What is "Mind?"

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MH2

climber
Jul 19, 2014 - 03:26pm PT
I include myself in this category! (jgill)



Imprecisely, perhaps.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Jul 19, 2014 - 03:36pm PT
Regarding the causality of the Big Bang...

...sorry about that.

No more mixing household cleaning products.

Promise.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jul 19, 2014 - 03:50pm PT
scientific determinism is different from "cause and effect"

and in fact, while scientific determinism is necessary, "cause and effect" probably isn't... but then I'm talking like a physicist.

For instance, you would say that the gravitational attraction of two bodies is "an effect" that "causes" the bodies to move along some trajectory.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causality#Physics

Especially in field theory, for instance... before which Newton famously said hypothesis non fingo he didn't know what "action at a distance" was all about, but he knew that the Sun somehow interacted, gravitationally, with the Earth.

If he had a notion of "cause and effect" there was a huge gap in it...

Later, with a classical field theory, (which essentially waited for Faraday) the idea was that the "source" was some charge that created a field, and that other charges, and their fields, interacted. Electromagnetism has fields that are the result of a superposition of the individual charges, the fields don't interact with each other, only with the charges.

In General Relativity, the fields from each mass do intereact with each other, the theory is non-linear.

So the "cause and effect" chain there might be that a mass sources a field, the field fills space and interact with the other masses and fields. The position of the masses change under the forces of the local field, which change the other masses... this is a dynamical system.

But we actually don't go to all that trouble... we can write down the force:

F₁₂ = G M₁M₂/r₁₂˛

the Newtonian form of gravity, and time integrate the equations of motion to see how the system changes in time (the dynamics).

Where do we use "cause and effect"? Newton didn't know what it was, but he didn't need it to do celestial mechanics.

This is, however, a deterministic system (without resorting to "cause and effect").

So the concept is a bit more subtle, at least I think so... that's my opinion.

This issue is even more pronounced in quantum mechanics, and in relativity... in quantum mechanics there are many unresolved issues concerning the "collapse of the wave function" and all that... and in relativity, we have causality limited by the speed-of-light.

Physicists handle these well, but the common idea of "cause and effect" isn't as straight forward as you seem to say.




as for Ohm's law, it is the empirical observation that the current is proportional to the potential difference, that works for light bulbs too (I don't know why you think not), but it does not work for all devices, why do you say it does?

V=IR

is Ohm's law...

the current line density is proportional to the field strength

J is proportional to E

is Ohm's law...

these are linear relationships...

a diode doesn't have such a relationship.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jul 19, 2014 - 03:54pm PT
What "Caused" the "BANG"?

inflation "caused the bang"...
there was a universe before inflation, however, but our current universe did start at some time, t=0, which happened before inflation...
BLUEBLOCR

Social climber
joshua tree
Jul 19, 2014 - 07:48pm PT
Been studying this Inflaton when i came across this

Vacuum has been a frequent topic of philosophical debate since ancient Greek times, but was not studied empirically until the 17th century.

Stuff like this really makes those old ancient dudes look pretty smart!

For the Greeks that argued FOR Vacuum. Their philosophy turned out to be True. i bookmarked that one!
MikeL

Social climber
Seattle, WA
Jul 19, 2014 - 09:31pm PT
Ed: Maybe "Truth" is the myth? Feferman has a better idea, that the knowledge might be "open-ended" and therefore, there is no "truth"

Oh, I have no problem at all with this. It could constitute a truth, but that could also be not true. Er, the problem (if there is one) with this whole line of talk is that we are focusing on knowledge . . . that there is something to know / content / stuff that one uses to predict and control. That something is knowable. It should come as no surprise that I think there are "things" that fall outside of what is knowable. Knowing and knowledge are both conceits. I don't think we know anything beyond our own existence. We have seas of hypotheses, stories, and theories. And that's ok, too. Who doesn't love a good story?


DMT: Interesting how you always find what you're looking for.

