You people almost put a religious faith in computers.

We could just as well have lived in a world without computers. So putting all trust in computers is strange. It implies that we wouldn’t be able to understand without computers and AI. But if we lived in a world where computers hadn’t been invented, we would also understand reality. Another way to look at this is that we live in a world where a thousand things like computers were never invented, and we still understand reality without them, since those things don’t exist for us now.

How can something be nothing and something at the same time?

Let’s take depression as an example.

Depression exists, clearly. But it also doesn’t exist, since every depression is unique in itself. If we took brain scans of a thousand depressions, we would get a thousand unique outcomes. So it doesn’t exist as one unique thing—there is no such thing as one depression—but it exists as a thousand different depressions.

Quantum is like that too. It doesn’t exist as one thing; it’s a thousand unique things at the same time.

Like a thousand depressions each have a thousand sources of sadness underneath them.


What Can’t the Bible Be?

A book. Because books didn’t exist yet.

So what is it then?
It is certainly interesting. I have thought about it for a few years. Now I know what it is and how it works.

The question is: do you want to know, or do you want to find out for yourself? I’m not talking about a higher power, but about a concrete answer.

Because there is a code in it. The code is based on sound. Sounds you also know.

Do you know what I mean?


Relationships

It’s easier to see psychiatric diseases as disturbed relationships:

  • With emotions and food: anorexia

  • With meaning and other people: depression

  • With your body and self-care: psychosis

If you focus on unhealthy relationships, it’s easier to see what the real problem is. The problem is not in the disease itself—that’s just a name—but in prolonging a relationship that isn’t healthy.

A simple example of why this is hard to spot is the ‘calorie trap’: seeing food only as calories in and out. That’s an example of building an extremely unhealthy relationship with food. A healthy relationship with food is not based on calories—or only very little.