"Adams, Scott - God's Debris" - читать интересную книгу автора (Adams Scott)
GOD'S DEBRIS A Thought Experiment
by Scott Adams The rain made everything sound different -- the engine of my delivery van, the traffic as it rolled by on a film of fallen clouds, the occasional dull honk. I didn't have a great job, but it wasn't bad either. I knew the city so well that I could lose myself in thought and still do the work, still get paid, still have plenty of time for myself. When you're inside your own head, the travel time between buildings evaporates. It's as if I could vanish from one stop and reappear at the next. If you work in the city long enough, it begins to deal with you on a personal level. Streets reveal their moods. Sometimes the signal lights love you. Sometimes they fight you. When you're hunting for a new building, you hope the city is on your side. You have to use a little bit of thinking -- you might call it the process of elimination -- and you need a little bit of instinct, but not too much of either. If you think too hard, you overshoot your target and end up at the Pier of the Tenderloin. If you relax and let the city help, the destination does all the work for you. It was one of those days. It was a scruffy package, barely up to company standards. I calculated the distance from my van to the doorway and decided the packing material could handle the moisture. On behalf of the package and myself, I surrendered to the rain. I walked up the four steps to the ornate wooden door and pressed the doorbell. A muddled 'bing-bong' filled the interior and leaked out the cracks of the door jam. Rookies wore jackets. Ah, rules. The oversized knob offered no resistance as it turned on its oiled core. I was no longer surprised to find unlocked doors in the city. Maybe at some subconscious level we don't believe we need protection from our own species. Inside I could see a long, dark hallway with red faux-textured walls lined with large, illuminated paintings. At the end was a half-opened door to a room that hosted a flickering light. Someone was home and should have heard the doorbell. I didn't like the look of it. Occasionally you read about an elderly person who dies alone and no one knows about it for weeks. My mind went there. I stepped inside and closed the door, enjoying the warmth, deciding what to do next. The source of the uneven light was a huge stone fireplace. I entered the room, not sure why I was being quiet. Somehow the room was both simple and overwhelming. It was half fire-washed color, half black, brilliantly appointed with antique wooden furniture, elaborate patterned walls, and wood floors. My pupils enlarged to tease out the shadows. I was startled and feeling a bit guilty about letting myself in. It took me a minute to locate the source of the voice. It was as if it came from the room itself. Something moved and I noticed, on the far side of the fireplace, in a wooden rocker, a smallish form in a red plaid blanket, looking like a hastily rolled cigar. His tiny wrinkled hands held the blanket like the button clasps. Two undersized feet in cloth slippers dangled from the wrap. All I heard was the fire. I expected an answer. That's how it's supposed to work. When one person says something, the other is supposed to say something back. The old man wasn't subscribing. "If you toss a coin a thousand times, how often will it come up heads?" "About 50 percent of the time," I answered before changing the subject. "I need a signature for this package." "Well," I said, measuring how much information to include in my response, "the person who sent the package wants a signature. He needs confirmation that it got delivered." "I guess that's because the coin weighs about the same on both sides, so there's a 50-50 chance it will land on one side versus the other." I tried to avoid sounding condescending. I wasn't sure I succeeded. I saw what was going on. The old man pulls this trick question on anyone who comes within range. There had to be a punch line or clever answer, so I played along. "The answer," he said, "is that the question has no why." "No," he replied, in a manner that seemed suddenly coherent. "Every other question has an answer to why. Only probability is inexplicable." "It's more than it seems." He gestured to the clipboard with his head. "You can sign it." "Avatar. A-v-a-t-a-r." "What's for me?" "I just deliver the packages," I said. "My job is to bring them to you. It's your package." "Uhm, okay," I said, planning my exit strategy. I figured I could leave the package in the hallway on the way out. The old man's caretaker would find it. "It's the answer to your question." "I understand," said the old man. He continued, "Let me ask you a simple question: did you deliver the package or did the package deliver you?" "I delivered the package," I answered. That seemed obvious enough. I said no. "I suppose that's true, in a way. But it's the least important part of the delivery. I did the driving and lifting and moving. That's the important part." "Look," I said, "I'm holding the package and I'm walking with it. That's delivering. I'm delivering the package. That's what I do. I'm a package-delivery guy." There was a twisted logic to that interpretation, but I wasn't willing to give in. "The difference is intention. If I leave this package here and go on my way, I think that settles the question of who delivered who." I picked out a big one. The retiring embers celebrated its arrival. I had the brief impression that the log was glad to help, to do its part keeping the old man warm. It was a silly thought. I brushed off my hands and turned to leave. The old man's face revealed a life of useful endeavor. I had a sense that he deserved companionship and I was happy to give some. my other choice involved a bag lunch and the back of my truck. Maybe there wasn't any choice at all. "There has to be a God," I said. "Otherwise, none of us would be here." It wasn't much of a reason, but I figured he didn't need more. "That's standard stuff for God. So, yeah." "Sure." He was clever, but I wasn't going to fall for that trap. "God let us determine the future ourselves, using our free will," I explained. "So you agree that it would be impossible for God to know the future and also grant humans free will?" "For whose benefir does God withhold his power to determine the future?" he asked. The old man pressed on. "Couldn't God give humans the illusion of free will? We'd be just as happy as if we had actual free will, and God would retain his ability to see the future. Isn't that a better solution for God than the one you suggested?" "If God exists, his motives are certainly unfathomable. No one knows why he grants free will, or why he cares about human souls, or why pain and suffering are necessary parts of life." "Love? Do you mean love in the way you understand it as a human?" "A brain surgeon would tell you that a specific part of the brain controls the ability to love. If it's damaged, people are incapable of love, incapable of caring about others." "So, isn't it arrogant to think that the love generated by our little brains is the same thing that an omnipotent being experiences? If you were omnipotent, why would you limit yourself to something that could be reproduced by a little clump of neurons?" "What does it mean to feel something similar to the way God feels? Is that like saying a pebble is similar to the sub because both are round?" he responded. "Soyou believe God WANTS things. And he LOVES things, similar to the way humans do. Do you also believe God experiences anger and forgiveness?" "So God has a personality, according to you, and it is similar to what humans experience?" "What sort of arrogance assumes God is like people?" he asked. "Are you saying you believe in God because there are no other explanations?" he asked. "If a stage magician makes a tiger disappear and you don't know how the trick could be done without real magic, does that make it real magic?" "If someone very wise knew how the world were designed without God's hand, could that person convince you that God wasn't involved?" "To be fair, you can only be sure that you don't know whether that person exists or not." "Does God have free will?" he asked. "Indeed. And being omnipotent, God must be able to peer into his own future, to view it in all its perfect detail." "Omnipotence is trickier than it seems," he said. "I see where you're going with this," I said. "You're an atheist. You think science has the answers and you think religious people are all delusional." I was relieved. I liked science. It was my favorite subject in school. Religion made me uncomfortable. It's better not to think too much about religion, but science was made for thinking. It was based on facts. "Almost nothing," he said. "Consider magnets," the old man said. "If you hold two magnets near each other, they are attracted. Yet there is nothing material connecting them." "So you have a word for it. It's a 'field' you say. But you can't get a handful of this thing for which you have a name. You can't fill a container with a magnetic field and take it with you. You can't cut it in pieces. You can't block its power." "No matter what object you insert between two magnets, their attraction to each other remains exactly the same. This 'field' of yours is strange stuff. We can see its effect, and we can invent a name for it, but it doesn't exist in any physical form. How can something that doesn't exist in physical form have influence over the things that do?" "Consider gravity," the old man continued, oblivious to my creative answer. "Gravity is also an unseen force that cannot be blocked by any object. It reaches across the entire universe and connects all things instantly, yet it has no physical form." "Indeed, Einstein did say that. And what does that mean?" "Can you imagine bent space?" he asked. He looked away. I figured he was either annoyed at my answer or just resting. It turned out he was pausing to gather energy. He drew a breath into his tiny lungs and began. For example, some physicists describe gravity in terms of ten dimensions all curled up. But those aren't real words -- just placeholders, used to refer to parts of abstract equasions. Even if the equations someday prove useful, it would say nothing about the existence of other dimensions. Words such as 'dimension' and 'field' and 'infinity' are nothing more than conveniences for mathematicians and scientists. They are not descriptions of reality, yet we accpt them as such because everyone is sure someone else knows what the words mean." "Have you heard of string theory?" heasked. "String theory says that all of physical reality -- from gravity to magnetism to light -- can be explained in one grand theory that involves tiny string-shaped vibrating objects. String theory has produced no useful results. It has never been proven by experiment, yet thousands of physicists are dedicating their careers to it on the faith that it smells right." "Every generation of humans believed it had all the answers it needed, except for a few mysteries they assumed would be solved at any moment. And they all believed their ancestors were simplistic and deluded. What are the odds that you are the first generation of humans who will understand reality?" "Computers and rocket ships are examples of inventions, not of understanding," he said. "All that is needed to build machines is the knowledge that when one thing happens, another thing happens as a result. It's an accumulation of simple patterns. A dog can learn patterns. There is no 'why' in those examples. We don't understand why electricity travels. We don't know why light travels at a constant speed forever. All we can do is observe and record patterns." "Where is your free will?" the old man asked. "Is it part of your brain, or does it emanate from some place outside your body and somehow control your actions?" "Doubting is good," he said. "But tell me where you think free will comes from." "Your brain is like a machine in many ways, isn't it?" he asked. "The brain is comprised of cells and neurons and chemicals and pathways and electrical activity that all conform to physical laws. When part of your brain is stimulated in one specific way, could it respond any way it wants, or would it always respond in one specific way?" "Then you believe we can only know things that have been tested?" he asked. "Then you're not saying anything, are you?" "So where is free will?" he asked again. "Soul? Where is the soul located?" "Then the soul is not physical in nature, according to you," he said. "So you believe that the soul, which is not physical, can influence the brain, which IS physical?" "Do you believe the soul can influence other physical things, like a car or a watch?" "Can your soul influence other peoples' brains, or does it know which brain is yours?" He paused. "Your soul, according to you, knows the difference between your brain and everything else that is not your brain. And it never makes a mistake in that regard. That means your soul has structure and rules, like a machine." "If the soul is the source of free will, then it must be weighing alternatives and making decisions." "But that's what brains do. Why would you need a soul to do what a brain can do?" he asked. "If the soul's actions are not controlled by rules, that can only mean the soul acts randomly. On the other hand, if your soul IS guided by rules, which in turn guide you, then you have no free will. You are programmed. There is no in-between; either your life is random or predetermined. Which is it?" "If God is guiding your soul and your soul is guiding your brain, then you are nothing more than a puppet of God. You don't really have free will in that case, do you?" "That sounds as if God is giving you some sort of an intelligence test. If you make the right choices, good things happen to your soul. Is that what you're saying?" "Morality?" "Is your brain involved in making moral decisions or do those decisions get made some place outside your body?" he asked. I needed reinforcements. "Look," I said, "four billion people believe in some sort of God and free will. They can't all be wrong." I didn't see how he could deny the obvious. "Of course they do. Billions of people believe in God." "Four billion people SAY they believe in God, but few genuinely believe. If people believed in God, they would live every minute of their lives in support of that belief. Rich people would give their wealth to the needy. Everyone would be frantic to determine which religion was the true one. No one could be comfortable in the thought that they might have picked the wrong religion and blundered into eternal damnation, or bad reincarnation, or some other unthinkable consequence. People would dedicate their lives to converting others to their religions. I couldn't believe what I was hearing. "If you asked them, they'd say they believe." If you believe a truck is coming toward you, you will jump out of the way. That is belief in the reality of the truck. If you tell people you fear the truck but do nothing to get out of the way, that is not belief in the truck. Likewise, it is not belief to say God exists and then continue sinning and hoarding your wealth while innocent people die of starvation. When belief does not control your most important decisions it is not belief in the underlying reality, it is belief in the usefulness of believing." "I'm saying that people claim to believe in God, but most don't literally believe. They only act as though they believe because there are earthly benefits in doing so. They create a delusion for themselves because it makes them happy." "No. Atheists also prefer delusions," he said. "The best any human can do is to pick a delusion that helps them get through the day. This is why people of different religions can generally live in peace. At some level, we all suspect that other people don't believe their own religion any more than we believe ours." "Jews and Muslims believe that Christ isn't the Son of God," he countered. "If they are right, then Christians are mistaken about the core of their religion. And the Jews or the Christians or the Muslims have the right religion, then the Hindus and Buddhists who believe in reincarnation are wrong. Would you call those details?" "At some level of consciousness, everyone knows that the odds of picking the true religion -- if such a thing exists -- is nil." ######### CHAPTER 8 - ROAD MAPS ######### "What's your belief, Mr. Avatar?" Religions are like different maps whose routes all lead to the collective good of society. Some maps take their followers ove rugged terrain. Other maps have easier paths. Some of the travelers of each route will be assigned the job of being the protectors and interpreters of the map. They will teach the young to respect it and be suspicious of other maps." "The maps were made by the people who went first and didn't die. The maps that survive are the ones that work," he said. "You can't judge the value of a thing by looking only at costs. In many countries, more people die from hospital errors than religious wars, but no one accuses hospitals of being evil. Religious people are happier, they live