Think about it. How could it be any other way? You see what you are prepared to see.


Randisi: I suppose the question regarding Mike is that if everything is perfect, why does he do anything at all.

Let go. Take your hands off the controls, and just be who you cannot help but be and find the action of non-action.

I find myself doing what shows up in front of me. I quit a job, I am interviewing for a new job, we moved to another city, I unpacked maybe a hundred boxes and put everything in place, and I'm about to make a dinner I believe. I didn't plan any of these things. They just showed up. These days I'm trying to see what's showing up. Sometimes it's very subtle or nuanced. I don't try to manipulate anything. If anything (and this is heavy-handed to say), I try to navigate by leaning this way or that way.

I can see that you think that nothing will get done without intentions, plans, objectives, missions, etc. There are hundreds of things that are getting done inside of you right now: digestion, thought generation, breathing, heart pumping, etc.--John Barth notwithstanding.


Tvash: perfection in nature is hooey. Nature is one big junk pile . . . .

According to you. You would do it differently, of course. When I say perfection, (i) it couldn't be any other way (causes and conditions, think balanced equations). It is perfect given its state of evolution. (ii) You're stuck in evaluations. You're being critical. You don't like the way things are. That's the basis of all suffering. You are creating a narrative, a story.

Everything is connected to every other thing. It's all One. You're parsing the Whole artificially. You can't hold anything separate, independent of the whole. It's just a your wild imagination. Sorry, but it's a bit immature.

Try dropping all of the stories, theories, narratives, and just look at what's right in front of you . . . your raw experience.


MH2: . . . your use of the comprehensive word anything. If there is nothing that you feel is worth getting really serious or concrete about, okay for you, but are you saying that people who feel otherwise are always making a mistake?

It's a good question, MH2. I can see how one could see that in my writing. My thought is that where everyone is at is perfect for them given where they've gotten to. I too believe that variety can be instructive to folks. It might even show some people that nothing is very concrete (or serious) because there are so many views: how can any of them be true or right?

There are no mistakes. There are no errors. Everything is exactly as it must be, and everything is as it should be. Can't you see that? I suppose this means for most people that they should throw their hands up in the air and give up and do nothing. But, you nor I will do that, and neither will almost anyone else because that is not who and what we are.

We are actors that have found ourselves on a stage in a drama called life (the lila). Be your character. Do what you cannot help but do. Be who you cannot help but be. And watch your character, as you act and be in the world. You will learn from that what you can. No matter what happens, everything is ok. Everything is just perfect for you at this point in your evolution. You're emerging, developing, learning. You are learning what and who you are.

Sure, I know, there is pain and suffering and apparent difficulties that you face and must deal with. But that's only because, like Tvash, you have attractions and aversions. You like some things and not other things. You want; you don't want. It's all an illusion, a game, a narrative that you've made up. If you want to be free, you can give up the illusion, the game, the narrative. Just be . . . and in time, you can even drop the "be" (but that goes way beyond what I can possibly point to).

For now, just rest, relax. There is no where to go, and nothing to do or be. As Tony Soprano said in every episode, "Hey, hey, hey--Take It Easy!!"

Be well, . . . no matter what comes your way.
MH2

climber
Jul 19, 2014 - 09:38pm PT
There are no mistakes. There are no errors. (MikeL)


A+ for everyone.
BLUEBLOCR

Social climber
joshua tree
Jul 19, 2014 - 09:52pm PT
^^^MH2,didn't you know, thats what the schools are teaching now?
jgill

Boulder climber
Colorado
Jul 19, 2014 - 10:10pm PT
Do what you cannot help but do. Be who you cannot help but be . . . No matter what happens, everything is ok (MikeL)

Sam Harris comments that if he had the brain of a terrorist who committed an atrocity, he would do the same.

Your statement gives carte blanche to every action, no matter how heinous. I know you mean this in a more gentle, more benign context, but it reads horrendous.

