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Felix wrote:Leo, would you please define "information" in the sense you are using it? (As in your statement: "Non-linear dynamic systems need only two variables to work their self-organisational magic, these being information and time.") It is not clear to me. Thanks.Felix. You'll have to give me some time. You ask a very obvious question and you're entitled to a proper answer. I can and will give you this answer but I refuse to leave your answer incomplete. I promise you an answer that you will completely understand because the philosophy of the bloody obvious is an Everyman philosophy accessible to the average man of common sense with a reasonable modern education.
Felix wrote:Thank you Leo, you're obviously not using the word in the standard way....Depends what you mean by standard, mate. I use it in the standard way that it is used in information theory, which should come as no surprise since that's what complexity theory is. It's also the same concept as is used in physics, particularly black hole physics. Hawking radiation, for instance, is information, which not so coincidentally leads to one of the biggest paradoxes in physics, known as the firewall paradox. The non-linear systems approach makes this paradox disappear, along with all the others.
Obvious Leo wrote:I dispute this, although I have a great admiration for Chalmers. I believe that the "hard problem" of consciousness is no more than a case of using the wrong tools to deal with this problem...Autopoesis is the Theory of Everything, the holy grail of physics which will be the last of the sciences to acknowledge this... They know damn well that physiology is nothing more than a physical substrate for the evolution of mind and that the whole cannot be understood in terms of the sum of its parts. Reductionism is dead, will stay dead forever, and humanity will not mourn its passing. I can answer your question in more depth than you could possibly imagine because the philosophy of the bloody obvious has been my life's work. I don't lay claim to the synergy of the entire suite of human knowledge but I do claim that complexity theory is the mechanism by which this synthesis can be achieved.I've read some papers on autopoesis from Alicia Juarrero, Evan Thompson and Terrence Deacon. I didn't find anything that shed light on the "hard" problem. Similarly with holism (whole is greater than sum of parts, etc.). In fact, experiments demonstrating violation of Bell's inequality already arguably imply this at the micro level (physics). But I still don't see how this sheds light on the "hard" problem. I also don't see how mere self-organization can generate the subjective character of conscious experience. With respect to information theory, etc as McGinn writes:
As I clearly stated, the activities of mind depend completely upon activity in the brain, so every mental act has its neural correlate and mechanism. The study of the brain is thus highly relevant to the study of the mind. But it doesn’t follow from these truisms that the brain understands, reads, thinks, feels, or processes information. The brain is rather the enabling mechanism of these essentially mental acts. Herbert’s own analogy makes the point clearly, though he misses it utterly: wings indeed enable a bird to fly, but it is false and confused to say that wings fly—birds do. Neurons enable people to think and read and process information, but they don’t themselves do any of these things...‘How to Create a Mind’
But it is another matter with respect to the second kind of neural activity: here there is no mental correlate to justify the attribution of mental descriptions—we just have a collection of neurons engaging in electrical and chemical activity without any corresponding mental process. In this case describing the neurons as thinking or reading or processing information cannot be regarded as shorthand for a psychological truth about the person—it is simply unjustified homunculus talk.
There is nothing wrong with describing the brain as involved in information processing, as there is nothing wrong with describing the telephone system that way; but we have to recognize that such talk is entirely derivative upon the fact that these systems are connected to people who have real conscious informational states (which of course depend upon brain activity)...
All information is information—to some conscious agent. Accordingly, neurons do not, considered in themselves, process information or send signs or receive messages—to indulge in such talk is a clear case of the homunculus fallacy.
