Mindstream Index

About MINDSTREAM [making sense of nonsense]:       

Pattern Interruption Non-News has no informational value, just potential experiential value.  [Food-for-thought, by definition, comes with indigestion.  If food-for-thought goes down easy, it's not food-for-thought but just brain-candy.]

I write this freely, unafraid of self-contradiction.  And I encourage you to read this blog with the same attitude of interpretive freedom.

Walt Whitman:  Do I contradict myself?  Very well, then I contradict myself.  I am large: I contain multitudes.

Confusion* is enlightenment [of sorts].

confusion =  letting go of the known + stepping into the unknown = openness of mind

Entries in gravity (2)

Wednesday
Dec292010

Level 3

1.
Elevator music needs re-invention:
It denigrates the mind with clichés: it needs to literally
Uplift!
2.
After all,
any departure from the Earth’s Center of Gravity
requires the reassurance of return.
3.
There is a chance I confused you.
if I, in fact, did, then we just met in the Cloud of Unknowing.
But if I didn't, then we'll surely clash on the Beaches of Certainty!
So, get your beach ball ready:

Thursday
Apr292010

Gravity & Levity of Uncertainty

As of this writing moment, the Earth’s human population is estimated to be 6,841,451,100.  All of these 6.8 billion people are in the same exact “now.”  We are all at the exact same time: not a single one of us is either a nanosecond behind or a nanosecond ahead.  We are all on time.  Make no mistake: time-zones are spatial coordinates, not temporal (time) coordinates.  Sure, you are awake reading this, perhaps, on a coffee break from work just as somebody somewhere is going to bed or waking up.  Sure, we are all doing different things at this moment of you reading this, but we all – without exception – are in this exact one moment, moving into the future that doesn’t yet exist. 

What this means is that no one, not you, not me, not your favorite politician or stock broker or “seer” of any kind, knows a thing about the future that doesn’t yet exist. 

What this means is that out of 6.8 billion people that are breathing right now (their first, their next or their last breath) not a single one has been into the future and back to tell you definitively what it is like.  The next moment of time hasn’t happened yet for any of us to experience it and report it as a fact.   And anyone claiming to know the future or promising you a particular version of the future is exaggerating their existential mandate.  Remember: a promise is just a statement of intent, not a guarantee of a particular future outcome.  After all, how can anyone guarantee the reality that hasn't yet happened, the tomorrow that doesn't yet exist?!  Laugh at this future-telling naivette!

So, what are we to do about all this?  How are we to operate on this chronic uncertainty?  History – we are told by historians – has been our best bet, our best predictor of the future.  But, to quote Colin Tudge, “The lessons of history are inevitably broad…”  Indeed, the lessons of history are inevitably generic and time-specific, offering us at best approximate guidelines, or hints at what still might be. 

And to continue with Tudge's astute observation: “… for no set of circumstance can ever be repeated precisely.”  Precisely so: there is no ultimate predictive precision!  Predictive precision only approximates definitive knowledge but never equals it.  Prediction, after all, is but an expression of belief about what might yet be, i.e. about the future that hasn’t happened yet, about the reality that hasn’t yet materialized, i.e. about the world that doesn’t yet exist. 

As informed and data-driven as our speculations, guesses, estimations might be about the future, a prediction is still only a prediction, and a belief is never knowledge.  Chronic uncertainty is no more a problem than gravity: it simply is (a fundamental parameter of our existence).  We see objects fall every day: we have long accepted this.  We see predictions fail every day: we just have to accept this too.  It’s always been like that and, my guess, will always be like that.  Let’s face it: we are facing a Chronic Unknown, i.e. Time*.  So, wink, with levity, at the idea of Time and remember to acknowledge the Timelessness of what still is.

*Chronic, from Greek khronikos "of time," from khronos "time.” (etymonline.com)

Resources:

The Impasse of Certainty

Cultivating a Healthy Relationship with Time

Once Is Nonce: Time Perception, Pain, Mindfulness

Mandalas of Impermanence

References:

Colin Tudge, "The Time Before History: 5 Million Years of Human Impact" Scribner, 1996.