The question of what we can know of that which lies beyond the limits of our imagination is partially about the biological function of intelligence, and partially about our greatest cognitive prostheses, particularly human language and mathematics. It’s also about the possibility of a physical reality that far exceeds our own, or endless simulated realities running in the computers of advanced nonhuman lifeforms. And it’s about our technological progeny, those ‘children’ who will one day cognitively eclipse us. From the perspective of my 10 queries, human exceptionalism becomes very shaky.
The question of what we can know of that which lies beyond the limits of our imagination is partially about the biological function of intelligence….
It’s also about the possibility of a physical reality that far exceeds our own, or endless simulated realities running in the computers of advanced nonhuman lifeforms.
A physical reality can never ‘far exceed our own’ , given that physical reality is the set of goal-oriented interactive performances of humans on our environment — Joshs
Our devices, like our world , can never be ‘beyond us’. — Joshs
Our world is not of our making and not in our control. It is not ours in that it controls the shots and we have limited power to change that. The world does not answer to us. — Fooloso4
Our devices may someday be beyond us. In some ways they already are. — Fooloso4
Wolpeet gives the impression the world can ‘break through’ from outside this reciprocally responsive interaction to affect us directly, but if it did it would be invisible and irrelevant to us. — Joshs
Saying our machine are smarter or dumber than us is like saying the spider web or birds nest is smarter or dumber than the spider or bird. — Joshs
It makes no sense to talk about what might affect the organism from the world outside of its ow. making (niche) because there is no world for an organism outside of its reciprocally interactive niche. The same is true of our sciences. There has never been , and there never can be, a world for us outside of the continually evolving response theoretical niches we construct in interaction with that aspect of world that is relevant to our goals and purposes. — Joshs
Poor analogy. Spider webs and bird nests are not capable of self-learning or self-improvement — Fooloso4
They are not capable of anything beyond our models which produce them — Joshs
Wolpeet gives the impression the world can ‘break through’ from outside this reciprocally responsive interaction to affect us directly, but if it did it would be invisible and irrelevant to us.
— Joshs
What does he say to give you that impression? It is not a matter of the world breaking through but of our expanding what we know. That has limits, but they are our limits not the limits of reality — Fooloso4
A computer capable of self-learning is able to do more than the programs that produce them.In addition, they are capable of doing what we are not. In any case, the article is about the limits of human knowledge, not IA. — Fooloso4
I don't recall him saying anything about the limits of reality — Fooloso4
If the Singularity can happen, maybe it's already happened — 180 Proof
His argument seems to me that humans are equipped with formal structures of cognition that are perhaps evolutionarily based and that are therefore basically set in place and relatively fixed. — Joshs
but my contention that these schemes are continually adapting and changing. their nature in response to feedback from the world, so there is not the disconnect between formal cogntive structures and world that Wolpert suggests needs to be overcome in order to see more of reality. — Joshs
I am emphasising the possibility of things that are knowable, but not to us, because we are not capable of conceiving of that kind of knowledge in the first place.
This returns us to an issue that was briefly discussed above, of how the set of what-we-can-imagine might evolve in the future. Suppose that what-can-be-known-but-not-even-conceived-of is non-empty. Suppose we can know something about that which we truly can’t imagine.
He makes a distinction between the possibility of gaining knowledge based on what we can imagine and our inability to imagine what that knowledge might be — Fooloso4
To paraphrase and correct Wolpert, we regularly become those beings for whom things are knowable, but not to us currently, because we are not capable of conceiving of that kind of knowledge in the first place (within our current schemes of conceptualization). — Joshs
Is there any sense to you that our continually evolving response is in some way inevitable based perhaps on the intrinsic limitations and opportunities inherent in being? By the way, I'm trying to ask this question without trapping myself in notions of time or destiny. — Tom Storm
Whereof we cannot speak, thereof we must remain silent. — Ludwig Wittgenstein
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