Wilson wrote:I think it's okay to say that the brain thinks and is self-aware, just as it's okay to say that an arm can throw a spear. As long as we agree that thinking and self-awareness are products of what's going on among the neurons, and not dependent on some extra-corporeal "mind" entity, aren't we all saying the same thing, and arguing semantics?But it's not just semantics when we are trying to understand how nerve activity leads to things like qualia/experiential stuff/consciousness. For more details see previous thread (particularly post # 19, 44):
The homunculus fallacy is to take predicates whose normal application is to complete human beings (or animals) and apply them to parts of animals, typically to brains, or indeed to any insufficiently human-like object. The fallacy properly so-called is attempting to argue from the fact that a person-predicate applies to a person to the conclusion that it applies to his brain or vice versa. This form of argument is non-truth-preserving as it ignores the fact that the term in question must have a different meaning if it is to be applied in these different contexts...Quantum Information Theory and The Foundations of Quantum Mechanics
‘Homunculus’ means ‘miniature man’, from the Latin (the diminutive of homo). This is an appropriate name for the fallacy, for in its most transparent form it is tantamount to saying that there is a little man in our heads who sees, hears, thinks and so on. Because if, for example, we were to try to explain the fact that a person sees by saying that images are produced in his mind, brain or soul (or whatever) then we would not have offered any explanation, but merely postulated a little man who perceives the images. For exactly the same questions arise about what it is for the mind/brain/soul to perceive these images as we were trying to answer for the whole human being. This is a direct consequence of the fact that we are applying a predicate—‘sees’—that applies properly only to the whole human being to something which is merely a part of a human being, and what is lacking is an explanation of what the term means in this application. It becomes very clear that the purported explanation of seeing in terms of images in the head is no explanation at all, when we reflect that it gives rise to an infinite regress. If we see in virtue of a little man perceiving images in our heads, then we need to explain what it is for him to perceive, which can only be in terms of another little man, and so on.
Obvious Leo wrote: Einstein was well aware of this problem and pointed out throughout his life that his models were mathematical ones and not physical ones. He didn't realise that this was the cause of the "observer problem", also known as the "measurement problem", but he knew bloody well that it meant that spacetime should NEVER be regarded as physically real, a stance he maintained until his dying day.Of course, his models were mathematical as is all of physics, but mathematical models of what? Einstein was definitely a "realist". Moreover, Einstein was deeply sceptical of QM because he realized it was clearly at odds with the local classical field/his theory of GR:
It is further characteristic of these physical objects that they are thought of as arranged in a space-time continuum. An essential aspect of this arrangement of things in physics is that they lay claim, at a certain time, to an existence independent of one another, provided these objects ‘are situated in different parts of space’. Unless one makes this kind of assumption about the independence of the existence (the ‘being-thus’) of objects which are far apart from one another in space—which stems in the first place from everyday thinking— physical thinking in the familiar sense would not be possible. It is also hard to see any way of formulating and testing the laws of physics unless one makes a clear distinction of this kind. This principle has been carried to extremes in the field theory by localizing the elementary objects on which it is based and which exist independently of each other, as well as the elementary laws which have been postulated for it, in the infinitely small (four-dimensional) elements of space.Thus, "Einstein notes that in classical field theory all of the beables are local, and local in the strongest sense: the entire physical situation is nothing but the sum of the physical situations in the infinitely small regions of space-time."
The classical picture offered a compelling presumption in favour of the claim that causation is strictly bottom up-that the causal powers of whole systems reside entirely in the causal powers of parts. This thesis is central to most arguments for reductionism. It contends that all physically significant processes are due to causal powers of the smallest parts acting individually on one another. If this were right, then any emergent or systemic properties must either be powerless epiphenomena or else violate basic microphysical laws. But the way in which the classical picture breaks down undermines this connection and the reductionist argument that employs it. If microphysical systems can have properties not possessed by individual parts, then so might any system composed of such parts...For whom the Bell arguments toll
Were the physical world completely governed by local processes, the reductionist might well argue that each biological system is made up of the microphysical parts that interact, perhaps stochastically, but with things that exist in microscopic local regions; so the biological can only be epiphenomena of local microphysical processes occurring in tiny regions. Biology reduces to molecular biology, which reduces in turn to microphysics. But the Bell arguments completely overturn this conception...
