Disrespect for the world is very deeply engrained in people, and it starts from the idea that an external God was needed to create the world, or the idea that the world needs something external like a Platonic realm in order to function, because the world itself is lacking in what is necessary.
What is respected is the God, not the world. And if not a God, then what is respected is the mathematics, not the world.
However, it is reasonable to assume that the world is in fact a self-contained, self-sufficient, standalone thing, and that there is nothing outside of the world. It is reasonable to assume that the world has within itself all the necessary features that would be attributed to a God, or a Platonic realm.
The world itself is worthy of respect.
And the only aspects of the world that can’t potentially be explained are it’s logically necessary aspects, i.e. consciousness and creativity.
- Creativity:
The world necessarily created the very specific, basic mathematical aspects of the world that we see today: the world created categories; the world created mathematical relationships between the categories; the world created numbers; the world assigned some numbers to some of the categories, where this number assignment is also a creative act.
This creation of new numbers, and assigning them to categories, are creative acts that are still happening to this day, as seen in "quantum number jumps".
- Consciousness:
It is all very well for high-level human mathematicians to be conscious of the mathematical symbols on the page in front of them, but it is logically necessary that the low-level world would also be aware of its own categories, numbers and relationships. The high-level consciousness of the higher-level entities is made possible by the low-level consciousness of the low-level entities that make up the higher-level entities.
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Isn’t it time that our theories of the world all STARTED with the question: Why is there anything at all, why not nothing? Isn’t it time that consciousness and creativity/ free will were seen as logically necessary aspects of the world, and not as aspects that later mysteriously “emerged”.