longer, have fewer accidents and stay out of trouble compared to non-religious people. From society's viewpoint, religion works." ######### CHAPTER 9 - DELUSION GENERATOR ######### "Has anyone ever advised you to 'be yourself'?" "What does it mean to be yourself?" he asked. "If it means to do what you think you ought to do, then you're doing that already. If it means to act like you're exempt from society's influence, that's the worst advice in the world; you would probably stop bathing and wearing clothes. The advice to 'be yourself' is obviously nonsense. But our brains accept the tripe as wisdom because it is more comfortable to believe we have a strategy for life than to believe we have no idea how to behave." "There is more information in one thimble of reality than can be understoof by a galaxy of human brains. It is beyond the human brain to understand the world and its environment, so the brain compensates by creating simplified illusions that act as a replacement for understanding. When the illusions work well and the human who subscribes to the illusion survives, those illusions are passed to new generations. "Well, I don't think rocks would be very interesting to God," I said. "They just sit on the ground and erode." "That wouldn't be practical," I said. I wasn't sure it was a question meant to be answered, but I wanted to show I was listening. To a God not bound by the limits of human practicality, every tiny part of your body would be as action-packed and meaningful as the parts of any rock or tree or bug. And the sum of your parts that form the personality and life we find so special and amazing would seem neither special nor amazing to an omnipotent being. "I still think people are more important to God than animals and plants and dirt. I think that's obvious," I argued. "The engine is more important because without an engine, there is no reason to steer," I reasoned. "Well, yes. I guess that's true," I admitted. ########## CHAPTER 10 - REINCARNATION, UFOS, AND GOD ########## He started again. "If you want to understand UFOs, reincarnation and God, do not study UFOs, reincarnation and God. Study people." "No," he said, "I am saying that UFOs, reincarnation and God are all equal in terms of their reality." "Your question reveals your bias for a binary world where everything is either real or imaginary. That distinction lies in your perceptions, not in the universe. Your inability to see other possibilites and your lack of vocabulary are your brain's limits, not the universe's." "As you sit here, your truck exists for you only in your memory, a place in your mind. The Easter Bunny lives in the same place. They are equal." "Was the rain from this morning real?" "But you can't see or touch that rain now, can you?" "Like the Easter Bunny, the past exists only in your mind," he said. "Likewise, the future exists only in your mind because it has not happened." "And when you get that confirmation it would instantly become the past itself. So in effect, you would be using the past, which does not exist, to confirm something else from the past. And if you repeat the process a thousand times, with a thousand different pieces of evidence, together they would still be nothing but impressions of the past supporting other impressions of the past." "An insane person believes his world is consistent. If he believes the government is trying to kill him, he will see ample evidence of his belief in the so-called real world. He will be wrong, but his evidence is no better or worse than your evidence that it rained this morning. Both of you will be converting evidence of the present into impressions stored in your minds and you will both be certain your evidence is solid and irrefutable. Your mind will mold the facts and shape the clues until it all fits." "Clinical psychologists have proven that ordinary people will alter their memories of the past to make them fit their perceptions. It is the way a;; normal brains function under ordinary circumstances." "Now you do," he replied. "If you were God," he said, "what would you want?" "Imagine that you are omnipotent. You cando anything, create anything, be anything. As soon as you decide you want something, it becomes reality." He continued. "Does it make sense to think of God as wanting anything? A God would have no emotions, no fears, no desires, no curiosity, no hunger. Those are human shortcomings, not something that would be found in an omnipotent God. What then would motivate God?" "Omnipotence means that nothing is a challenge. And what could stimulate the mind of someone who knows everything?" "Everything that motivates living creatures is based on some weakness or flaw. Hunger motivates animals. Lust motivates animals. Fear and pain motivate animals. A God would have none of those impulses. Humans are driven by all of our animal passions plus loftier-sounding things like self-actualization and creativity and freedom and love. But God would care nothing for these things, or if he cared would already have them in unlimited quantities. None of them would be motivating." "I can conceieve of only one challenge for an omnipotent being -- the challenge of destroying himself." "I'm not saying he wants anything. I'm saying it's the only challenge." "That's thinking like a human, not like a God. You have a fear of death so you assume God would share your preference. But God would have no fears. Existing would be a choice. And there would be no pain of death, nor feelings of guilt or remorse or loss. Those are human feelings, not God feelings. God could simply choose to discontinue existence." "Your thinking is getting clearer," he said. "Yes, he will know the future of his own existence under normal conditions. But would his omnipotence include knowing what happens after he loses his omnipotence, or would his knowledge of the future end at that point?" "Maybe. But consider this. A God who knew the answer to that question would indeed know everything and have everything. For that reason he would be unmotivated to do anything or create anything. There would be no purpose to act in any way whatsoever. But a God who had one nagging question -- what happens if I cease to exist? -- MIGHT be motivated to find the answer in order to complete his knowledge. And having no fear and no reason to continue existing, he might try it." "We have the answer. It is our existence. The fact that we exist is proof that God is motivated to act in some way. And since only the challenge of self-destruction could interest an omnipotent God, it stands to reason that we..." "Are you saying what I think you're saying?" My brain was taking on too much knowledge. There was overflow and I needed to shake off the excess. "Are you saying that God blew himself to bits and we're what's left?" I asked. "Then what?" "Smaller than quarks? I don't know what a quark is, but I think it's small." "What's the second part of the debris?" I asked. "So you're saying that God -- an all-powerful being with a consciousness that extends to all things, across all time -- consists of nothing but dust and probability?" "Yes. You asked why a coin comes up heads half the time." "It's God's debris," I mumbled, rolling the idea around in both my mouth and mind to see if that helped. It was a fascinating concept, but too strange to embrace on first impression. "You said before that you didn't believe in God. Now you say you do. Which is it?" "You're not rejecting the idea of a fixed reality," I argued. "You're saying the universe is made of God's debris. That's a fixed reality." "If your God is just a metaphor, why should I care about him? He would be irrelevant," I said. "That's ridiculous. If everything we perceive is fake, just a metaphor, how do we get anything done?" "You lost me. So God is a potato?" I joked. "What makes things do what they do?" he asked. "What makes dogs bark, cats purr, plants grow?" "Evolution isn't a cause of anything; it's an observation, a way of putting things in categories. Evolution says nothing about causes." "But what makes evolution happen?" he asked. "Where did all the energy come from and how did it become so organized?" "Do you have any trouble understanding that a human embryo can only grow into a human adult and never into an apple tree or a pigeon?" he asked. "So you believe that DNA is fundamentally different from luck?" The old man looked at me in that way that said I would soon doubt what I was saying. He didn't disappoint. As usual, he began with a question. "Sure," I said, feeling confident again. "If all the things that caused life the first time around were to happen again, the result should be the same. I don't know what you're getting at." "I guess so. If it starts out the same and nothing changes it along the way, it should turn out the same." My confidence was evaporating again. "I have to think about that. It sounds logical but it's weird," I said. "I don't think instinct is making us build the Internet. I think people are trying to make money off it. It's just capitalism," I replied. He was right about the Internet being somewhat irrational. I wasn't going to win that debate and this was not a place to jump in. He had a lot more to say. In the distant future, humans will learn to control the weather, to manipulate DNA and to build whole new worlds out of raw matter. There is no logical limit to how much our collective power will grow. A billion years from now, if a visitor from another dimension observed humanity, he might perceive it to be one large entity with a consciousness and purpose, and not a collection of relatively uninteresting individuals." "I'm saying we're the building blocks of God, in the early stages of reassembling." "Would you? Your skin cells are not aware that they are part of a human being. Skin cells are not equipped for that knowledge. They are equipped to do what they do and nothing more. Likewise, if we humans -- and all the plants and animals and dirt and rocks -- were components of God, would we have the capacity to know it?" "He is discovering the answer to his only question." "He does. Otherwise you could not have asked the question, and I could not have answered." ########## CHAPTER 14 - PHYSICS OF GOD-DUST ########## "I can answer those questions by answering other questions first," he said. "Science is based on assumptions. Scientists assume that electricity will behave the same tommorrow as today. They assume that the laws of physics that apply on Earth will apply on other planets. Usually the assumptions are right, or close enough to be useful. "That's an old mind trick I learned about in school," I said. "I think it's called Xeno's Paradox, after some old Greek guy who thought it up first." "The solution is that each of the infinite slices of time are infinitely small, so the math works out. You can have continuous time without a minute lasting an eternity." "I thought the universe was infinitely large," I replied. "That doesn't make sense. What if I took a rocket to the edge of the universe, then I kept going. Couldn't I keep going forever? Where would I be if not in the universe?" "Okay, the universe itself might be finite, but all the stuff around it, the nothingness, that's infinite, right?" I asked. "Yeah, I guess so. But let's get back to the subject," I said. "How do you explain Xeno's Paradox?" "How should I know? You're the one making up the example. How much?" "What if everything disappears except for me and my wristwatch?" I asked. "Okay, I think I get that. But how is any of this going to answer my original question about gravity and what makes things move?" "Yes. It has a bunch of dots on it. The placed with the most dots are where there's the greatest probability," I said, pleased to remember something from my statistics classes. "You lost me." "I think I understand that, sort of," I lied. "I prefer the current theory of gravity," I said. "Newton and Einstein had it pretty much figured out. The math works with their theories. I'm not so sure about yours." "Einstein did explain it," I said. "Remember we talked about that? He said space was warped by matter, so what looks like gravity is just objects following the path of warped space." "Okay," I said. "I admit I don't know what any of that means. It does sound like nonsense." I chuckled. I had never heard anyone compare himself to Einstein. I was impressed by his cockiness but not convinced. "You haven't explained orbits. Under your theory, how could a moon orbit a planet and not be sucked into it? Your God-dust would pop into existence closer to the planet every time it appeared until it crashed into the surface." "I guess I am." He continued. "So there is always a dual probability influencing each particle of God-dust. One probability makes all God-dust pop into existence nearer to other God-dust. The other probability is that the dust will appear along a straight line drawn from its past. All apparent motion in the universe is based on those competing probabilities. "What if all the dust that makes up the moon doesn't reappear near is last position?" I asked. "You said it's only a matter of probability where the dust reappears, so couldn't the moon suddenly vanish if all its dust disappeared and then appeared on the other side of the solar system?" "The trouble with your theory," I said, "is that matter doesn't pop in and out of existence. Scientists would have noticed that by now." "I'll be darned," I said. ########## CHAPTER 15 - FREE WILL OF A PENNY ########## "Imagine a copper penny that is exactly like an ordinary penny except that for this discussion it has consciousness.It knows it is a coin and it knows that you sometimes flip it. And it knows that no external force dictates whether it comes up heads or tails on any individual flip. The imaginary coin would believe that things don't just 'happen' without causes. If nothing external controlled the results of the flips, a reasonable penny would assume hat the control came from its own will, influenced perhaps by God's will, assuming it were a religious penny. "But people aren't pennies," I said. "We have brains. And when our brains make choices, we move our arms and legs and mouths to make things happen. The penny has no way to turn its choices into reality, but we do." "I'm not following you," I said. "We've been through this. Maybe the brain is exempt from the normal rules because of free will or the soul. I know I can't define those things, but you can't rule them out." "Being simpler doesn't make it right," I pointed out. I needed to say something that sounded wise, for my own benefit. ########## CHAPTER 16 - EVOLUTION ########## "The theory of evolution is not so much wrong as it is incomplete and useless." "The theory of evolution leads to no practical invention. It is a concept that has no application." "Imagine that an asteroid lands on Earth and brings with it exotic bacteria that kills all organic matter on Earth and then dissolves without a trace. A million years later, intelligent aliens discover Earth and study our bones and our possessions, trying to piece together our history. They might notice that all of our cookware -- the pots and pans and plates and bowls -- all seemed to be related somehow. And the older ones were quite different from the newer ones. The earliest among them were crude bowls, all somewhat similar, generally made of clay or stone. Over time, the bowls evolved into plates and coffee cups, and steel frying pans. "That might be the worst analogy ever made," I said. "You're comparing people to dishes." "It's not an analogy," he said with a twinkle in his eye. "It's a point of view. Evolution is compelling not because of the quality of the evidence but because of the quantity and variety of it. The aliens would have the same dilemma. There would be so much evidence for their theory of dishware evolution that opponents would be mocked. The alien scientists would theorize that forks evolved from spoons, which evolved from knives. Pots evolved from bowls. Dinner plates evolved from cutting boards. The sheer quantity and variety of the data would be overwhelming. Eventually they would stop calling it a theory and consider it fact. Only a lunatic could publicly doubt the mountain of evidence." "That's not exactly true," he countered. "It could be said that the dishes used human beings in a symbiotic relationship, convincing us through their usefulness to make new dishes. In that way the dishes succeeded inreproducing and evolving. Every species takes advantage of other living things to ensure its survival. That is the normal way living things reproduce. "But the dishes have no personalities, no thoughts or emotions or desires," I said. "Then why do people say they're as happy as a clam?" I joked. He ignored me. "Like what?" And why does evolution seem to move in one direction, from simpler to more complex? Why aren't there any higher life forms evolving into simpler, hardier creatures? If mutations happen randomly, you would expect evolution to work in both directions. But it only works in one, from simple to complex." And how does the first member of a new species find someone to breed with? Being a new species means you can no longer breed with the members of your