Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2024 8:39 pm
Where's the evidence that consciousness comes from an outside source? Where's the evidence of the entangled fields you suggest? The fact that I can imagine entangled fields producing consciousness does not mean that it's possible for entangled fields to produce consciousness.
An outside source of energy is necessary, but not sufficient, for the body to function. If your car's engine is broken down, putting gas in the tank won't make it go. The body has a complex set of hardware, if you will, that permits the body to take in food as a source of energy, break the food down into a form that the body can use to run the various systems that keep us alive. The body continuously radiates energy in the form of heat, which is a more disorganized form of energy than what our bodies use as fuel. It's a constant flow of energy into, through, and out of the body. When the body's systems can no longer sustain the processes necessary for that flow of energy to happen, we die. But the energy doesn't stop flowing all at once. Different systems shut down at different times. The body gradually cools. That sometimes we see what we think is a moment of death does not mean that all the flow of energy stops in a moment.
Energy isn't a static entity in our bodies -- it is constantly flowing through them. Energy is constantly leaving our bodies in the form of heat (thermal energy) and waste (chemical energy). The energy that is powering my brain right now isn't the same energy that was powering it when I began typing the first sentence of this paragraph. The balloon always leaks. The energy doesn't stop existing, but it leaves the body in a less organized form than it entered in. Or to put it in more correct terminology, the entropy of the energy when it leaves is higher than the entropy when it enters. It doesn't go away when it leaves my body -- it's simply in a different form.
The energy in our bodies at the moment of death leaves, at least at first, the same way it has left throughout our entire lives -- heat and waste. It also flows into other organisms as they use the body as a source of food. The energy never disappears -- it just changes form.
I think we tend to misidentify processes as things. I call it "thingifying." The musical "Godspell" has a prologue in which various philosophers sing snippets about their philosophies separately and then at the same time in a musical representation of the Tower of Babel. Or Babble. I like Buckminster Fuller's part:
Man is a complex of patterns, of processes...
I live on Earth at present, and I don't know what I am.
I know that I am not a category
I am not a thing - a noun
I seem to be a verb, an evolutionary process-
An integral function of the universe.
That's how I think of life. It's not a thing -- it's a process. In a very real sense to me, "life" does not exist -- only living.
ETA: I don't understand the EEG example. Doesn't an EEG measure the flow of energy through the body by attaching electrodes to the body? I think of the surface of the body as being part of the body.