Everything is connected" is a red flag, which acts to mark a person with whom I should avoid any unnecessary conversation.
If this statement was not attached to unctuous philosophies, I'd say it's too vague to agree or disagree with. My hair is somehow connected to my skin, but not really, as the atoms aren't allowing them to actually touch. I guess you could say that everything is connected in the heart of the sun, but then that is only true if you draw certain lines regarding what you'll call a "thing". Less literally, there are cause and effect, but not every cause affects every effect.
idk, i feel the sentence makes sense just that people dont misinterpret itI hate it. It's a meaningless statement that humanities dropouts use to add gravitas to some point they're making.
Personally feel it isnt wrong to imagine things;Being an ex physicist and a student of psychology I often get this nonsense. "I just thought of so-and-so and then they called, how do you explain that?" I'll try and point out the thousands of times they thought of somebody and didn't get a call but invariably they don't want to hear it "yes but how do you explain it??"
I've watched a bit of Cosmos recently. I believe in Episode 2, Neil DeGrasse Tyson elaborates on how very long any one string of DNA is. And at the very beginning of every string, the DNA of every single living creature contains the same pattern. Furthermore (this actually came from elsewhere, one of my textbooks I think), our atoms, the very building blocks of our existence, are the very same atoms that make up the dust which form stars.
That is how I have always interpreted that statement. In a certain scientific sense, everything is connected. We all stem from the same materials. We are all stardust. (Damn, science can make you cry with joy sometimes. :') )