On the other hand your (well-written) commentaries are never dull!
MH2

climber
Jul 19, 2014 - 10:24pm PT
Hakuna matata

[Click to View YouTube Video]
Ward Trotter

Trad climber
Jul 19, 2014 - 10:52pm PT
On the other hand your (well-written) commentaries are never dull!

But they are insufferably condescending. Besides they read like new agey blurbs one would expect in the Hallmark greeting card department devoted to Zen acolytes---if there were such a thing.

His pronouncements are wisdom from on high. A type of spiritual autism that rejects the mere material plane in which the rest of us are hopelessly entrapped.
Ward Trotter

Trad climber
Jul 19, 2014 - 11:01pm PT
Yes, he does suffer from pronouncements ex cathedra.

Aye...we are not worthy of "Himself "

We await further encyclicals .
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jul 19, 2014 - 11:09pm PT
Largo: The problem with Hewaljy is that while sounding avuncular and reliable, his information is not remotely accurate. I said I was not guessing at this material, and here this guy keeps bumbling along insisting that I am butchering the data.

Exactly, except for the fact you don't have an adequate grasp on the material to pick up a knife to do any butchering.

First, Healyj’s wonky claim that AI and other associated fields have given up on sentience since around 1980, this is not remotely so. And while it is true that some of the big brain projects are not trying to directly program sentience, or consciousness, they are very much trying to achieve and produce it as an ”emergent” function.

Nothing 'wonky' about it - everyone except the delusional gave up around 1988. No one with half a mind is currently working on an "emergent function". Again. It's delusional and yet you keep claiming that's what folks are attempting - they are categorically not because they know it isn't going to happen.

The most vocal, well-funded (1 billion Euros) of these Dr. Frankensein’s includes “Professor” Henry Markram, “a doctor-turned-computer engineer, who announced that his team would create the world's first artificial conscious and intelligent mind by 2018. And that is exactly what he is doing. On the shore of Lake Geneva, this brilliant, eccentric scientist is building an artificial mind. A Swiss - it could only be Swiss - precision- engineered mind, made of silicon, gold and copper.

Again, total bullsh#t. Markram knows all too well that isn't even a remote possibility and - as an aside - he's motivated by an autistic son, not sentience.

Markram: A meticulous virtual copy of the human brain would enable basic research on brain cells and circuits or computer-based drug trials.

Markram: We cannot experimentally map out the brain. It's just too big. In a piece of the brain the size of a pinhead there are 3,000 pathways like a city with 3,000 streets.

Markram points out that, using conventional approaches, it takes 20,000 experiments to map a neural circuit. Yet, in all, the brain contains 86 billion neurons. On top of that, to fully understand the operation of every synapse and how they interact with neurons in other parts of the neo-cortex, scientists would need to trace all of the 100 trillion connections between them – something that is impossible to do experimentally.

Furber: "The thing that I admire about Henry is that he is a great believer that when problem reaches a certain point the only way to make progress is to industrialise the research process," says Furber, before adding that: "Whether the project will yield the big goal of giving us a clear conception of how the brain works is bound to be speculative because we have no way of knowing if we're capturing enough data or not, but it will almost certainly tell us a lot about the biology of the brain and advance computational neuroscience."

Largo: Mind you, this is not some isolated, crank “Professon,” but a leading neuroscientist who actually believes that a computer will be generating feelings (sans a limbic system LOL) in a few short years.

Actually he doesn't.

Now obviously my friends at Caltech don’t have a few billion greenbacks to simulate a human brain and hope sentience jumps off it like music out of a jutebox. So they are left to try and imagine what is involved, what is the process, what is the mechanical A-B-Cs that “creates” sentience. And where might they start to program such a “function.”

Even if your Caltech friends had unlimited greenbacks they wouldn't have the remotest clue where to even begin to "program sentience."

I would be interested in hearing why Haelyj believes that people “gave up” on building machine sentience, and how he might define what it is (self consciousness) that they collectively gave up on (they didn’t).

