Navigate Select ESC Close

What happens to consciousness when clocks stop? | Bernard Carr & Bernardo Kastrup

2024-05-19 Education
470.4k
8.7k
1.0k
Essentia Foundation
Essentia Foundation
265.0k subscribers

Unlock all features

FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.

Description

Hans Busstra sat down with Bernard Carr and Bernardo Kastrup to discuss all presentations given at our 'Time and Mind' conference and elaborate further on their own ideas. For instance, both Carr and Kastrup agree that, if you take an idealist perspective, you need multiple time dimensions to account for the decomposition problem: the mechanism by which consciousness with a big ‘C’ resolves itself into consciousness with a small ‘c’. I. Bernard Carr and Bernardo Kastrup discussing their own views: 00:00 Intro 04:06 Opening 09:42 Bernard Carr on the bridge between physics an psi phenomena 10:50 Scientists don't like mystics and mystics don't like scientists... 11:26 Is the paranormal compatible with Einstein's Block Universe? 19:01 On physicists understanding of time 25:35 What is the relationship between time and mind? 28:18 Bernardo on the three different metaphysical interpretations of time 32:52 Levels of 'selves' 36:21 No philosopher seems to talk about the specious present... 37:32 Einsteins Block Universe 38:56 On Einstein calling the passage of time a stubborn illusion... 40:52 On the importance of careful language 43:16 How a multi-dimensional time model can explain different identities 52:10 On models and reality 54:20 Time in General Relativity 58:15 Time in Quantum Theory 59:21 Lee Smolin's understanding of time 1:00:38 The role of time in different branches of Quantum Theory 1:01:54 Is time fundamental, asked to Bernard Carr. II. Bernard Carr and Bernardo Kastrup discussing the conference presentations: 1:02:34 On Lee Smolin's 'presentism' 1:08:31 On George Ellis' presentation: There is no way a physical block universe can have come into existence: the future not yet determined! 1:15:05 On Lee Smolin's presentation: The role of qualia in temporal naturalism 1:22:16 On Bernard Carr's own presentation: Making space for time and consciousness in physics 1:26:26 On Kip Thorne's ideas 1:30:39 Bernardo on the undeniability of parapsychological phenomena 1:33:10 On Jonathan Schooler's presentation: Could postulating three dimension of time address assorted disparities between physics and experience? 1:38:38 The Specious Present 1:38:54 On Marc Wittman's presentation: Subjective time during ordinary and altered states of consciousness 1:47:21 On Alex Gomez Marin's presentation: The consciousness of neuroscience 1:52:53 On Paul Davies's presentation: The muddlescape of time 1:59:51 On Julia Mossbridge's presentation: How do precognition and other perceptual anomalies shed light on models of consciousness, unconsciousness and time? 2:25:21 Closing remarks You can watch all the presentations referred to in this conversation in full length here: On George Ellis - There is no way a physical block universe can have come into existence: the future not yet determined! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Bnktj5_o6M&t=950s Lee Smolin - The role of qualia in temporal naturalism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Bnktj5_o6M&t=3274s Bernard Carr - Making space for time and consciousness in physics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Bnktj5_o6M&t=5326s Jonathan Schooler - Could postulating three dimension of time address assorted disparities between physics and experience? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Bnktj5_o6M&t=7331s Marc Wittman's - Subjective time during ordinary and altered states of consciousness https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atKCgbAOPhQ&t=1035s Alex Gomez Marin - The consciousness of neuroscience https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atKCgbAOPhQ&t=3197s Paul Davies - The muddlescape of time https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atKCgbAOPhQ&t=5655s Julia Mossbridge's - How do precognition and other perceptual anomalies shed light on models of consciousness, unconsciousness and time? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atKCgbAOPhQ&t=8103s Bernard Carr's essay "Higher Dimensions of Consiousness": https://www.essentiafoundation.org/how-hyper-dimensional-spacetime-may-explain-individual-identity/reading/ Credits for intro edit footage Amadeus, Miloš Forman (1984, Warner Bros) Interstellar, Christopher Nolan (2014, Paramount Pictures) The art of precision | Jaeger-LeCoultre: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4BdhuvZiug Spacetime by Michael Murphy: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bygjCPH55aY Neil de Grasse Tyson explaining the Tesseract in Interstellar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5yQhiJjSWYk&t=15s Let there be life by Melody Sheep: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNSa8oq4vYQ Playing with Time by Macro Room: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gooWdc6kb80 Amazing Mosaic Zoom out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWYNTkyUJS0 Beautiful art images: The Metaphysical Mirror: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cOdyJDDUB0 Copyright © 2023-2024 by Essentia Foundation. All rights reserved.

Top Comments (10)

@minsungderstandings 2024-05-19

As a 21 year old, I feel very grateful to see the Internet being used for this type of things, seeing professionals and wise people from older generations starting to speak about these issues, even if that many times means they can lose their reputation or even their job. I wish us, the younger generations, can follow your legacy and be the ones to shift the paradigm... I don't think it's impossible, as my generation has overall been raised in a more non-material environment (videos, Internet, videogames, hearing about simulation theories... I'd say we've engaged more with the Internet and information than with the material/physical world). The amount of people my age I've met who think "the material world is just one layer of reality but there's definitely more than just it" is pretty huge I'd say, but not enough. I just wish there were more people from my generation watching this kind of videos.

809 80 replies
@matthewlaham6809 2024-05-30

I've watched this twice, and I'm not ashamed to say I'm not stoned enough to understand this

232 22 replies
@FellowHuman137 2024-05-30

One of my favourite days of my life was after years of playing guitar, one day i was improvising a guitar solo with a band and i realised i was hearing the music i was going to play before i played it whilst playing in time with the other band members, it was such a cool paradigm shift for my brain.

202 14 replies
@bunberrier 2024-06-01

How you know this is the good kind of debate is because the participants are delighted to hear the reasoning of those who disagree, because everyone wins. Their hope for the discussion is an advancement of knowledge and not an elevation of their ego, or the furthering of a narrative they wish to establish.

175 4 replies
@godwho5365 2024-05-19

Bernardo the metaphysical rockstar and Bernard the dark knight of contemporary physics in one room! Long live Essentia Foundation!

141 4 replies
@nessy2000 2025-01-11

The best physicists are those who speak about Consciousness without fear. Go Bernard!

93 4 replies
@SOLIDSNAKE. 2024-05-25

Pshycdelics taught me, time is infinite and we are all one

46 32 replies
@heinzgassner1057 2024-05-21

Just imagine a mountain valley that got completely cut off from the world and has the strange metrological phenomenon of being fully in fog 365 days a year. There are some ‘religions’ in this valley, believing in a blue sky but the philosophers and scientists of this valley are debating and debating, many ‘proofing’ that his blue is just an emerging phenomenon of fog. Then imagine, someone leaning the art of climbing and succeeding to actually see the blue sky. This climber (mystic) would have a very hard time when returning and joining the discussions of the scientific elite of this metaphorical valley. Having experienced blue sky or having NOT experienced blue sky makes a big difference. According to my experience, there comes the point in every journey for understanding reality, where you need to learn how to climb and take the risk to leave the discussion table of reasoning and start your first person experiment.

46 7 replies
@theLUCYCOWAN 2024-06-05

"Time" is such a crucial basic component of music that I think it would be useful to include the musical aspect of time in future discussions

24
@nix811318 2024-05-20

Bernard Carr's open mindedness makes him the most evolved of all of them 💯💯

16

Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge

  • Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
  • Chat with videos, export text & PDF
  • $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research

Free forever plan • All features unlocked

App screenshot