parents' species. If mutations are the trigger for evolution, the mutations must happen regularly and in such similar ways that the mutants can find each other to breed. You would think we would notice more mutations if it happens that easily." "Come back to the coin for a moment," he beckoned. "If by chance you flip a balanced coin and it comes up heads a hundred times in a row, what is the probability that it will come up heads again on the next toss?" "That's right," he said. "Or to put it another way, the coin's past has no impact on its future. There is no connection between the outcomes of the prior coin flips and the likelihood of the future ones. He shifted in his chair and began again. "Every creature has a tiny probability of becoming a different species with each beat of the universe. A duck can be replaced in whole by a woodchuck. The odds of this happening are so small that it probably never has and never will happen, but it is not precluded by the nature of the universe. It is simply unlikely. When you flip the coin, it almost always lands either heads or tails, even though it could possibly balance on its edge. If we did not have ecperience with flipping coins we might think coins regularly land and stay on their edges. The edge of a coin has perhaps ten percent as much surface area as either of its sides, so you might expect that coins come up 'edge' routinely. ########## CHAPTER 17 - SKEPTICS' DISEASE ########## "Skeptics," he said, "suffer from the skeptics' disease -- the problem of being right too often." "If you are proven to be right a hundred times in a row, no amount of evidence will convince you that you are mistaken in the hundred-and-first case. You will be seduced by your own apparent infallibilty. Remember that all scientific experiments are performed by human beings and the results are subject to human interpretation. Yje human mind is a dleusion generator, not a window to truth. Everyone, including skeptics, will generate delusions that match their views. That is how a normal and healthy brain works. Skeptics are not exempt from self-delusion." "The scientific approach also makes people think and act in groups," he countered. "They form skeptical societies and create skeptical publications. They breathe each other's fumes and they demonize those who do not share their scientific methods. Because skeptics' views are at oods with the majority of the world, they become emotionally and intellectually isolated. That sort of environment is a recipe for cult thinking and behavior. Skeptics are not exempt from normal human brain functions. it is a human tendency to become what you attack. Skeptics attack irrational thinkers and in the process become irrational." ########## CHAPTER 18 - ESP AND LUCK ########## "That depends how you define it," he said. "Skeptics try to make ESP go away by defining it so narrowly that it can't be demonstrated in controlled experiments. Believers hold a more expansive view of ESP, focusing on its utility in daily life." His expression said no. "There are billions of people on earth. Some of them will have miserable lives from the time they are born until the day they die. Others will have incredibly good fortune in every facet of their lives. They will be born to loving parents in well-to-do homes. Their brains and bodies will be efficient, healthy and highly capable. They will experience love. They will never be shy or fearful without reason. Some might win lotteries. In a word, they will be lucky over their entire lives, compared to other people. He continued. "And luck will be compartmentalized in some people, confined to specific areas of their lives. Some people will be extraordinarily lucky gamblers and some people will have amazing business luck or romantic luck. "If they tested him with controlled experiments and he repeatedly passed, I think they would conclude he had ESP," I said. To be fair, in all likelihood, the skeptics have never been wrong when debunking claims of alleged extraordinary powers. They believe their methods to be sound because, excluding missteps in individual tests, their methods have never provided a wrong result in the long run, as far as anyone knows. But never being wrong is no proof that the method of testing is sound for all cases." "I'm saying the results are indistinguishable." "If you define ESP narrowly to include only the transfer through the air of information, then skeptics will never detect it," he said. "But if you accept luck as being the same as ESP, then ESP exists and it can be useful, though not reliably so, since luck can change in an instant." "But your thoughts do travel across space," he said. "The question is whether another person can decode the information." "When anything physical moves, it has a gravitational impact on every other object in the universe, instantly and across any distance. That impact is fantastically small, but it is real. When you have a thought, it is coupled with a physical change in your mind that is specific to that thought, and it has an instant gravitational ripple effect throughout the entire universe. "What about remote viewing?" I asked. "You've heard of that. It's when a psychic draws a picture of some distant place without being there. How's that done? Is that luck, too?" "How? There's no pattern if you're sitting in a room in one part of the world and the object is someplace else." Consider a typical math prodigy. Math geniuses often report knowing the answers to problems without being aware of having made a calculation. The top geniuses in every field report the same experience. At the highest levels of performance people are not aware of the processes they are using. Some apparent psychics, the ones who are not intentional frauds, are geniuses at pattern recognition, but they are not necessarily aware of the source of their abilities. Like math geniuses, so-called psychics don't know how they do it. They only know that it works." "Most of the reports about psychics who locate bodies are false. Reporters usually get their information by talking to people and writing down what they are told, but the stories are only as good as the reliability of the people interviewed. Psychics can make vague predicitions and later claim credit for anything that was near the mark. The media tells the story of the fascinating successes and ignores the failures as being not newsworthy. The public gets the impression that psychics can locate dead bodies with regularity. In fact, such cases have been rare and probably a result of genius-level pattern recognition, or luck, or simple exaggeration. He continued. "For example, the entertainment and news media create patterns in the public's minds. Let's say that several movies and TB shows about kidnappings in the past year have created a pattern about the best place to dispose of dead bodies. That pattern could influence a perpetrator to pick a drainage ditch instead of an old shack. The psychic unknowingly picks up on the pattern and 'feels' that the child will be found in a drainage ditch. A search of drainage ditches proves the psychic right. "What about a guy who talks to your dead relatives?" I asked. "He always has information about the survivors and about the dead person that couldn't be a coincidence. How's that done?" The psychic can pick up many patterns suggested from a person's voice, accent, clothes, age, name, health and ethnicity. Let's say a client has smoke-stained teeth. Smokers are likely to live with other smokers. The psuchic might guess that a loved one recently died from heart or lung problems. That would be a good guess." The old man just laughed. I laughed, too. ########## CHAPTER 20 - LIGHT ########## "It's made of photons," I said, thinking that was a start. By then I should have known better. I think he ignored my answer. "About one percent of the speed of light, obviously. I don't know the miles per hour." "That doesn't make any sense. But it sounds vaguely familiar. Did he really say that?" "That's ridiculous," I said. "If I'm travelling 99 percent as fast as the light beam, in the same direction as the light, the light beam can't be faster than me by the same speed as if I weren't moving at all." "What if two rocket ships were racing the light beam, one was 99 percent as fast as light and the other was 50 percent as fast? The light can't be faster than both of them by exactly the speed of light." "Okay, that's just plain crazy," I replied. "You see, the light beam should be speeding away from the slower ship faster than it would be pulling away from the fast ship. That's common sense." It is literally true that no two people share the same reality. Einstein proved that reality is not one fixed state. Indeed, it is an infinite number of unique realities, depending on where you are and how fast you are moving. "So what the heck is light?" I asked. Yet the horizon is observable and understandable. It seems to be physical and it seems to have form and substance. But when you run toward the horizon, no matter how fast you go, it seems to stay ahead of you by the same distance. You can never reach the horizon, no matter how fast you move." Consider two plants. One is in direct light and the other is in perpetual shadow. The lighted plant experiences more possibilities because it lives longer and grows bigger and stronger. Eventually it will die, but not before it experiences many more possibilities than its shaded counterpart." "There are plenty of non-physical things that affect the world," he said. "Gravity is not physical, and yet it seems to keep you from floating off the earth. Probability is not physical, but it influences a coin toss anywhere in the universe. An idea is not physical and it can change civilization." "Suppose I write a hurtful insult on a piece of paper and hand it to you," he replied. "The note is physical, but when you look at it, the information enters your mind over a pathway of light. Remember that light has no mass. Like magnetic fields, light exists in no physical form. When the insult on the note travels across the light path from the note to your eyes it is completely non-physical for the duration of the trip. The insult encoded in the light is no more real than a horizon. It is a pure transfer of probability from me to you. When the insult registers in your mind, physical things start to happen. You might get angry and your neck and forehead might get hot. You might even punch me. Light is the messenger of probability, but neither the light nor the message has mass. He continued. "You might have heard it said that light is both a particle and a wave, sometimes behaving like one, sometimes like the other, depending on the circumstance. That is like saying sometimes your shadow is long and sometimes it is short. Your shadow is not a physical thing; it is an impression, a perception, left by physical things. It is a boundary, not an object. The reason you cannot catch up to a light beam, no matter how fast you travel, is because the zone of probability moves with you like your shadow. Trying to race light is like trying to run away from your own thoughts. "My brain hurts," I said. "Why do people have different religions?" I asked. "It seems like the best one would win, eventually, and we'd all believe the same thing." "Imagine that a group of curious bees land on the outside of a church window. Each bee gazes upon the interior through a different stained glass pane. To one bee, the church's interior is all red. To another it is all yellow, and so on. The bees cannot experience the inside of the church directly; they can only see it. They can never touch the interior or smell it or interact with it in any way. If bees could talk they might argue over the color of the interior. Each bee would stick to his version, not capable of understanding that the other bees were looking through different pieces of stained glass. Nor would they understand the purpose of the church or how it got there or anything about it. The brain of a bee is not capable of such things. "So you're saying we're like dumb bees?" I asked, trying to lighten the mood. "You're very fit," the old man observed. "When you see an overweight person, what do you think of his willpower?" "Why do you think that?" "If you were starving, could you resist eating?" "But if your belly were full you could resist easily, I assume." "It sounds as if hunger determines your actions, not so-called willpower." "Have you every been very hungry -- not starving, just very hungry -- and found yourself eating until it hurt?" "I don't see how willpower enters into your life," he said. "In one case you overeat and in the other case you simply forget to eat. I see no willpower at all." "And according to you, overweight people have less of this thing you call willpower?" he asked. "Isn't it possible that overweight people have the same amount of willpower as you but much greater hunger?" "Take responsibility? It sounds as if you're trying to replace the word 'willpower' with two new words in the hope that I will think it's a new thought." "Okay, just give it to me," I said, knowing there was a more profound thought behind this line of questioning. "Your interpretation is dangerous," I said. "You're saying it's okay to follow your urges, no matter what is right or wrong, because you can't help yourself anyway. We might as well empty the prisons since people can't stop themselves from committing crimes. It's not really their fault, according to you." "I'll never look at pie the same way," I said. "But what about people with slow metabolisms? They get fat no matter how little they eat." "Yes." "None that I've seen. They're always skin and bones. But that's different." I didn't have an answer for that. I was happy when he changed the subject. ########## CHAPTER 23 - HOLY LANDS ########## "Well, usually it's because some important religious event took place there." "I see your point, but on earth the holy places keep their relationship to other things on earth, and those things don't move much," I said. "I think both would be considered holy," I said, hedging my bets. "That's a little tricker," I said. "I'll say the new location isn't holy because the topsoil that you moved there isn't itself holy, it was only in contact with holy land. If holy land could turn anything that touched it into more holy land, then the whole planet would be holy." While we speak, nations are arming themselves to fight for control of lands they consider holy. They are trapped in the delusion that locations are real things, not just fictions of the mind. Many will die." ########## CHAPTER 24 - FIGHTING GOD ########## "Probability is the expression of God's will. It is in your best interest to obey probability." "God's reassembly requires people -- living, healthy people," he said. "When you buckle your seat belt, you increase your chances of living. That is obeying probability. If you get drunk and drive without a seat belt, you are fighting probability." "Every economic activity helps. Whether you are programming computers, or growing food, or raising children, or cleaning garbage from the side of the road, you are contributing to the realization of God's consciousness. None of those activities is more important than another." "Evil is any action that might damage people. Probability generally punishes evildoers. Since most criminals are captured and jailed, overall the people who hurt others tend to die early. So evil does exist and, on average, it is punished. "That sounds like karma," I said. "When you do good things, good things come back to you." "Does God forgive people, in a manner of speaking?" "What about an afterlife? Where's the payoff? What difference does it make to me whether I contribute to society or not? I'll die anyway, eventually. Why should I care if God gets conscious or not?" I asked. Stress is the cause of all unhappiness and it comes in infinite varieties, all with a common cause. Stress is a result of fighting probability, and the friction between what you are doing and what you know you should be doing to live within probability." "Stress cannot be eliminated from your life. But you can reduce stress by being in harmony with probability. You can deal with the death of a loved one more easily if you have done proper estate planning and are mentally prepared for the inevitable. If you have been a good friend to many people and stayed close to your family, the loss will be softened. If you allow your mind to release the past instead of trying to wish the deceased back to life, or wishing you had done something different, then your stress will be less." "Over time, everything that is possible happens. That is fundamental quality of probability. If you flip a coin often enough, eventually it will come up heads a thousand times in a row. And everything possible will happen over and over as long as God's debris exists. The clump of debris that comprises your body and mind will break down and disintegrate someday, but a version of you will reappear in the future, by chance." "Not exactly. I'm saying a replica of your mind and body will exist in the distant future, by chance. And the things you do now can either make life more pleasant or more difficult