Jeff Russell
[Main Blog Post] The Open-Minded Materialist's Gentle Introduction to Spirituality
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- 1: [Open Post] Heathen Open Post
- 2: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Thoughts on A Short History of Ethics
- 3: Ask Me (Just About) Anything
- 4: A Request: Help with Dream Interpretation
- 5: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Blessing: the Art and the Practice
- 6: Divination Offering - Rune or Ogham Reading Through the End of the Year
- 7: [Main Blog Post] Looking Back on 2024 and Forward to 2025
- 8: [Main Blog Post] How the Cost of Freight Has Shaped the World
- 9: [Main Blog Post] [Heathen Rosary] Draft "Hail Holy Forebears"
- 10: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Thoughts on Shadow Tech
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Similar Background
Date: 2023-01-10 11:34 am (UTC)I have a huge scientific background, having studied both physics and anthropology in college. Though I got exposed to the magical side of life a few years earlier and kept my interest in it. I think my acceptance that the World has both a scientific side and a spiritual side is still strong because at the time I was learning both, Quantum Mechanics was the hot topic in physics. When you see some of the things the top people in that field write, you come away with the feeling that what is believed in spirituality and magic isn't anywhere as weird. Now that the theory of "E8" and Quantum gravity is gaining traction in physics it's getting even weirder, lol.
Keep writing. I think that you can come to a worldview that accepts both material science and the spiritual as equally valid and complementary.
Re: Similar Background
Date: 2023-01-11 02:51 am (UTC)Thank you for the encouragement! After reading Neal Stephenson's Anathem I tracked down some of the books on quantum physics in his list of inspirations and read them, but as a Classics and Ancient History B.A. with an MBA, I lacked much of the mathematical and scientific grounding to much follow. Since learning the occult philosophy of "everything has consciousness", I have found myself thinking back to Mind, Matter, and Quantum Mechanics by Henry Stapp, which I more-or-less followed and found intriguing.
Also, to be clear, I am in no way "anti-science", and I agree that it is an incredibly useful tool that tells us much about the world that we wouldn't know without it. I just don't think it is well-suited to the bottom-most level of qualitative questions about values (such as "what is best in life?" "is this discovery good, bad, or some blend? what should we do with it?") - I don't think you can arrive at answers to those empirically.