Bohm2 wrote:Of course, his models were mathematical as is all of physics,Agreed. We make progress. Mathematical models can only make mathematical predictions and they can only model mathematical entities. That clears up Albert's justifiable anxieties about the dice-playing god. The particles aren't real. Because the predictions are solely mathematical ones it becomes the responsibility of the observer to interpret what the data shows. If he gets it wrong his model will make no sense. These models make no sense hence the interpretations are incorrect. This clears up the "observer problem", sometimes known as the "measurement problem". I'm gald we've got that nicely sorted out.
Obvious Leo wrote: Mathematical models can only make mathematical predictions and they can only model mathematical entities.This doesn't make sense to me. And I can't think of many scientists who subscribe to that view. Most scientists tend to view mathematics as a very useful scaffolding to attach our claims about physical systems. It seems that there is something more to physical reality (or even our models of physical realty) over and above the mathematics. The mathematical theories/objects are not the same type of entities that appear to exist in the physical world. We can't get to the physical world without using mathematics because non-mathematical versions of scientific theories just seem to be practically very difficult to do. As the cosmologist Eddington pointed out,
Physics is mathematical, not because we know so much about the 'physical world' but because we know so little: it is only its mathematical properties that we can discover. For the rest, our knowledge is negative...But, even though the mathematics may be indespinsible and the mathematical equations we use ultimately decide what we believe about the physical world there still seems to be this difference between the two, as I'm pretty sure most scientists do not subscribe to radical Platonism. And from what I recall, either do you.
Obvious Leo wrote:The easiest way to understand time is to simply accept it for what it appears to be, namely a sequence of moments in which events occur. Just think of time as continuously coming into existence, just as your most basic intuitions tell you it does. Your intuitions are not fooling you because this would completely contradict evolutionary law. Our moments arrive and pass in an ever-moving stream of time, like Omar Khayyam's Moving Finger. Each event has its moment in the spotlight and then exists no more. The past is gone and can never be retrieved because the Moving Finger has moved on. The present is only the present and is also irretrievable. These are the only moments in which reality can truly be said to exist. The present has been caused by the events of the past and by the time we can observe these moments they too have become the past. This is physical law. The only moments that have any meaning to the human mind are those that lie in our future. These moments do not exist yet and thus the events of these moments are yet to be caused. The truth of the human experience cannot be denied and the meaning of our own existence lies in this truth, which stands before us like an elephant in the room. This is also the meaning and the truth of the entire universe, as I've desperately been trying to explain elsewhere. The events which will occur in our moments of the future have not yet been determined. The great evolutionary milestone that is a sentient mind reveals this simplest of all truths to us. We are both observers and players in a never-ending cosmic opera. Most of the events of the future moments will occur with or without our own existence. However some of those events which form a part of our personal experience of these moments are our own privilege to cause. A mind is a future-maker.I find it absurd to view our cognition of time as objective. If the past is really 'gone' and the future really isn't 'here', then how can the present be said to have any real existence? As you noted, quite correctly, what we take as the 'present' is in reality the very very recent past, as it takes time for our cognitive, perceptive, and sensory apparatuses to 'assemble' our present. The ordinary view of time makes no sense whatsoever. A fleeting 'reality' which fades into non-existence continually and also comes from non-existence continually. As if the entire Universe was like the sparks of a campfire, each spark existing for a moment and then absolutely disappearing, only to be replaced by another. It's like the view of the 'stupid nomad', who believes that the city from which he has left exists no longer, and that the city to which he is going is being hurriedly built for his arrival. The places from which he has left have disappeared, and the places to which he is going do not exist yet.
In a nutshell, my friends, this is the philosophy of the bloody obvious. So exquisitely simple and intuitive is this proposition that I hold it to be a self-evident truth. However because it contradicts the current models being used in physics, I assert that these models must be false. This is all I'm getting at.
Regards Leo
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