for your replica." "That distinction is an illusion. In your current life, every cell in your body has died and been replaced many times. There is nothing in your current body that you were born with. You have no original equipment, just replacement parts, so for all practical purposes, you are already a replica of a prior version of you." "There will be many replicas of you in the future, not just one. Some will have lives similar to yours, with similar memories and feelings. The replicas will be different from you only in concept, not in practical terms." "Sometimes it is easy," he said. "Other times it will be hard to sort out the right probabilities. Today, the news reported that teens who publicly commit to avoiding sex have more success in abstaining, compared to those who don't. What would you conclude about the probabilities in that story?" "Perhaps. Or maybe the teens who wanted to abstain were the only ones who were willing to publicly commit. Or maybe the teens who made the public commitments were more likely to later lie about their rate of sex. Probability is simple but it is not always obvious." ########## CHAPTER 25 - RELATIONSHIPS ########## He was right. I enjoyed being alone. I had friends, but I was always happy to get back home. "Your pupils widen when I talk about ideas." "There are two types of people in the world, my young friend. One type is people-oriented. When they make conversation, it is about people -- what people are doing, what someone said, how someone feels. The other group is idea-oriented. When they make conversation, they talk about ideas and concepts and objects." "Yes. And it causes trouble in your personal life but you don't realize how." He continued, "Idea-people like you are boring, even to other idea-people." "Actually, the popular people only SEEM to be babbling," he countered. "In fact, they talk about a topic that everyone cares about; they talk about people. When a person talks about people, it is personal to everyone who listens. You will automatically relate the story to yourself, thinking how you would react in that person's situation, how your life has parallels. On the other hand, if you tell a story about a new type of tool you found at the hardware store, no one can relate to the tool on a personal level. It is just an object, no matter how useful or novel." "If I gave you advice, would you follow it?" "No, you wouldn't follow my advice. No one has every followed the advice of another person." "People think they follow advice but they don't. Humans are only capable of receiving information. They create their own advice. If you seek to influence someone, don't waste time giving advice. You can only change what people know, not what they do." "Perhaps," he said, clenching his red plaid blanket tighter around his tiny body. "What topic interests you more than any other?" "Yes, that is the essence of being human. Any person that you meet at a party will be interested in his own life above all other topics. Your awkward silences can be solved by asking simple questions about the person's life." "It would seem phony to you while you asked the questions, but it would not seem that way to the stranger. To him it is an unexpected gift, an opportunity to enjoy one of life's greatest pleasures: talking about oneself. He would become more animated and he would instantly begin to like you. You would seem to be a brilliant and talented conversationalist, even if your only contribution was asking questions and listening. And you would have solved the stranger's fear of an awkward silence. For that he will be grateful." "Your questions to the stranger are only the starting points. From there you can streer him toward the thing you care about most -- yourself." "When you find out how others deal with their situations it is automatically relevant to you," he said. "There will always be parallels in your life. Find out what you and he have in common, then ask how he likes it, how he deals with it, and if he has any clever solutions for it. Perhaps you both have long commutes, or you both have mothers who call too often or you both ski. Find that point of common interest and you will both be talking about yourself to the delight of the other." "Have you ever been in traffic behind someone who doesn't move when the light turns green, so you honk your horn, then you realize the car is stalled and there is nothing the driver could have done?" "Most disagreements are like my example. Two people have different information, but they think the root of their disagreement is that the other person has bad judgement or bad manners or bad values. In fact, most people would share your opinions if they had the same information. If you spend your time arguing about the faultiness of other peoples' opinions, you waste your time and theirs. The only thing that can be useful is examining the differences in your assumptions and adding to each other's information. Sometimes that is enough to make viewpoints converge over time." "I can tell you some things." "Women believe that men are, in a sense, defective versions of women," he began. "Men believe that women are defective versions of men. Both genders are trapped in a delusion that their personal viewpoints are universal. That viewpoint -- that each gender is a defective version of the other -- is the root of all misunderstandings." "Women define themselves by their relationships and men define themselves by who they are helping. Women believe value is created by sacrifice. If you are willing to give up your favorite activities to be with her, she will trust you. If being with her is too easy for you, she will not trust you. You can accomplish your sacrifices symbolically at first, by leaving work early to buy flowers, canceling your softball game to make a date, that sort of thing." "Partly because the rich and famous are capable of making larger sacrifices. The average man might be sacrificing a night of television to be with a woman. The rich and famous man could be sacrificing a week in Tahiti. There is much to be said about the attraction of power and confidence exuded by a rich and powerful man, but capacity for sacrifice is the most important thing." "Men believe value is created by accomplishment and they have objectives for the women in their lives. If a woman meets the objectives, he assumes she loves him. If she fails to meet the objectives, he will assume she does not love him. The man assumes that if the woman loved him she would have tried harder and he always believes his objectives for her are reasonable." "The objectives are different for each man. Men rarely share these objectives because doing so is a recipe for disaster. No woman would tolerate being given a set of goals." "He can't," he replied. "People don't change to meet the objectives of other people. Men can be molded in small ways -- clothing and haircuts and manners -- because those things are not important to most men. Women can't be changed at all." "The best you can hope for in a relationship is to find someone whose flaws are the sort you don't mind. It is futile to look for someone who has no flaws, or someone who is capable of significant change; that sort of person exists only in our imaginations." "A woman needs to be told that you would sacrifice anything for her. A man needs to be told he is being useful. When the man or woman strays from that formula the other loses trust. When trust is lost, communication falls apart." "Without trust, you can only communicate trivial things. If you try to communicate something important without a foundation of trust, you will be suspected of having a secret agenda. Your words will be analyzed for hidden meaning and your simple message will be clouded by suspicions." "Lie." "You should lie about your talents and accomplishments, describing your victories in dismissive terms as if they were the result of luck. And you should exaggerate your flaws." "Honesty is like food. Both are necessary, but too much of either creates discomfort. When you downplay your accomplishments, you make people feel better about their own accomplishments. It is dishonest, but it is kind." "You think casual conversation is a waste of time." "You problem is that you view conversation as a way to exchange information," he said. "Conversation is more than the sum of the words. It is also a way of signaling the importance of another person by showing your willingness to give that person your rarest resource: time. It is a way of conveying respect. Conversation reminds us that we are part of a greater whole, connected in some way that transcends duty or bloodline or commerce. Conversation can be many things, but it can never be useless." I didn't know if I could incorporate his ingredients into my life, but it seemed possible. "I've heard of something called affirmations," I said, taking the opportunity to spelunk another tunnel in the old man's brain. "Your write down your goals 15 times a day and then somehow they come true as if by magic. I know people who swear by it. Does that really work?" "I have time," I said. "Because they work harder?" "So the affirmations are unnecessary?" "What do you mean by tuning your mind?" "That happens all the time," I said. "It's freaky. It's as if hearing a word for the first time makes it appear everywhere. Like 'fescue.' I never heard of that word until I saw it on a package of grass seed in the store last week. That night I was at a party and some guy used the word. I'm fairly sure I've never heard that word before in my entire life, then I hear it twice in a matter of hours. What are the odds of that? His face said that he didn't need to know the details of foosball table design. "Your brain can only process a tiny portion of your environment," he said. "It risks being overwhelmed by the volume of information that bombards you every waking moment. Your brain compensates by filtering out the 99.9 percent of your environment that doesn't matter to you. When you took notice of the word 'fescue' for the first time and rolled it around in your head, your mined tuned itself to the word. That's why you heard it again so soon." "Yes, probability is still involved. But 'fescue' and 'foosball' were only a few of the unusual words and ideas that you tuned your brain to this week. The others didn't cross your path again so you took no notice of their absence. When you consider all of the coincidences that are possible, it is not surprising that you experience a few every day. "Well, maybe that's part of it," I said. "But I've heard of some pretty amazing coincidences that happened for the people doing affirmations. One of my friends was writing affirmations to double his income and he got a phone call out of the blue from a headhunter. Two weeks later he's in a new job at double his salary. How do you explain that?" People who do affirmations will have the sensation that they are causing the environment to conform to their will. This is an immensely enjoyable feeling because the illusion of control is one of the best illusions you can have." "I don't see why my subconscious would be better than my conscious mind at predicting my future. I thought the subconscious was irrational," I said. "Couldn't affirmations be more than that?" I asked. "You made a big deal about saying things aren't exaclty what they seem, but who's to say that concentrating on your goals doesn't change probability?" "Okay, imagine you're a sea captain but you're blind and deaf. You shout orders to your crew, but you don't know for sure if they heard the orders or obeyed them. All you know is that when you give an order to sail to a particular warm port, within a few days you are someplace warm. You can never be sure if the crew obeyed you, or took you to some other warm place, or if you went nowhere and the weather improved. If, as you say, our minds are delusion-generators, then we're all like blind and deaf sea captains shouting orders into the universe and hoping it makes a difference. We have no way of really knowing what really works and what merely seems to work. So doesn't it make sense to try all the things that appear to work even if we can't be sure?" I didn't know what that meant. ########## CHAPTER 27 - Fifth Level ########## "I'm an Avatar." "It's both." "You want to know if I'm human." The old man waved off the end of my sentence. "Fifth level?" "Is awareness like intelligence?" I asked. "What does it mean to recognize your delusions?" "Yeah," I said, "I believed in Santa until kindergarten, when the other kids started talking. Then I realized Santa couldn't get to all those homes in one night." "I guess it did." "Yeah." "In your examples, there's always learning. That seems like intelligence to me, not awareness." He described what he called the five levels of awareness and said that all humans experience the first level of awareness at birth. That is when you first become aware that you exist. At the third level of awareness you recognize that humans are often wrong about the things they believe. You feel that you might be wrong about some of your own beliefs but you don't know which ones. Despite your doubts, you still find comfort in your beliefs. The fifth level of awareness is the Avatar. The Avatar understands that the mind is an illusion generator, not a window to reality. The Avatar recognizes science as a belief system, albeit a useful one. An Avatar is aware of God's power as expressed in probability and the inevitable recombination of God's consciousness. "Yes, you are a fourth," he confirmed. "No," he said, "awareness does not come from receiving new information. It comes from rejecting old information. You still cling to your fourth-level delusions." "You shouldn't be. There is no implied good or bad about one's level of awareness. No level is better or worse than any other level. People enjoy happiness at every level and they contribute to society at every level." "There is no good or bad in anything, just differences in usefulness. People at all levels have the same potential for being useful." "No. Happiness comes more easily at the other levels. Awareness has its price. An Avatar can find happiness only in serving." "Sometimes society's delusions get out of balance and when they conflict, emotions flame out of control. People die. If enough people die, God's recombination is jeopardized. When that happens, the Avatar steps in." "You can't wake yourself from a dream. You need someone who is already awake to shake you gently, to whisper in your ear. In a sense, that is what I do." He explained, "The great leaders in this world are always the least rational among us. They exist at the second level of awareness. Charismatic leaders have a natural ability to bring people into their delusion. They convince people to act against self-interest and persue the leaders' visions of the greater good. Leaders make citizens go to war to seize land they will never live on and to kill people who have different religions." "The most effective ones are. You don't often see math geniuses or logic professors become great leaders. Logic is a detriment to leadership." "It works because people's delusions are, on average, in balance. The Avatar keeps it so by occasionally introducing new ideas when needed." "Ideas are the only things that can change the world. The rest is details." ########## CHAPTER 28 - GOING HOME ########## We talked more about life and energy and probability. At times I lost the sense of belonging to my own body. It was as if my consciousness expanded to include items in the room. I stared at my hand as it rested on the arm of the rocking chair and watched as the distinctions between wood and air and hand disappeared. At times I felt like a kitten lifted by the fold of skin on the back of my neck, helpless, safe, transported. I drove home by a route I wouldn't normally take. I glided through green lights without ever touching my brakes. Pedestrians stayed on sidewalks and a policeman waved me around an accident scene. I knew that all the people involved were safe. Everything in my apartment seemed three-quarters of its original size. It was mildly claustraphobic. A folded yellow note tumbled out of the box and into my lap. I unfolded it and read its barely legible message. It was just one sentence, but there was so much in the sentence that I found myself reading it over and over. I stayed up all that night, wrapped in the red plaid blanket that was also in the package, reading the sentence. "I love that rocking chair," the young man said to me. "How old is that thing? It looks like an antique." "I'm glad that war ended before I was born," the young man sighed. "I can't imagine what it was like to be alive then." "Were you in that war?" "Let me ask you something," he said. "Why do you think the war ended? We learned in school that everyone just stopped fighting. No one knows why. Although there are all kinds of theories about secret pacts among world leaders, no one really knows. You were there. Why do you think everyone suddenly stopped fighting?" The young man looked at his watch and hesitated. He had many more stops before lunch. Then he turned toward the fireplace and chose a sturdy log. ####### THE