• unenlightened
    9.2k
    There's lots of interesting (to me, anyway) stuff around, and a good sceptic will wonder 'how do they know this shit?' And then you get to some really interesting stuff.

    So imagine a cave inhabited by Neanderthals and/or H.Sapiens over thousands of years and layer of soil build up. And part of the soil content is little flakes from the roof of the caved each year there is some limestone deposit as water evaporates and also some soot deposits from the home fires of the inhabitants. And because the weather varies the deposits vary in size, so all these flakes are like chips of wood with varied layers. And when you collect enough of them, you can use them the same way tree rings are used to date wooden artefacts. How neat is that!

    And that's how we know that Neanderthals and H. Sapiens were around at the same time to within a year. Plus, there's an explanation of how we know that non-African humans today have some small % of Neanderthal genes, and more interesting titbits.

  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    And then there's this:

  • Moliere
    4.7k
    That's a super cool video.

    More research must be done, but if the idea survives the test of criticism it seems to support punctuated equilibrium.
  • Baden
    16.3k


    So, I'm wrong again, eh? :sad:
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Being wrong is the best thing ever. It is the fundamental unit of learning.
  • Baden
    16.3k


    Yeah, yeah, pass the sauce.
  • Baden
    16.3k
    Right so, change of poem then.

    Drunken Doughnut

    Danny Doughnut is my name
    Denying minds is my game
    Wrote myself a book or two
    They don't make sense, but who are you?

    I've talked at TED and Oxford too
    Taught those stiffs a thing or two
    I'm not here and neither are you
    The mind is false, the illusion true

    All was well 'til experiments proved
    My theories wrong, my followers fools
    But I've made enough to keep me in booze
    Heads I win, tails you lose!
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    I agree.

    Being wrong, and realizing it, is like removing a splinter which also gives me a new perspective.

    At one point I thought it a pain but I've come to see how being wrong is the better joy than being right.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Being wrong, and realizing it, is like removing a splinterMoliere

    I never am wrong, so I wouldn't know. Always I realise I was wrong when I have just changed my mind. :cool:
  • Banno
    25k
    I never am wrong,unenlightened

    's true, that.
  • Christoffer
    2.1k
    And then there's this:unenlightened

    Unfortunately, that new finding has blown things out of proportion in science media. We already know that quantum mechanical processes occur in biological systems and it's nice that there's some evidence for that happening in us, but people falling into the conclusion that consciousness is definitely a quantum mechanical process missed that this is not proven yet. And seen as how neural networks simulate similar behaviors, it may just be that these quantum mechanical processes are necessary for neurons to function properly, but a single neuron function does not equal consciousness as far as we know today. We still seem to need the sum of all parts to produce consciousness.

    Reminds me about the recent news of Princeton team copying a fruit fly brain. And how science influencers and media started talking about it in the form of some cyberpunk uploading of our mind into a computer. But the problem is that just a copy isn't enough, we need to understand how the chemicals that flow through the brain affect the brain, but we don't know yet what the "cocktail effect" of many different chemical compounds do with out brain so how do we simulate it enough to effectively give the full experience of a fruit fly? And if microtubules are part of the neuron function, and that quantum mechanical process isn't accounted for, the neurons might not act between each other in the way needed for accurate simulation.
  • Baden
    16.3k


    I generally agree with this. My previous comments here have, of course, been somewhat lacking in seriousness.
  • Outlander
    2.1k
    Neat thread. I for one love a good witty analysis/introspection/musing or what have you.

    For what it's worth, keep in mind. A 20,000 year old rock carving will carbon date the same whether it's been preserved for 20,000 years or freshly chiseled 20 minutes ago. If a few factors are managed properly, no man nor his instruments of science would tell the difference.

    How refreshing to think about what is normally not.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    A 20,000 year old rock carving will carbon date the same whether it's been preserved for 20,000 years or freshly chiseled 20 minutes ago.Outlander

    Yes, but it looks as though you have misunderstood the science being reported. It's not carbon dating.
    The sooty carbon layers from fire smoke deposits mark the annual layers of limestone deposit that build up in layers on the roof of the cave. This produces a barcode of thicker and thinner layers that can be matched over many years just the same way that tree rings can be matched so that a library can be built up from these flakes producing a continuous record of the years of habitation, and particular flakes can be associated with identifiable remains or artefacts of neanderthal or h.sapiens occupation and that enables them to say with confidence that they are occupying the cave if not at the same time, then at most one year apart. Carbon dating cannot get anything like that close, of course.

    people falling into the conclusion that consciousness is definitely a quantum mechanical process missed that this is not proven yet.Christoffer

    I missed where people were falling into that conclusion. "Is Human Consciousness Quantum After All?" is the subtitle. And at the end of the video, the guy says. This is super exciting because maybe Penrose and Hameroff were right ...", having noted at the beginning that no one had taken their ideas seriously for years.

