E
ElevenNine
Member
- Dec 24, 2022
- 13
We are all comprised completely of particles. Our brain waves are essentially just electrons moving at certain speeds, our blood pumping is the movement of certain molecules bonded in a certain way. Even our memories are, at the atomic level, just groups of atoms rearranging based on how our senses send electrons to us. Then, would it not theoretically be possible to create a human out of only the elements and maybe a few electrons? No, I'm not talking about something like cloning. I mean a grown adult made completely synthetically, and most importantly, with memories already implanted. There are no laws preventing such a feat from being done; only technological limitations.
But meticulously crafting every molecular bond seems nearly impossible. And, I expect, it will be for humans. But not for quantum mechanics. Quantum tunneling allows molecules to seemingly teleport from one place to another. The possibility of a human materializing is of course astronomically low. It's said the event of a single water molecule teleporting a metre or so won't happen until the heat death of the universe. But it's not like the universe stops existing after the heat death. Subatomic particles still exist, if across unimaginable distances. There's always a non-zero chance of this happening.
I see death as a temorary switching off of consciousness, like sleeping. I believe you will eventually wake up, that your physical assembly is inevitable given enough time. Of course, you'd exist in a void' so you'd die again pretty quickly. But given yet more time, wouldn't it be possible to emerge into an entire solar system crafted by quantum mechanics? If so, you'd wake up to find the world as it was. And in the trillions of possible worlds to wake up to, I believe there must be at least one in which life is better thepan it was before. Remember, at these ridiculous probabilities literally anything becomes possible.
Although I am an atheist, I still believe there is something for each of us after death. Not anything like heaven or hell, or even reincarnation in the common sense. Another life, while still retaining the same memories(or without them, if you prefer it that way). A better future, perhaps?
But meticulously crafting every molecular bond seems nearly impossible. And, I expect, it will be for humans. But not for quantum mechanics. Quantum tunneling allows molecules to seemingly teleport from one place to another. The possibility of a human materializing is of course astronomically low. It's said the event of a single water molecule teleporting a metre or so won't happen until the heat death of the universe. But it's not like the universe stops existing after the heat death. Subatomic particles still exist, if across unimaginable distances. There's always a non-zero chance of this happening.
I see death as a temorary switching off of consciousness, like sleeping. I believe you will eventually wake up, that your physical assembly is inevitable given enough time. Of course, you'd exist in a void' so you'd die again pretty quickly. But given yet more time, wouldn't it be possible to emerge into an entire solar system crafted by quantum mechanics? If so, you'd wake up to find the world as it was. And in the trillions of possible worlds to wake up to, I believe there must be at least one in which life is better thepan it was before. Remember, at these ridiculous probabilities literally anything becomes possible.
Although I am an atheist, I still believe there is something for each of us after death. Not anything like heaven or hell, or even reincarnation in the common sense. Another life, while still retaining the same memories(or without them, if you prefer it that way). A better future, perhaps?