END ####### GOD'S DEBRIS A Thought Experiment by Scott Adams The rain made everything sound different -- the engine of my delivery van, the traffic as it rolled by on a film of fallen clouds, the occasional dull honk. I didn't have a great job, but it wasn't bad either. I knew the city so well that I could lose myself in thought and still do the work, still get paid, still have plenty of time for myself. When you're inside your own head, the travel time between buildings evaporates. It's as if I could vanish from one stop and reappear at the next. If you work in the city long enough, it begins to deal with you on a personal level. Streets reveal their moods. Sometimes the signal lights love you. Sometimes they fight you. When you're hunting for a new building, you hope the city is on your side. You have to use a little bit of thinking -- you might call it the process of elimination -- and you need a little bit of instinct, but not too much of either. If you think too hard, you overshoot your target and end up at the Pier of the Tenderloin. If you relax and let the city help, the destination does all the work for you. It was one of those days. It was a scruffy package, barely up to company standards. I calculated the distance from my van to the doorway and decided the packing material could handle the moisture. On behalf of the package and myself, I surrendered to the rain. I walked up the four steps to the ornate wooden door and pressed the doorbell. A muddled 'bing-bong' filled the interior and leaked out the cracks of the door jam. Rookies wore jackets. Ah, rules. The oversized knob offered no resistance as it turned on its oiled core. I was no longer surprised to find unlocked doors in the city. Maybe at some subconscious level we don't believe we need protection from our own species. Inside I could see a long, dark hallway with red faux-textured walls lined with large, illuminated paintings. At the end was a half-opened door to a room that hosted a flickering light. Someone was home and should have heard the doorbell. I didn't like the look of it. Occasionally you read about an elderly person who dies alone and no one knows about it for weeks. My mind went there. I stepped inside and closed the door, enjoying the warmth, deciding what to do next. The source of the uneven light was a huge stone fireplace. I entered the room, not sure why I was being quiet. Somehow the room was both simple and overwhelming. It was half fire-washed color, half black, brilliantly appointed with antique wooden furniture, elaborate patterned walls, and wood floors. My pupils enlarged to tease out the shadows. I was startled and feeling a bit guilty about letting myself in. It took me a minute to locate the source of the voice. It was as if it came from the room itself. Something moved and I noticed, on the far side of the fireplace, in a wooden rocker, a smallish form in a red plaid blanket, looking like a hastily rolled cigar. His tiny wrinkled hands held the blanket like the button clasps. Two undersized feet in cloth slippers dangled from the wrap. All I heard was the fire. I expected an answer. That's how it's supposed to work. When one person says something, the other is supposed to say something back. The old man wasn't subscribing. "If you toss a coin a thousand times, how often will it come up heads?" "About 50 percent of the time," I answered before changing the subject. "I need a signature for this package." "Well," I said, measuring how much information to include in my response, "the person who sent the package wants a signature. He needs confirmation that it got delivered." "I guess that's because the coin weighs about the same on both sides, so there's a 50-50 chance it will land on one side versus the other." I tried to avoid sounding condescending. I wasn't sure I succeeded. I saw what was going on. The old man pulls this trick question on anyone who comes within range. There had to be a punch line or clever answer, so I played along. "The answer," he said, "is that the question has no why." "No," he replied, in a manner that seemed suddenly coherent. "Every other question has an answer to why. Only probability is inexplicable." "It's more than it seems." He gestured to the clipboard with his head. "You can sign it." "Avatar. A-v-a-t-a-r." "What's for me?" "I just deliver the packages," I said. "My job is to bring them to you. It's your package." "Uhm, okay," I said, planning my exit strategy. I figured I could leave the package in the hallway on the way out. The old man's caretaker would find it. "It's the answer to your question." "I understand," said the old man. He continued, "Let me ask you a simple question: did you deliver the package or did the package deliver you?" "I delivered the package," I answered. That seemed obvious enough. I said no. "I suppose that's true, in a way. But it's the least important part of the delivery. I did the driving and lifting and moving. That's the important part." "Look," I said, "I'm holding the package and I'm walking with it. That's delivering. I'm delivering the package. That's what I do. I'm a package-delivery guy." There was a twisted logic to that interpretation, but I wasn't willing to give in. "The difference is intention. If I leave this package here and go on my way, I think that settles the question of who delivered who." I picked out a big one. The retiring embers celebrated its arrival. I had the brief impression that the log was glad to help, to do its part keeping the old man warm. It was a silly thought. I brushed off my hands and turned to leave. The old man's face revealed a life of useful endeavor. I had a sense that he deserved companionship and I was happy to give some. my other choice involved a bag lunch and the back of my truck. Maybe there wasn't any choice at all. "There has to be a God," I said. "Otherwise, none of us would be here." It wasn't much of a reason, but I figured he didn't need more. "That's standard stuff for God. So, yeah." "Sure." He was clever, but I wasn't going to fall for that trap. "God let us determine the future ourselves, using our free will," I explained. "So you agree that it would be impossible for God to know the future and also grant humans free will?" "For whose benefir does God withhold his power to determine the future?" he asked. The old man pressed on. "Couldn't God give humans the illusion of free will? We'd be just as happy as if we had actual free will, and God would retain his ability to see the future. Isn't that a better solution for God than the one you suggested?" "If God exists, his motives are certainly unfathomable. No one knows why he grants free will, or why he cares about human souls, or why pain and suffering are necessary parts of life." "Love? Do you mean love in the way you understand it as a human?" "A brain surgeon would tell you that a specific part of the brain controls the ability to love. If it's damaged, people are incapable of love, incapable of caring about others." "So, isn't it arrogant to think that the love generated by our little brains is the same thing that an omnipotent being experiences? If you were omnipotent, why would you limit yourself to something that could be reproduced by a little clump of neurons?" "What does it mean to feel something similar to the way God feels? Is that like saying a pebble is similar to the sub because both are round?" he responded. "Soyou believe God WANTS things. And he LOVES things, similar to the way humans do. Do you also believe God experiences anger and forgiveness?" "So God has a personality, according to you, and it is similar to what humans experience?" "What sort of arrogance assumes God is like people?" he asked. "Are you saying you believe in God because there are no other explanations?" he asked. "If a stage magician makes a tiger disappear and you don't know how the trick could be done without real magic, does that make it real magic?" "If someone very wise knew how the world were designed without God's hand, could that person convince you that God wasn't involved?" "To be fair, you can only be sure that you don't know whether that person exists or not." "Does God have free will?" he asked. "Indeed. And being omnipotent, God must be able to peer into his own future, to view it in all its perfect detail." "Omnipotence is trickier than it seems," he said. "I see where you're going with this," I said. "You're an atheist. You think science has the answers and you think religious people are all delusional." I was relieved. I liked science. It was my favorite subject in school. Religion made me uncomfortable. It's better not to think too much about religion, but science was made for thinking. It was based on facts. "Almost nothing," he said. "Consider magnets," the old man said. "If you hold two magnets near each other, they are attracted. Yet there is nothing material connecting them." "So you have a word for it. It's a 'field' you say. But you can't get a handful of this thing for which you have a name. You can't fill a container with a magnetic field and take it with you. You can't cut it in pieces. You can't block its power." "No matter what object you insert between two magnets, their attraction to each other remains exactly the same. This 'field' of yours is strange stuff. We can see its effect, and we can invent a name for it, but it doesn't exist in any physical form. How can something that doesn't exist in physical form have influence over the things that do?" "Consider gravity," the old man continued, oblivious to my creative answer. "Gravity is also an unseen force that cannot be blocked by any object. It reaches across the entire universe and connects all things instantly, yet it has no physical form." "Indeed, Einstein did say that. And what does that mean?" "Can you imagine bent space?" he asked. He looked away. I figured he was either annoyed at my answer or just resting. It turned out he was pausing to gather energy. He drew a breath into his tiny lungs and began. For example, some physicists describe gravity in terms of ten dimensions all curled up. But those aren't real words -- just placeholders, used to refer to parts of abstract equasions. Even if the equations someday prove useful, it would say nothing about the existence of other dimensions. Words such as 'dimension' and 'field' and 'infinity' are nothing more than conveniences for mathematicians and scientists. They are not descriptions of reality, yet we accpt them as such because everyone is sure someone else knows what the words mean." "Have you heard of string theory?" heasked. "String theory says that all of physical reality -- from gravity to magnetism to light -- can be explained in one grand theory that involves tiny string-shaped vibrating objects. String theory has produced no useful results. It has never been proven by experiment, yet thousands of physicists are dedicating their careers to it on the faith that it smells right." "Every generation of humans believed it had all the answers it needed, except for a few mysteries they assumed would be solved at any moment. And they all believed their ancestors were simplistic and deluded. What are the odds that you are the first generation of humans who will understand reality?" "Computers and rocket ships are examples of inventions, not of understanding," he said. "All that is needed to build machines is the knowledge that when one thing happens, another thing happens as a result. It's an accumulation of simple patterns. A dog can learn patterns. There is no 'why' in those examples. We don't understand why electricity travels. We don't know why light travels at a constant speed forever. All we can do is observe and record patterns." "Where is your free will?" the old man asked. "Is it part of your brain, or does it emanate from some place outside your body and somehow control your actions?" "Doubting is good," he said. "But tell me where you think free will comes from." "Your brain is like a machine in many ways, isn't it?" he asked. "The brain is comprised of cells and neurons and chemicals and pathways and electrical activity that all conform to physical laws. When part of your brain is stimulated in one specific way, could it respond any way it wants, or would it always respond in one specific way?" "Then you believe we can only know things that have been tested?" he asked. "Then you're not saying anything, are you?" "So where is free will?" he asked again. "Soul? Where is the soul located?" "Then the soul is not physical in nature, according to you," he said. "So you believe that the soul, which is not physical, can influence the brain, which IS physical?" "Do you believe the soul can influence other physical things, like a car or a watch?" "Can your soul influence other peoples' brains, or does it know which brain is yours?" He paused. "Your soul, according to you, knows the difference between your brain and everything else that is not your brain. And it never makes a mistake in that regard. That means your soul has structure and rules, like a machine." "If the soul is the source of free will, then it must be weighing alternatives and making decisions." "But that's what brains do. Why would you need a soul to do what a brain can do?" he asked. "If the soul's actions are not controlled by rules, that can only mean the soul acts randomly. On the other hand, if your soul IS guided by rules, which in turn guide you, then you have no free will. You are programmed. There is no in-between; either your life is random or predetermined. Which is it?" "If God is guiding your soul and your soul is guiding your brain, then you are nothing more than a puppet of God. You don't really have free will in that case, do you?" "That sounds as if God is giving you some sort of an intelligence test. If you make the right choices, good things happen to your soul. Is that what you're saying?" "Morality?" "Is your brain involved in making moral decisions or do those decisions get made some place outside your body?" he asked. I needed reinforcements. "Look," I said, "four billion people believe in some sort of God and free will. They can't all be wrong." I didn't see how he could deny the obvious. "Of course they do. Billions of people believe in God." "Four billion people SAY they believe in God, but few genuinely believe. If people believed in God, they would live every minute of their lives in support of that belief. Rich people would give their wealth to the needy. Everyone would be frantic to determine which religion was the true one. No one could be comfortable in the thought that they might have picked the wrong religion and blundered into eternal damnation, or bad reincarnation, or some other unthinkable consequence. People would dedicate their lives to converting others to their religions. I couldn't believe what I was hearing. "If you asked them, they'd say they believe." If you believe a truck is coming toward you, you will jump out of the way. That is belief in the reality of the truck. If you tell people you fear the truck but do nothing to get out of the way, that is not belief in the truck. Likewise, it is not belief to say God exists and then continue sinning and hoarding your wealth while innocent people die of starvation. When belief does not control your most important decisions it is not belief in the underlying reality, it is belief in the usefulness of believing." "I'm saying that people claim to believe in God, but most don't literally believe. They only act as though they believe because there are earthly benefits in doing so. They create a delusion for themselves because it makes them happy." "No. Atheists also prefer delusions," he said. "The best any human can do is to pick a delusion that helps them get through the day. This is why people of different religions can generally live in peace. At some level, we all suspect that other people don't believe their own religion any more than we believe ours." "Jews and Muslims believe that Christ isn't the Son of God," he countered. "If they are right, then Christians are mistaken about the core of their religion. And the Jews or the Christians or the Muslims have the right religion, then the Hindus and Buddhists who believe in reincarnation are wrong. Would you call those details?" "At some level of consciousness, everyone knows that the odds of picking the true religion -- if such a thing exists -- is nil." ######### CHAPTER 8 - ROAD MAPS ######### "What's your belief, Mr. Avatar?" Religions are like different maps whose routes all lead to the collective good of society. Some maps take their followers ove rugged terrain. Other maps have easier paths. Some of the travelers of each route will be assigned the job of being the protectors and interpreters of the map. They will teach the young to respect it and be suspicious of other maps." "The maps were made by the people who went first and didn't die. The maps that survive are the ones that work," he said. "You can't judge the value of a thing by looking only at costs. In many countries, more people die from hospital errors than religious wars, but no one accuses hospitals of being evil. Religious people are happier, they live longer, have fewer accidents and stay out of trouble compared to