They did. And they did because they [eventually] recognized the inherent complexity of neurological components, systems, and chemistry coupled with our gross inability to understand them at a molecular level meant we lacked the ability to model them on any but the crudest scales. That situation has change a bit in the ensuing 25 years, but all our modeling efforts are still simple and crude compared to the actual wetware.

In his new book, Connectome , Seung argues that technology has now reached a point where it is conceivable to start mapping at least portions of the connectome. It’s a daunting task, he says, but without it, neuroscience will be stuck.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/mit-neuroscientist-discusses-quest-reserve-engineer-human-brain

_

Seung: Indeed, mapping an entire human connectome is one of the greatest technological challenges of all time. Just imaging all of a human brain with electron microscopes would be difficult enough. This would yield about one zettabyte of data, which roughly equals the world's current volume of digital content. Then analyzing the images to extract the connectome would be even more demanding.

My connectome, myself - Neuroscientist Sebastian Seung is on a quest to map brain connections that reveal how our memories and personalities take root.

Anne Trafton, MIT News Office
February 7, 2012


The human brain has 100 billion neurons, each of which is connected to many others. Neuroscientists believe these connections hold the key to our memories, personality and even mental disorders such as schizophrenia. By unraveling them, we may be able to learn more about how we become our unique selves, and possibly even how to alter those selves.

Mapping all those connections may sound like a daunting task, but MIT neuroscientist Sebastian Seung believes it can be done — one cubic millimeter of brain tissue at a time.

Etc., etc. - give it up dude, you're hopelessly over your head on this tack. Stick with the Zen thing...
Ward Trotter

Trad climber
Jul 19, 2014 - 11:20pm PT
Oscar Wilde perhaps said it better:

Tvash

climber
Seattle
Jul 19, 2014 - 11:48pm PT
Jeez Mike, calling a mess a mess doesn't mean I don't like messes.

That's prolly the Puritan in ya talkin.

Us Celtic Papists suffer from no such malady. We prefer things a bit on the dirty side.

Could I design a better mess?

That question is probably, in and of itself, performance art.
BLUEBLOCR

Social climber
joshua tree
Jul 19, 2014 - 11:55pm PT
i think MikeL's summation of "Perfectness" is derived from a negative being as useful as a positive, a (-)+(+)=0 = perfection. i see him whirl though here like a teacher grading the final exam. i find his sidenote offerings from his well readness of scholarly tradespeople thought provoking, and his broad view refreshing! He's also been transparent enough to show us he's human.

Some of the posts around here i wonder if "Siri" wrote them.


i could be all wrong on this, but then i remember MikeL saying everything is right..
Bushman

Social climber
Elk Grove, CA
Jul 20, 2014 - 12:20am PT
Regarding my sad attempt at humor, point taken.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Jul 20, 2014 - 12:30am PT
I'd call this ^^^ post separate and independent from the whole, but that might be viewed as immature.
cintune

climber
The Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Jul 20, 2014 - 07:59am PT
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/one-brain-area-processes-time-space-and-social-relationships/
Jan

Mountain climber
Colorado, Nepal & Okinawa
Jul 20, 2014 - 08:37am PT
Regarding Cintune's note from Scientific American, it makes perfect sense to me that mental notions of distance are the foundation for more abstract ideas like time and social relationships. If we think about Homo sapiens being around 200,000 years old and other hominins going back millions of years before that, and all indications of the invention of language being only 50,000 years ago, it has to be so.We were wandering hunters and gathers for millenia before we had language.

There are many other indicators - that memory is enhanced by physical movement, that children can learn sign language before speech, that people can still sing and whistle when they have lost speech etc. I think our efforts to understand the mind have been thwarted in part because we are applying the concepts of the present rather than trying to understand the situation as it was at the time the physical brain evolved.

And since the brain evolved before language, isn't this also a good argument for seeing what we can to understand the human mind in its motives and workings, by doing meditation which is also non verbal?
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