https://freddieyam.com/gen2/p/quotes.merrell-wolff.htmlI’m not the mind. I’m not the feelings. I’m not the body. That I see. But I surely am. I surely am an individual apart from others. Now, what you’ve gotten ahold of is a very difficult fellow. It’s your ego. He can sneak around and confuse you like the dickens. You can spend years trying to get behind him. And what you can do, you can get into an infinite regression. You look at your ego, all right here am I? It all of a sudden dawns upon you that that which is looking at the ego is really the “I.” So you stick that one out in front and you look at it again, but then you realize it couldn’t be because here’s the something that is observing it. At last it finally dawns that I am that which is never an object before consciousness. And mayhap at that moment in your analysis the heavens will open.
But if you really consider the nature of consciousness, and the nature of being, you will see that ‘the world’ is always being constituted moment-by-moment in your extraordinarily powerful and large hominid forebrain. — Wayfarer
Your mind is not actually ‘your mind’ - it is the mind, the human mind, which has evolved over millions or even billions of years as a sophisticated Virtual Reality generator. — Wayfarer
I'm a bit surprised to hear it from you, since it casts the subject as the product of evolution. — jas0n
Ah, but that brain is (positioned as) a mere part of the dream. — jas0n
Ah, but that brain is part of the dream — jas0n
But that only makes sense if my brain exists in a world outside that dream. — jas0n
Well, your brain can be preserved in formaldehyde for much longer than a human lifespan.
Are 'you' still in there? What about those who get their head preserved in cryogenic storage?
They hope to be revived at some point in the future. — universeness
Does the brain of a dead human have to be allowed to 'disassemble,' before YOU can become truly dead. Are YOU gone from the brain the second you die? — universeness
I think the facts of evolution are indisputable. But unlike evolutionary materialism, I don't see evolution as a kind of spontaneous chemical reaction elaborated by the Darwinian algorithm, a la Dennett. I had a wise professor of Indian philosophy, who related the Vedic idea of evolution, which is that evolution is the result of involution - that the cosmic mind enfolds itself into the material world, which then unfolds as its expressions. 'What is latent', he would say, 'becomes patent'. — Wayfarer
Only when you look at it as an object. In practice, the brain is never an object, unless you're a neurologist or some such. — Wayfarer
Excellent questions! Altered Carbon runs with this idea and allows personality/memory/self to be stored on a kind of flash drive. Is there anything special about our brain meat? Don't know ! — jas0n
Thanks, I wish we had some answers! Come on ye scientists! — universeness
That only makes sense as 'outside' the dream.
If 'the subject' or 'consciousness' lives in healthy human brains, then what are they made of and where do they exist? — jas0n
I made the point about the subjective nature of time itself. I drew on some quotes from various scientists on that point. The very fabric of space and time is in some fundamental sense generated by the mind. — Wayfarer
I don't think I will be able to visit a non-English speaking country in my lifetime and be wearing an earpiece that speaks to me in English that which is spoken to me in Spanish. — universeness
Even if we do get such technologies working perfectly, I don't see how this helps answer the questions I asked about. — universeness
I made the point about the subjective nature of time itself. I drew on some quotes from various scientists on that point. The very fabric of space and time is in some fundamental sense generated by the mind. — Wayfarer
But saying that reality is 'generated' by the mind is not saying that it's just a dream. That's the only reality we know, and it has a fundamentally mental character. — Wayfarer
But as soon as you say 'ah, in the mind', then already you're trying to see from a perspective outside that — Wayfarer
But that is also all a cognitive act. So I'm saying, reality has an irreducibly subjective pole - but there's no use asking 'what is that' or 'where is that'. — Wayfarer
The very fabric of space and time is in some fundamental sense generated by the mind. Kant saw this. — Wayfarer
Do you know if they've got any big computers that can do it almost instantaneously ? I haven't checked in for awhile. I never focused on NLP, but I know the theory of SGD pretty well. — jas0n
Am I conscious ? Is it plausible that I (manifested as this stream of text) am the output of a program? Because you know the field, you'll probably say no. But how about a century from now? — jas0n
An 'operationalized' definition of consciousness might involve something like a Turing test. If you are talking on the phone with some voice and don't know if that voice is conscious or not, then it's 'operationally conscious' (in the context of that particular test.) — jas0n
I read a little about Stochastic Gradient Descent. — universeness
I have never seen or read about any AI system that can pass the Turing test in any interesting way, have you? — universeness
Although I think you are setting a very ambitious time frame. I think some seriously transhuman creations are in our future but I think it will take thousands of years not hundreds and only of course if we can prevent our own extinction. — universeness
The gradient points in the best direction for the next baby step. — jas0n
No. I just don't see why it won't happen eventually. We're near the beginning of the revolution. An economic/military arms race will only accelerate the process perhaps, though Skynet might get us first — jas0n
The question is whether or not you grant the existence of some kind of substrate where all of us more or less conscious/subjective animals live (and can have evolved in the first place.) — jas0n
Do you think that it is valid to posit that there exists a reference frame within which the Universe ends when YOU die? — universeness
I confess that I really don't know. — jas0n
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