Well, it’s Monday again. Time keeps marching on without respite, as it is apparently wont to do, “progressing” in the direction of increasing entropy, whether time is a fundamental aspect of the universe or an emergent phenomenon. In either case, there doesn’t seem to be any sort of time stream or time vortex like in Doctor Who, but rather a process that simply is a linear dimension with some “entanglement” (not to be confused with quantum entanglement) with the dimensions of space, such that motion and acceleration in space changes one’s “motion” in time, in an updated version of the Pythagorean Theorem.
For those of you who like to share the joke about “Yet another day when I didn’t use a2 + b2 = c2” you’re really depriving yourself of a deep understanding of something that turns up in and governs a ridiculous number of the things and processes in the physical reality in which you live. Consciousness—despite clever but tortured sophistry (in my opinion) by some prominent philosophers of mind—in no way appears fundamental to the universe*. On the other hand, the Pythagorean Theorem, which was neither invented nor discovered by Pythagoras, applies in all levels of dimensions, however many you might conjure, and with the modification to make it reflect velocities, it applies to spacetime as well.
There can be no readily conceivable brains** in two spatial dimensions, but Pythagoras nevertheless applies. In one dimension, it doesn’t really apply, but in one dimension there are no triangles of any kind, so it doesn’t make much difference. It’s difficult to imagine how consciousness could possibly occur in one dimension (notwithstanding the seemingly one-dimensional paucity of ideas held by so many people, especially in politics).
Anyway, enough of this nonsense. Well, it’s not nonsense, but it is rather pointless meandering of random thoughts that interest no one but me, and will probably lose me readers. Weirdly enough, people seem to come and read more often when I write about my depression and self-hatred and anxiety and ASD and how there’s absolutely nothing going on in my life that makes it worth living.
Well, rest assured, all those things are still present and active and driving me toward an early grave, which in some senses will be a release, or at least an escape of sorts.
I keep trying to think of things to engage myself and my interests, but so far to no avail. I think about asking my boss to give me back my black Strat to play at the office, or I consider bringing in another guitar, or maybe even getting a portable keyboard or something, but when I think of any of them, I cannot even imagine doing anything but sort of staring at them as if I don’t even know what their purpose is. I don’t play my guitars or my keyboard at the house, either.
It’s likewise with even fiction, other than silly Japanese light novels that take a day or so to read (not continuous time). I think I like them mainly because of the social interactions of the characters, many of the main ones of whom are somewhat socially awkward. It can feel, however briefly, that I have a social group of some sort, as I read the stories. Of course, that means that once I’m done reading there is a comparative let down, which sometimes makes me feel worse than I did before.
I tried to read some of Feynman’s Lectures on Physics, but I lost interest almost immediately, though he was a brilliant and engaging teacher. I also tried to read some of Anthony Padilla’s Fantastic Numbers and Where to Find Them, which is also very good and fun; if you’re interested in who he is, you can check out the YouTube channel Sixty Symbols, and sometimes Numberphile. He shows up in both places fairly often. But in any case, though I like his book (I’ve read it before) it has not been able to grip me.
I’ve also tried to start reading Stephen King’s novella The Life of Chuck, since it’s now a movie and is getting positive reviews. At least Stephen King is almost always an engaging read. But I’m not sure I’m getting into the story. Quite a while ago, I started the first story in If It Bleeds, the collection in which the above novella appears, but I couldn’t get into it at all. When I can’t even get into reading Stephen King***, things are looking bleak.
I did watch the rest of the latest series of Doctor Who, and it was pretty good, and quite surprising at the end, but Batman only knows when the next series is going to happen, and there will only be a handful of episodes if it keeps up as it has been. That’s too little too late for me to use as motivation for continued existence.
I don’t know what to do. I really don’t know. I feel very lost and, more importantly, very much without any internal impetus. I can’t even listen to songs I like, let alone try to sing along (or play) without feeling like I’m going to cry, though I don’t understand why. I’m at the end of my rope (I have two, and both are tied into nooses, just for “fun”).
Anyway, that’s enough. Sorry to bother you with my crap again, but in my mind, you asked for it by complaining about my tedious math and science stuff. I hope you have a good day. Unless you’re lucky (or I am) I’m sure to be back again tomorrow with another blog post.
*The only reason I can discern why some people think consciousness is fundamental to the universe is that consciousness is fundamental to human experience—indeed, one could say that it is human experience—and of course, such people seem tacitly or implicitly to think humans are the measure of all things simply because that is what they are.
**The degree of interconnectivity is just too low. Connections between 2D neurons would be terribly limited, as would room for such things. I suppose that, since we can always map anything three-dimensional onto some two-dimensional surface, à la Bekenstein-Hawking black hole entropy and the holographic principle, we could construct a sort of brain in 2D, but that’s a tortuous process, and seems quite unlikely. Of course, 4D would give us even more available connectivity than 3D—also there are no knots or tangles in 4 spatial dimensions—but there are other issues with 4 (macroscopic) spatial dimensions that would seem to get in the way of life as we know it, such as the nature of gravity (and other forces) and the rate of such forces’ diminishment. For instance, the force of gravity (and electromagnetism, etc.) in four dimensions would fall off at a rate proportional to r3 rather than r2, and there are apparently no stable orbits in such situations.
***What’s worse, I cannot even get into reading Tolkien. I’ve tried. When neither Stephen King nor Tolkien, nor even well-written science books, can engage me, something indeed has happened.
