AngryZealot
King
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2007
- Messages
- 770
That's an interesting philosophy, but I have some problems with it.
We take the observations, but we do not create them. Our subjective theories do not change the fact that there are fundamental laws of the universe. These laws exist regardless of life.
Most of these comprehensive theories are no more than stories that fail to take into account one crucial factor: we are creating them. It is the biological creature that makes observations, names what it observes, and creates stories.
We take the observations, but we do not create them. Our subjective theories do not change the fact that there are fundamental laws of the universe. These laws exist regardless of life.
This is my biggest problem with biocentrism as Lanza describes. There is no evidence to suggest that consciousness is a result of anything other than physical laws and the chemical signaling between neurons. There might be, but there is no evidence for it. For the same reason that we must reject the Flying Spaghetti Monster, we must reject this notion in the absence of evidence. Like Intelligent Design, this theory by definition is an untestable hypothesis -- if all reality is subjective to biology, then biology cannot probe reality. However, given the tangible benefits the scientific method has brought to humanity as measured through biology (increased life span, decreased suffering, etc), there has to be something external and fundamental, separate from the biological realm; otherwise, we would not expect to see this correlation. It only works if biology is a reflection of reality, not the other way around.Science has not succeeded in confronting the element of existence that is at once most familiar and most mysterious—conscious experience.