non-religious people. From society's viewpoint, religion works." ######### CHAPTER 9 - DELUSION GENERATOR ######### "Has anyone ever advised you to 'be yourself'?" "What does it mean to be yourself?" he asked. "If it means to do what you think you ought to do, then you're doing that already. If it means to act like you're exempt from society's influence, that's the worst advice in the world; you would probably stop bathing and wearing clothes. The advice to 'be yourself' is obviously nonsense. But our brains accept the tripe as wisdom because it is more comfortable to believe we have a strategy for life than to believe we have no idea how to behave." "There is more information in one thimble of reality than can be understoof by a galaxy of human brains. It is beyond the human brain to understand the world and its environment, so the brain compensates by creating simplified illusions that act as a replacement for understanding. When the illusions work well and the human who subscribes to the illusion survives, those illusions are passed to new generations. "Well, I don't think rocks would be very interesting to God," I said. "They just sit on the ground and erode." "That wouldn't be practical," I said. I wasn't sure it was a question meant to be answered, but I wanted to show I was listening. To a God not bound by the limits of human practicality, every tiny part of your body would be as action-packed and meaningful as the parts of any rock or tree or bug. And the sum of your parts that form the personality and life we find so special and amazing would seem neither special nor amazing to an omnipotent being. "I still think people are more important to God than animals and plants and dirt. I think that's obvious," I argued. "The engine is more important because without an engine, there is no reason to steer," I reasoned. "Well, yes. I guess that's true," I admitted. ########## CHAPTER 10 - REINCARNATION, UFOS, AND GOD ########## He started again. "If you want to understand UFOs, reincarnation and God, do not study UFOs, reincarnation and God. Study people." "No," he said, "I am saying that UFOs, reincarnation and God are all equal in terms of their reality." "Your question reveals your bias for a binary world where everything is either real or imaginary. That distinction lies in your perceptions, not in the universe. Your inability to see other possibilites and your lack of vocabulary are your brain's limits, not the universe's." "As you sit here, your truck exists for you only in your memory, a place in your mind. The Easter Bunny lives in the same place. They are equal." "Was the rain from this morning real?" "But you can't see or touch that rain now, can you?" "Like the Easter Bunny, the past exists only in your mind," he said. "Likewise, the future exists only in your mind because it has not happened." "And when you get that confirmation it would instantly become the past itself. So in effect, you would be using the past, which does not exist, to confirm something else from the past. And if you repeat the process a thousand times, with a thousand different pieces of evidence, together they would still be nothing but impressions of the past supporting other impressions of the past." "An insane person believes his world is consistent. If he believes the government is trying to kill him, he will see ample evidence of his belief in the so-called real world. He will be wrong, but his evidence is no better or worse than your evidence that it rained this morning. Both of you will be converting evidence of the present into impressions stored in your minds and you will both be certain your evidence is solid and irrefutable. Your mind will mold the facts and shape the clues until it all fits." "Clinical psychologists have proven that ordinary people will alter their memories of the past to make them fit their perceptions. It is the way a;; normal brains function under ordinary circumstances." "Now you do," he replied. "If you were God," he said, "what would you want?" "Imagine that you are omnipotent. You cando anything, create anything, be anything. As soon as you decide you want something, it becomes reality." He continued. "Does it make sense to think of God as wanting anything? A God would have no emotions, no fears, no desires, no curiosity, no hunger. Those are human shortcomings, not something that would be found in an omnipotent God. What then would motivate God?" "Omnipotence means that nothing is a challenge. And what could stimulate the mind of someone who knows everything?" "Everything that motivates living creatures is based on some weakness or flaw. Hunger motivates animals. Lust motivates animals. Fear and pain motivate animals. A God would have none of those impulses. Humans are driven by all of our animal passions plus loftier-sounding things like self-actualization and creativity and freedom and love. But God would care nothing for these things, or if he cared would already have them in unlimited quantities. None of them would be motivating." "I can conceieve of only one challenge for an omnipotent being -- the challenge of destroying himself." "I'm not saying he wants anything. I'm saying it's the only challenge." "That's thinking like a human, not like a God. You have a fear of death so you assume God would share your preference. But God would have no fears. Existing would be a choice. And there would be no pain of death, nor feelings of guilt or remorse or loss. Those are human feelings, not God feelings. God could simply choose to discontinue existence." "Your thinking is getting clearer," he said. "Yes, he will know the future of his own existence under normal conditions. But would his omnipotence include knowing what happens after he loses his omnipotence, or would his knowledge of the future end at that point?" "Maybe. But consider this. A God who knew the answer to that question would indeed know everything and have everything. For that reason he would be unmotivated to do anything or create anything. There would be no purpose to act in any way whatsoever. But a God who had one nagging question -- what happens if I cease to exist? -- MIGHT be motivated to find the answer in order to complete his knowledge. And having no fear and no reason to continue existing, he might try it." "We have the answer. It is our existence. The fact that we exist is proof that God is motivated to act in some way. And since only the challenge of self-destruction could interest an omnipotent God, it stands to reason that we..." "Are you saying what I think you're saying?" My brain was taking on too much knowledge. There was overflow and I needed to shake off the excess. "Are you saying that God blew himself to bits and we're what's left?" I asked. "Then what?" "Smaller than quarks? I don't know what a quark is, but I think it's small." "What's the second part of the debris?" I asked. "So you're saying that God -- an all-powerful being with a consciousness that extends to all things, across all time -- consists of nothing but dust and probability?" "Yes. You asked why a coin comes up heads half the time." "It's God's debris," I mumbled, rolling the idea around in both my mouth and mind to see if that helped. It was a fascinating concept, but too strange to embrace on first impression. "You said before that you didn't believe in God. Now you say you do. Which is it?" "You're not rejecting the idea of a fixed reality," I argued. "You're saying the universe is made of God's debris. That's a fixed reality." "If your God is just a metaphor, why should I care about him? He would be irrelevant," I said. "That's ridiculous. If everything we perceive is fake, just a metaphor, how do we get anything done?" "You lost me. So God is a potato?" I joked. "What makes things do what they do?" he asked. "What makes dogs bark, cats purr, plants grow?" "Evolution isn't a cause of anything; it's an observation, a way of putting things in categories. Evolution says nothing about causes." "But what makes evolution happen?" he asked. "Where did all the energy come from and how did it become so organized?" "Do you have any trouble understanding that a human embryo can only grow into a human adult and never into an apple tree or a pigeon?" he asked. "So you believe that DNA is fundamentally different from luck?" The old man looked at me in that way that said I would soon doubt what I was saying. He didn't disappoint. As usual, he began with a question. "Sure," I said, feeling confident again. "If all the things that caused life the first time around were to happen again, the result should be the same. I don't know what you're getting at." "I guess so. If it starts out the same and nothing changes it along the way, it should turn out the same." My confidence was evaporating again. "I have to think about that. It sounds logical but it's weird," I said. "I don't think instinct is making us build the Internet. I think people are trying to make money off it. It's just capitalism," I replied. He was right about the Internet being somewhat irrational. I wasn't going to win that debate and this was not a place to jump in. He had a lot more to say. In the distant future, humans will learn to control the weather, to manipulate DNA and to build whole new worlds out of raw matter. There is no logical limit to how much our collective power will grow. A billion years from now, if a visitor from another dimension observed humanity, he might perceive it to be one large entity with a consciousness and purpose, and not a collection of relatively uninteresting individuals." "I'm saying we're the building blocks of God, in the early stages of reassembling." "Would you? Your skin cells are not aware that they are part of a human being. Skin cells are not equipped for that knowledge. They are equipped to do what they do and nothing more. Likewise, if we humans -- and all the plants and animals and dirt and rocks -- were components of God, would we have the capacity to know it?" "He is discovering the answer to his only question." "He does. Otherwise you could not have asked the question, and I could not have answered." ########## CHAPTER 14 - PHYSICS OF GOD-DUST ########## "I can answer those questions by answering other questions first," he said. "Science is based on assumptions. Scientists assume that electricity will behave the same tommorrow as today. They assume that the laws of physics that apply on Earth will apply on other planets. Usually the assumptions are right, or close enough to be useful. "That's an old mind trick I learned about in school," I said. "I think it's called Xeno's Paradox, after some old Greek guy who thought it up first." "The solution is that each of the infinite slices of time are infinitely small, so the math works out. You can have continuous time without a minute lasting an eternity." "I thought the universe was infinitely large," I replied. "That doesn't make sense. What if I took a rocket to the edge of the universe, then I kept going. Couldn't I keep going forever? Where would I be if not in the universe?" "Okay, the universe itself might be finite, but all the stuff around it, the nothingness, that's infinite, right?" I asked. "Yeah, I guess so. But let's get back to the subject," I said. "How do you explain Xeno's Paradox?" "How should I know? You're the one making up the example. How much?" "What if everything disappears except for me and my wristwatch?" I asked. "Okay, I think I get that. But how is any of this going to answer my original question about gravity and what makes things move?" "Yes. It has a bunch of dots on it. The placed with the most dots are where there's the greatest probability," I said, pleased to remember something from my statistics classes. "You lost me." "I think I understand that, sort of," I lied. "I prefer the current theory of gravity," I said. "Newton and Einstein had it pretty much figured out. The math works with their theories. I'm not so sure about yours." "Einstein did explain it," I said. "Remember we talked about that? He said space was warped by matter, so what looks like gravity is just objects following the path of warped space." "Okay," I said. "I admit I don't know what any of that means. It does sound like nonsense." I chuckled. I had never heard anyone compare himself to Einstein. I was impressed by his cockiness but not convinced. "You haven't explained orbits. Under your theory, how could a moon orbit a planet and not be sucked into it? Your God-dust would pop into existence closer to the planet every time it appeared until it crashed into the surface." "I guess I am." He continued. "So there is always a dual probability influencing each particle of God-dust. One probability makes all God-dust pop into existence nearer to other God-dust. The other probability is that the dust will appear along a straight line drawn from its past. All apparent motion in the universe is based on those competing probabilities. "What if all the dust that makes up the moon doesn't reappear near is last position?" I asked. "You said it's only a matter of probability where the dust reappears, so couldn't the moon suddenly vanish if all its dust disappeared and then appeared on the other side of the solar system?" "The trouble with your theory," I said, "is that matter doesn't pop in and out of existence. Scientists would have noticed that by now." "I'll be darned," I said. ########## CHAPTER 15 - FREE WILL OF A PENNY ########## "Imagine a copper penny that is exactly like an ordinary penny except that for this discussion it has consciousness.It knows it is a coin and it knows that you sometimes flip it. And it knows that no external force dictates whether it comes up heads or tails on any individual flip. The imaginary coin would believe that things don't just 'happen' without causes. If nothing external controlled the results of the flips, a reasonable penny would assume hat the control came from its own will, influenced perhaps by God's will, assuming it were a religious penny. "But people aren't pennies," I said. "We have brains. And when our brains make choices, we move our arms and legs and mouths to make things happen. The penny has no way to turn its choices into reality, but we do." "I'm not following you," I said. "We've been through this. Maybe the brain is exempt from the normal rules because of free will or the soul. I know I can't define those things, but you can't rule them out." "Being simpler doesn't make it right," I pointed out. I needed to say something that sounded wise, for my own benefit. ########## CHAPTER 16 - EVOLUTION ########## "The theory of evolution is not so much wrong as it is incomplete and useless." "The theory of evolution leads to no practical invention. It is a concept that has no application." "Imagine that an asteroid lands on Earth and brings with it exotic bacteria that kills all organic matter on Earth and then dissolves without a trace. A million years later, intelligent aliens discover Earth and study our bones and our possessions, trying to piece together our history. They might notice that all of our cookware -- the pots and pans and plates and bowls -- all seemed to be related somehow. And the older ones were quite different from the newer ones. The earliest among them were crude bowls, all somewhat similar, generally made of clay or stone. Over time, the bowls evolved into plates and coffee cups, and steel frying pans. "That might be the worst analogy ever made," I said. "You're comparing people to dishes." "It's not an analogy," he said with a twinkle in his eye. "It's a point of view. Evolution is compelling not because of the quality of the evidence but because of the quantity and variety of it. The aliens would have the same dilemma. There would be so much evidence for their theory of dishware evolution that opponents would be mocked. The alien scientists would theorize that forks evolved from spoons, which evolved from knives. Pots evolved from bowls. Dinner plates evolved from cutting boards. The sheer quantity and variety of the data would be overwhelming. Eventually they would stop calling it a theory and consider it fact. Only a lunatic could publicly doubt the mountain of evidence." "That's not exactly true," he countered. "It could be said that the dishes used human beings in a symbiotic relationship, convincing us through their usefulness to make new dishes. In that way the dishes succeeded inreproducing and evolving. Every species takes advantage of other living things to ensure its survival. That is the normal way living things reproduce. "But the dishes have no personalities, no thoughts or emotions or desires," I said. "Then why do people say they're as happy as a clam?" I joked. He ignored me. "Like what?" And why does evolution seem to move in one direction, from simpler to more complex? Why aren't there any higher life forms evolving into simpler, hardier creatures? If mutations happen randomly, you would expect evolution to work in both directions. But it only works in one, from simple to complex." And how does the first member of a new species find someone to breed with? Being a new species means you can no longer breed with the members of your parents' species. If mutations are the trigger for evolution, the mutations