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On 6/8/24 21:55, john larkin wrote:On Sat, 8 Jun 2024 19:30:11 +0200, Jeroen Belleman>
<jeroen@nospam.please> wrote:
On 6/8/24 16:45, john larkin wrote:On Sat, 8 Jun 2024 09:54:42 -0000 (UTC), Cursitor Doom>
<cd999666@notformail.com> wrote:
>On Sat, 8 Jun 2024 10:43:15 +0200, Jeroen Belleman wrote:>
>On 6/8/24 01:37, Cursitor Doom wrote:>On Fri, 7 Jun 2024 23:57:54 +0200, Jeroen Belleman wrote:>
>On 6/7/24 23:11, Mike Monett VE3BTI wrote:>Jeroen Belleman <jeroen@nospam.please> wrote:>
>On 6/7/24 16:49, john larkin wrote:>
[...]>Some kind of sense, given that there is neither heaven, nor hell.
Actually, Hamas makes sense. They send Jews to hell because they
are heretics, and send Muslims to heaven to be blessed martyrs. So
for Hamas, killing is always win-win.
>
>
Religion, islam in particular, is only pernicious brainwashing.
There is no afterlife. There is only this life. Don't waste it.
>
Jeroen Belleman
Learn how to do soul travel. It is the most important thing to do
this lifetime. It will give you absolute proof there is life past
this one,
and that you are immortal.
I don't know what soul travel is, but I'm sure there is no afterlife,
just as there was no forelife. There is no soul. My existence is the
result of an uninterrupted sequence of incredibly improbable events,
going back billions of years into the past, and I will cease to exist,
never to come back,
when some essential part of my body fails.
>
While I'm certainly not looking forward to dying, I'm not afraid of
being dead. The need to believe in an afterlife is just another of
those weird religious ideas.
>
Jeroen Belleman
Well, I'm not religious at all but am convinced there's an after-life.
And that's not just so I can feel all warm and fuzzy. I actually find
the prospect deeply concerning. I'd much rather be like you in outlook!
How did you come to be convinced of the existence of an afterlife,
and what kind of experience do you expect to have?
>
Jeroen Belleman
I'm afraid that's *way* too big and off-topic a subject for expansion on
this forum!
Designing electronics has obviously suggestions of quantum
consciousness, and even Einstein thought that QM was spooky.
>
Don't give up on miracles quite yet.
>
You have referred to quantum effects in the brain many
times. In as far as the brain is a chemical machine, and
that chemistry is basically a manifestation of quantum
mechanics, I agree. In practice, QM is just a level too
deep in the abstraction stack. Somehow I believe that
that is not how you see it. Would you elaborate?
>
DNA and RNA and other things aren't flat linear molecules as the
cartoons suggest. They are twisted and tangled into writhing balls. So
any sequence gets continuously and randomly rubbed against the rest of
the string. That's a quantum cross-correlation machine.
Hmm. I see DNA as a template for making molecular machines,
enzymes and such, that do useful things for living organisms.
Useful things such as transforming nutrients into suitable
energy-carrying chemicals or building blocks for cell components.
Pumps to move stuff into or out of cell compartments, and many
other functions needed to make a living cell thrive.
>
DNA doesn't do much by itself. It's the molecular machines that
do the work.
>>Much of technology, electronics in particular, is a miracle,
though not in the mystical or religious sense.
I like the Barrie Gilbert essay, "Where do little circuits come from?"
They are all out there in the infinite solution space, and it's hard
to explore an infinite space serially.
Hmm. When I design a circuit, I don't randomly jump through
solution space. I start with something simple, then identify
limitations and add or change things to address them. I may
add bootstraps or cascodes to reduce the effect of parasitic
capacitance. Add buffers to reduce load or output impedance
effects. Add symmetry to tackle thermal or offset issues.
Change or add components to tweak phase/frequency responses.
Move components around to reduce parasitics, or to profit
from some fortuitous beneficial one. And so on.
>
Basically I'll choose some promising starting point and then
try to move forward through the solution space, exploring
interesting branches on the way. Rarely I'll throw everything
out and start over.
>
It's still a serial process. I can't see much of the space at
once. Maybe you can. So much the better for you.
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