must happen regularly and in such similar ways that the mutants can find each other to breed. You would think we would notice more mutations if it happens that easily." "Come back to the coin for a moment," he beckoned. "If by chance you flip a balanced coin and it comes up heads a hundred times in a row, what is the probability that it will come up heads again on the next toss?" "That's right," he said. "Or to put it another way, the coin's past has no impact on its future. There is no connection between the outcomes of the prior coin flips and the likelihood of the future ones. He shifted in his chair and began again. "Every creature has a tiny probability of becoming a different species with each beat of the universe. A duck can be replaced in whole by a woodchuck. The odds of this happening are so small that it probably never has and never will happen, but it is not precluded by the nature of the universe. It is simply unlikely. When you flip the coin, it almost always lands either heads or tails, even though it could possibly balance on its edge. If we did not have ecperience with flipping coins we might think coins regularly land and stay on their edges. The edge of a coin has perhaps ten percent as much surface area as either of its sides, so you might expect that coins come up 'edge' routinely. ########## CHAPTER 17 - SKEPTICS' DISEASE ########## "Skeptics," he said, "suffer from the skeptics' disease -- the problem of being right too often." "If you are proven to be right a hundred times in a row, no amount of evidence will convince you that you are mistaken in the hundred-and-first case. You will be seduced by your own apparent infallibilty. Remember that all scientific experiments are performed by human beings and the results are subject to human interpretation. Yje human mind is a dleusion generator, not a window to truth. Everyone, including skeptics, will generate delusions that match their views. That is how a normal and healthy brain works. Skeptics are not exempt from self-delusion." "The scientific approach also makes people think and act in groups," he countered. "They form skeptical societies and create skeptical publications. They breathe each other's fumes and they demonize those who do not share their scientific methods. Because skeptics' views are at oods with the majority of the world, they become emotionally and intellectually isolated. That sort of environment is a recipe for cult thinking and behavior. Skeptics are not exempt from normal human brain functions. it is a human tendency to become what you attack. Skeptics attack irrational thinkers and in the process become irrational." ########## CHAPTER 18 - ESP AND LUCK ########## "That depends how you define it," he said. "Skeptics try to make ESP go away by defining it so narrowly that it can't be demonstrated in controlled experiments. Believers hold a more expansive view of ESP, focusing on its utility in daily life." His expression said no. "There are billions of people on earth. Some of them will have miserable lives from the time they are born until the day they die. Others will have incredibly good fortune in every facet of their lives. They will be born to loving parents in well-to-do homes. Their brains and bodies will be efficient, healthy and highly capable. They will experience love. They will never be shy or fearful without reason. Some might win lotteries. In a word, they will be lucky over their entire lives, compared to other people. He continued. "And luck will be compartmentalized in some people, confined to specific areas of their lives. Some people will be extraordinarily lucky gamblers and some people will have amazing business luck or romantic luck. "If they tested him with controlled experiments and he repeatedly passed, I think they would conclude he had ESP," I said. To be fair, in all likelihood, the skeptics have never been wrong when debunking claims of alleged extraordinary powers. They believe their methods to be sound because, excluding missteps in individual tests, their methods have never provided a wrong result in the long run, as far as anyone knows. But never being wrong is no proof that the method of testing is sound for all cases." "I'm saying the results are indistinguishable." "If you define ESP narrowly to include only the transfer through the air of information, then skeptics will never detect it," he said. "But if you accept luck as being the same as ESP, then ESP exists and it can be useful, though not reliably so, since luck can change in an instant." "But your thoughts do travel across space," he said. "The question is whether another person can decode the information." "When anything physical moves, it has a gravitational impact on every other object in the universe, instantly and across any distance. That impact is fantastically small, but it is real. When you have a thought, it is coupled with a physical change in your mind that is specific to that thought, and it has an instant gravitational ripple effect throughout the entire universe. "What about remote viewing?" I asked. "You've heard of that. It's when a psychic draws a picture of some distant place without being there. How's that done? Is that luck, too?" "How? There's no pattern if you're sitting in a room in one part of the world and the object is someplace else." Consider a typical math prodigy. Math geniuses often report knowing the answers to problems without being aware of having made a calculation. The top geniuses in every field report the same experience. At the highest levels of performance people are not aware of the processes they are using. Some apparent psychics, the ones who are not intentional frauds, are geniuses at pattern recognition, but they are not necessarily aware of the source of their abilities. Like math geniuses, so-called psychics don't know how they do it. They only know that it works." "Most of the reports about psychics who locate bodies are false. Reporters usually get their information by talking to people and writing down what they are told, but the stories are only as good as the reliability of the people interviewed. Psychics can make vague predicitions and later claim credit for anything that was near the mark. The media tells the story of the fascinating successes and ignores the failures as being not newsworthy. The public gets the impression that psychics can locate dead bodies with regularity. In fact, such cases have been rare and probably a result of genius-level pattern recognition, or luck, or simple exaggeration. He continued. "For example, the entertainment and news media create patterns in the public's minds. Let's say that several movies and TB shows about kidnappings in the past year have created a pattern about the best place to dispose of dead bodies. That pattern could influence a perpetrator to pick a drainage ditch instead of an old shack. The psychic unknowingly picks up on the pattern and 'feels' that the child will be found in a drainage ditch. A search of drainage ditches proves the psychic right. "What about a guy who talks to your dead relatives?" I asked. "He always has information about the survivors and about the dead person that couldn't be a coincidence. How's that done?" The psychic can pick up many patterns suggested from a person's voice, accent, clothes, age, name, health and ethnicity. Let's say a client has smoke-stained teeth. Smokers are likely to live with other smokers. The psuchic might guess that a loved one recently died from heart or lung problems. That would be a good guess." The old man just laughed. I laughed, too. ########## CHAPTER 20 - LIGHT ########## "It's made of photons," I said, thinking that was a start. By then I should have known better. I think he ignored my answer. "About one percent of the speed of light, obviously. I don't know the miles per hour." "That doesn't make any sense. But it sounds vaguely familiar. Did he really say that?" "That's ridiculous," I said. "If I'm travelling 99 percent as fast as the light beam, in the same direction as the light, the light beam can't be faster than me by the same speed as if I weren't moving at all." "What if two rocket ships were racing the light beam, one was 99 percent as fast as light and the other was 50 percent as fast? The light can't be faster than both of them by exactly the speed of light." "Okay, that's just plain crazy," I replied. "You see, the light beam should be speeding away from the slower ship faster than it would be pulling away from the fast ship. That's common sense." It is literally true that no two people share the same reality. Einstein proved that reality is not one fixed state. Indeed, it is an infinite number of unique realities, depending on where you are and how fast you are moving. "So what the heck is light?" I asked. Yet the horizon is observable and understandable. It seems to be physical and it seems to have form and substance. But when you run toward the horizon, no matter how fast you go, it seems to stay ahead of you by the same distance. You can never reach the horizon, no matter how fast you move." Consider two plants. One is in direct light and the other is in perpetual shadow. The lighted plant experiences more possibilities because it lives longer and grows bigger and stronger. Eventually it will die, but not before it experiences many more possibilities than its shaded counterpart." "There are plenty of non-physical things that affect the world," he said. "Gravity is not physical, and yet it seems to keep you from floating off the earth. Probability is not physical, but it influences a coin toss anywhere in the universe. An idea is not physical and it can change civilization." "Suppose I write a hurtful insult on a piece of paper and hand it to you," he replied. "The note is physical, but when you look at it, the information enters your mind over a pathway of light. Remember that light has no mass. Like magnetic fields, light exists in no physical form. When the insult on the note travels across the light path from the note to your eyes it is completely non-physical for the duration of the trip. The insult encoded in the light is no more real than a horizon. It is a pure transfer of probability from me to you. When the insult registers in your mind, physical things start to happen. You might get angry and your neck and forehead might get hot. You might even punch me. Light is the messenger of probability, but neither the light nor the message has mass. He continued. "You might have heard it said that light is both a particle and a wave, sometimes behaving like one, sometimes like the other, depending on the circumstance. That is like saying sometimes your shadow is long and sometimes it is short. Your shadow is not a physical thing; it is an impression, a perception, left by physical things. It is a boundary, not an object. The reason you cannot catch up to a light beam, no matter how fast you travel, is because the zone of probability moves with you like your shadow. Trying to race light is like trying to run away from your own thoughts. "My brain hurts," I said. "Why do people have different religions?" I asked. "It seems like the best one would win, eventually, and we'd all believe the same thing." "Imagine that a group of curious bees land on the outside of a church window. Each bee gazes upon the interior through a different stained glass pane. To one bee, the church's interior is all red. To another it is all yellow, and so on. The bees cannot experience the inside of the church directly; they can only see it. They can never touch the interior or smell it or interact with it in any way. If bees could talk they might argue over the color of the interior. Each bee would stick to his version, not capable of understanding that the other bees were looking through different pieces of stained glass. Nor would they understand the purpose of the church or how it got there or anything about it. The brain of a bee is not capable of such things. "So you're saying we're like dumb bees?" I asked, trying to lighten the mood. "You're very fit," the old man observed. "When you see an overweight person, what do you think of his willpower?" "Why do you think that?" "If you were starving, could you resist eating?" "But if your belly were full you could resist easily, I assume." "It sounds as if hunger determines your actions, not so-called willpower." "Have you every been very hungry -- not starving, just very hungry -- and found yourself eating until it hurt?" "I don't see how willpower enters into your life," he said. "In one case you overeat and in the other case you simply forget to eat. I see no willpower at all." "And according to you, overweight people have less of this thing you call willpower?" he asked. "Isn't it possible that overweight people have the same amount of willpower as you but much greater hunger?" "Take responsibility? It sounds as if you're trying to replace the word 'willpower' with two new words in the hope that I will think it's a new thought." "Okay, just give it to me," I said, knowing there was a more profound thought behind this line of questioning. "Your interpretation is dangerous," I said. "You're saying it's okay to follow your urges, no matter what is right or wrong, because you can't help yourself anyway. We might as well empty the prisons since people can't stop themselves from committing crimes. It's not really their fault, according to you." "I'll never look at pie the same way," I said. "But what about people with slow metabolisms? They get fat no matter how little they eat." "Yes." "None that I've seen. They're always skin and bones. But that's different." I didn't have an answer for that. I was happy when he changed the subject. ########## CHAPTER 23 - HOLY LANDS ########## "Well, usually it's because some important religious event took place there." "I see your point, but on earth the holy places keep their relationship to other things on earth, and those things don't move much," I said. "I think both would be considered holy," I said, hedging my bets. "That's a little tricker," I said. "I'll say the new location isn't holy because the topsoil that you moved there isn't itself holy, it was only in contact with holy land. If holy land could turn anything that touched it into more holy land, then the whole planet would be holy." While we speak, nations are arming themselves to fight for control of lands they consider holy. They are trapped in the delusion that locations are real things, not just fictions of the mind. Many will die." ########## CHAPTER 24 - FIGHTING GOD ########## "Probability is the expression of God's will. It is in your best interest to obey probability." "God's reassembly requires people -- living, healthy people," he said. "When you buckle your seat belt, you increase your chances of living. That is obeying probability. If you get drunk and drive without a seat belt, you are fighting probability." "Every economic activity helps. Whether you are programming computers, or growing food, or raising children, or cleaning garbage from the side of the road, you are contributing to the realization of God's consciousness. None of those activities is more important than another." "Evil is any action that might damage people. Probability generally punishes evildoers. Since most criminals are captured and jailed, overall the people who hurt others tend to die early. So evil does exist and, on average, it is punished. "That sounds like karma," I said. "When you do good things, good things come back to you." "Does God forgive people, in a manner of speaking?" "What about an afterlife? Where's the payoff? What difference does it make to me whether I contribute to society or not? I'll die anyway, eventually. Why should I care if God gets conscious or not?" I asked. Stress is the cause of all unhappiness and it comes in infinite varieties, all with a common cause. Stress is a result of fighting probability, and the friction between what you are doing and what you know you should be doing to live within probability." "Stress cannot be eliminated from your life. But you can reduce stress by being in harmony with probability. You can deal with the death of a loved one more easily if you have done proper estate planning and are mentally prepared for the inevitable. If you have been a good friend to many people and stayed close to your family, the loss will be softened. If you allow your mind to release the past instead of trying to wish the deceased back to life, or wishing you had done something different, then your stress will be less." "Over time, everything that is possible happens. That is fundamental quality of probability. If you flip a coin often enough, eventually it will come up heads a thousand times in a row. And everything possible will happen over and over as long as God's debris exists. The clump of debris that comprises your body and mind will break down and disintegrate someday, but a version of you will reappear in the future, by chance." "Not exactly. I'm saying a replica of your mind and body will exist in the distant future, by chance. And the things you do now can either make life more pleasant or more difficult for your replica." "That distinction is an illusion. In your current life, every cell in your body has died and been replaced many times. There is nothing in your current body that you were born with. You have no original equipment, just replacement parts, so for all practical purposes, you are already a replica of a prior version of you." "There will be many replicas of you in the future, not just one. Some will have lives similar to yours, with similar memories and feelings. The replicas will be different from you only in concept, not in practical terms." "Sometimes it is easy," he said. "Other times it will be hard to sort out the right probabilities. Today, the news reported that teens who publicly commit to avoiding sex have more success in abstaining, compared to those who don't. What would you conclude about the probabilities in that story?" "Perhaps. Or maybe the teens who wanted to abstain were the only ones who were willing to publicly commit. Or maybe the teens who made the public commitments were more likely to later lie about their rate of sex. Probability is simple but it is not always obvious." ########## CHAPTER 25 - RELATIONSHIPS ########## He was right. I enjoyed being alone. I had friends, but I was always happy to get back home. "Your pupils widen when I talk about ideas." "There are two types of people in the world, my young friend. One type is people-oriented. When they make conversation, it is about people -- what people are doing, what someone said, how someone feels. The other group is idea-oriented. When they make conversation, they talk about ideas and concepts and objects." "Yes. And it causes trouble in your personal life but you don't realize how." He continued, "Idea-people like you are boring, even to other idea-people." "Actually, the popular people only SEEM to be babbling," he countered. "In fact, they talk about a topic that everyone cares about; they talk about people. When a person talks about people, it is personal to everyone who listens. You will automatically relate the story to yourself, thinking how you would react in that person's situation, how your life has parallels. On the other hand, if you tell a story about a new type of tool you found at the hardware store, no one can relate to the tool on a personal level. It is just an object, no matter how useful or novel." "If I gave you advice, would you follow it?" "No, you wouldn't follow my advice. No one has every followed the advice of another person." "People think they follow advice but they don't. Humans are only capable of receiving information. They create their own advice. If you seek to influence someone, don't waste time giving advice. You can only change what people know, not what they do." "Perhaps," he said, clenching his red plaid blanket tighter around his tiny body. "What topic interests you more than any other?" "Yes, that is the essence of being human. Any person that you meet at a party will be interested in his own life above all other topics. Your awkward silences can be solved by asking simple questions about the person's life." "It would seem phony to you while you asked the questions, but it would not seem that way to the stranger. To him it is an unexpected gift, an opportunity to enjoy one of life's greatest pleasures: talking about oneself. He would become more animated and he would instantly begin to like you. You would seem to be a brilliant and talented conversationalist, even if your only contribution was asking questions and listening. And you would have solved the stranger's fear of an awkward silence. For that he will be grateful." "Your questions to the stranger are only the starting points. From there you can streer him toward the thing you care about most -- yourself." "When you find out how others deal with their situations it is automatically relevant to you," he said. "There will always be parallels in your life. Find out what you and he have in common, then ask how he likes it, how he deals with it, and if he has any clever solutions for it. Perhaps you both have long commutes, or you both have mothers who call too often or you both ski. Find that point of common interest and you will both be talking about yourself to the delight of the other." "Have you ever been in traffic behind someone who doesn't move when the light turns green, so you honk your horn, then you realize the car is stalled and there is nothing the driver could have done?" "Most disagreements are like my example. Two people have different information, but they think the root of their disagreement is that the other person has bad judgement or bad manners or bad values. In fact, most people would share your opinions if they had the same information. If you spend your time arguing about the faultiness of other peoples' opinions, you waste your time and theirs. The only thing that can be useful is examining the differences in your assumptions and adding to each other's information. Sometimes that is enough to make viewpoints converge over time." "I can tell you some things." "Women believe that men are, in a sense, defective versions of women," he began. "Men believe that women are defective versions of men. Both genders are trapped in a delusion that their personal viewpoints are universal. That viewpoint -- that each gender is a defective version of the other -- is the root of all misunderstandings." "Women define themselves by their relationships and men define themselves by who they are helping. Women believe value is created by sacrifice. If you are willing to give up your favorite activities to be with her, she will trust you. If being with her is too easy for you, she will not trust you. You can accomplish your sacrifices symbolically at first, by leaving work early to buy flowers, canceling your softball game to make a date, that sort of thing." "Partly because the rich and famous are capable of making larger sacrifices. The average man might be sacrificing a night of television to be with a woman. The rich and famous man could be sacrificing a week in Tahiti. There is much to be said about the attraction of power and confidence exuded by a rich and powerful man, but capacity for sacrifice is the most important thing." "Men believe value is created by accomplishment and they have objectives for the women in their lives. If a woman meets the objectives, he assumes she loves him. If she fails to meet the objectives, he will assume she does not love him. The man assumes that if the woman loved him she would have tried harder and he always believes his objectives for her are reasonable." "The objectives are different for each man. Men rarely share these objectives because doing so is a recipe for disaster. No woman would tolerate being given a set of goals." "He can't," he replied. "People don't change to meet the objectives of other people. Men can be molded in small ways -- clothing and haircuts and manners -- because those things are not important to most men. Women can't be changed at all." "The best you can hope for in a relationship is to find someone whose flaws are the sort you don't mind. It is futile to look for someone who has no flaws, or someone who is capable of significant change; that sort of person exists only in our imaginations." "A woman needs to be told that you would sacrifice anything for her. A man needs to be told he is being useful. When the man or woman strays from that formula the other loses trust. When trust is lost, communication falls apart." "Without trust, you can only communicate trivial things. If you try to communicate something important without a foundation of trust, you will be suspected of having a secret agenda. Your words will be analyzed for hidden meaning and your simple message will be clouded by suspicions." "Lie." "You should lie about your talents and accomplishments, describing your victories in dismissive terms as if they were the result of luck. And you should exaggerate your flaws." "Honesty is like food. Both are necessary, but too much of either creates discomfort. When you downplay your accomplishments, you make people feel better about their own accomplishments. It is dishonest, but it is kind." "You think casual conversation is a waste of time." "You problem is that you view conversation as a way to exchange information," he said. "Conversation is more than the sum of the words. It is also a way of signaling the importance of another person by showing your willingness to give that person your rarest resource: time. It is a way of conveying respect. Conversation reminds us that we are part of a greater whole, connected in some way that transcends duty or bloodline or commerce. Conversation can be many things, but it can never be useless." I didn't know if I could incorporate his ingredients into my life, but it seemed possible. "I've heard of something called affirmations," I said, taking the opportunity to spelunk another tunnel in the old man's brain. "Your write down your goals 15 times a day and then somehow they come true as if by magic. I know people who swear by it. Does that really work?" "I have time," I said. "Because they work harder?" "So the affirmations are unnecessary?" "What do you mean by tuning your mind?" "That happens all the time," I said. "It's freaky. It's as if hearing a word for the first time makes it appear everywhere. Like 'fescue.' I never heard of that word until I saw it on a package of grass seed in the store last week. That night I was at a party and some guy used the word. I'm fairly sure I've never heard that word before in my entire life, then I hear it twice in a matter of hours. What are the odds of that? His face said that he didn't need to know the details of foosball table design. "Your brain can only process a tiny portion of your environment," he said. "It risks being overwhelmed by the volume of information that bombards you every waking moment. Your brain compensates by filtering out the 99.9 percent of your environment that doesn't matter to you. When you took notice of the word 'fescue' for the first time and rolled it around in your head, your mined tuned itself to the word. That's why you heard it again so soon." "Yes, probability is still involved. But 'fescue' and 'foosball' were only a few of the unusual words and ideas that you tuned your brain to this week. The others didn't cross your path again so you took no notice of their absence. When you consider all of the coincidences that are possible, it is not surprising that you experience a few every day. "Well, maybe that's part of it," I said. "But I've heard of some pretty amazing coincidences that happened for the people doing affirmations. One of my friends was writing affirmations to double his income and he got a phone call out of the blue from a headhunter. Two weeks later he's in a new job at double his salary. How do you explain that?" People who do affirmations will have the sensation that they are causing the environment to conform to their will. This is an immensely enjoyable feeling because the illusion of control is one of the best illusions you can have." "I don't see why my subconscious would be better than my conscious mind at predicting my future. I thought the subconscious was irrational," I said. "Couldn't affirmations be more than that?" I asked. "You made a big deal about saying things aren't exaclty what they seem, but who's to say that concentrating on your goals doesn't change probability?" "Okay, imagine you're a sea captain but you're blind and deaf. You shout orders to your crew, but you don't know for sure if they heard the orders or obeyed them. All you know is that when you give an order to sail to a particular warm port, within a few days you are someplace warm. You can never be sure if the crew obeyed you, or took you to some other warm place, or if you went nowhere and the weather improved. If, as you say, our minds are delusion-generators, then we're all like blind and deaf sea captains shouting orders into the universe and hoping it makes a difference. We have no way of really knowing what really works and what merely seems to work. So doesn't it make sense to try all the things that appear to work even if we can't be sure?" I didn't know what that meant. ########## CHAPTER 27 - Fifth Level ########## "I'm an Avatar." "It's both." "You want to know if I'm human." The old man waved off the end of my sentence. "Fifth level?" "Is awareness like intelligence?" I asked. "What does it mean to recognize your delusions?" "Yeah," I said, "I believed in Santa until kindergarten, when the other kids started talking. Then I realized Santa couldn't get to all those homes in one night." "I guess it did." "Yeah." "In your examples, there's always learning. That seems like intelligence to me, not awareness." He described what he called the five levels of awareness and said that all humans experience the first level of awareness at birth. That is when you first become aware that you exist. At the third level of awareness you recognize that humans are often wrong about the things they believe. You feel that you might be wrong about some of your own beliefs but you don't know which ones. Despite your doubts, you still find comfort in your beliefs. The fifth level of awareness is the Avatar. The Avatar understands that the mind is an illusion generator, not a window to reality. The Avatar recognizes science as a belief system, albeit a useful one. An Avatar is aware of God's power as expressed in probability and the inevitable recombination of God's consciousness. "Yes, you are a fourth," he confirmed. "No," he said, "awareness does not come from receiving new information. It comes from rejecting old information. You still cling to your fourth-level delusions." "You shouldn't be. There is no implied good or bad about one's level of awareness. No level is better or worse than any other level. People enjoy happiness at every level and they contribute to society at every level." "There is no good or bad in anything, just differences in usefulness. People at all levels have the same potential for being useful." "No. Happiness comes more easily at the other levels. Awareness has its price. An Avatar can find happiness only in serving." "Sometimes society's delusions get out of balance and when they conflict, emotions flame out of control. People die. If enough people die, God's recombination is jeopardized. When that happens, the Avatar steps in." "You can't wake yourself from a dream. You need someone who is already awake to shake you gently, to whisper in your ear. In a sense, that is what I do." He explained, "The great leaders in this world are always the least rational among us. They exist at the second level of awareness. Charismatic leaders have a natural ability to bring people into their delusion. They convince people to act against self-interest and persue the leaders' visions of the greater good. Leaders make citizens go to war to seize land they will never live on and to kill people who have different religions." "The most effective ones are. You don't often see math geniuses or logic professors become great leaders. Logic is a detriment to leadership." "It works because people's delusions are, on average, in balance. The Avatar keeps it so by occasionally introducing new ideas when needed." "Ideas are the only things that can change the world. The rest is details." ########## CHAPTER 28 - GOING HOME ########## We talked more about life and energy and probability. At times I lost the sense of belonging to my own body. It was as if my consciousness expanded to include items in the room. I stared at my hand as it rested on the arm of the rocking chair and watched as the distinctions between wood and air and hand disappeared. At times I felt like a kitten lifted by the fold of skin on the back of my neck, helpless, safe, transported. I drove home by a route I wouldn't normally take. I glided through green lights without ever touching my brakes. Pedestrians stayed on sidewalks and a policeman waved me around an accident scene. I knew that all the people involved were safe. Everything in my apartment seemed three-quarters of its original size. It was mildly claustraphobic. A folded yellow note tumbled out of the box and into my lap. I unfolded it and read its barely legible message. It was just one sentence, but there was so much in the sentence that I found myself reading it over and over. I stayed up all that night, wrapped in the red plaid blanket that was also in the package, reading the sentence. "I love that rocking chair," the young man said to me. "How old is that thing? It looks like an antique." "I'm glad that war ended before I was born," the young man sighed. "I can't imagine what it was like to be alive then." "Were you in that war?" "Let me ask you something," he said. "Why do you think the war ended? We learned in school that everyone just stopped fighting. No one knows why. Although there are all kinds of theories about secret pacts among world leaders, no one really knows. You were there. Why do you think everyone suddenly stopped fighting?" The young man looked at his watch and hesitated. He had many more stops before lunch. Then he turned toward the fireplace and chose a sturdy log. ####### THE END ####### |
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