    And of course it is only a very partial explanation at best, of something that every living cell has, that is possibly a precursor of what we might recognise as consciousness.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Now this is a backroad so scenic and unspoilt, you may want to stop for a picnic. Or, if you need to be somewhere urgently, probably avoid the area altogether.

  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Ok, this is slightly off-topic, and the guy does a great imitation of the mad staring eyed mathematician.
    But it relates to any number of waffles threads over in the hard-nosed philosophy section. It goes right against my instincts on the abstract, but it does it well.

  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Completely off topic today, but we need cheering up.

  • javi2541997
    5.8k
    As I always say to Jehovah's Witnesses when they ring my home: show me your Crocoduck if you truly want to brainwash me!
  • Nils Loc
    1.4k
    It's not part of a grand scientific narrative but you should see the blue carousel bird's courtship ritual.



    The social aspect of this collaborative dance troop in training is remarkable (as it reminds me of us). Does kinship explain the cooperation of the junior males? Can more genetically distant birds join a troop? How much variation in the style of dance between populations is there? If we could award a species for the most interesting/complex courtship ritual, who are the contenders?
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    They're rather jolly. Such extravagant displays can only evolve in an environment of plenty where the quality of the genes is all important and assistance with chick-rearing is not important. I guess the junior members of the troop are trainees the star of the show. Just another day of trying to work out what she wants...
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    There's a memoir I read which talked about the effects of music on plants that I wish I remembered the name of. It wasn't the only thing in the memoir -- I remember he visited a person who believed they could talk with whales, but not much else -- but I wish I could remember the author or name of that book.

    EDIT: Typing it out helped me remember: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/319/the-spell-of-the-sensuous-by-david-abram/
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Looks interesting. Alas for the disenchanted, they have lost the song and are left with only noise.
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    I remember enjoying it -- it's something of a lament and criticism of disenchantment as the one true knowledge. The plant studies stuck with me as an interesting bit because it seemed like such an easy thing to test, empirically, so you didn't even need to care if the idea was silly -- it got along with my general attitude of anarchy towards scientific knowledge.
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    they have lost the song and are left with only noise.unenlightened

    ...though part of my interest here is also in how it seems plausible that sound would effect things in a strictly physical analysis, and if you replicate effects you'll observe consequences, and the whole project can superficially be read as obvious woo.

    I stopped 1/2-way through the video you linked because the studies they cited all had the same problem, and that's more or less what I saw when I looked into this. (tho tell me if I ought continue)

    But the idea is super interesting and could be rigorously tested without much of a theory. Lots of good data could be produced on the question that controlled and tested for so, so many things. It's just seen as too magical.

    For me I like the idea of finding ways of making the songs make sense in the noise, to utilize your metaphor.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Here's a hair-raising tale for you.

  • Moliere
    4.7k
    Hrm! Apparently I didn't dig deep enough. Those labs would both be a lot of fun to work in.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    And now— the biology of self, and the selfless organism.

  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    All things of creation are children of the Father and thus brothers of man. ... God wants us to help animals, if they need help. Every creature in distress has the same right to be protected. — Francis of Assisi
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    Aahhhh!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_leukocyte_antigen

    I was privileged enough to learn about that for work, at one point.

    I found the idea of a protein complex as the basis for self/other fascinating, and still do.

    I didn't know about the organism you linked about though. Very exciting stuff.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    I found the idea of a protein complex as the basis for self/other fascinating, and still do.Moliere

    Me too. A case where psychology recapitulates biology.

    To your wiki link. Alas my organic chemistry encompasses the idea that amino acids have an an acidic end and an amine base end, and so can form chains of peptide and poly-peptide. And the rest is a sea of links to a language I do not speak. But I vaguely get that self-recognition is necessary for the immune system, and the implications for transplants and cancers; but the gap in my understanding between basic chemistry and medical principle is too wide to even try a fill at this late stage. I wave my hands and nod wisely, hoping not to have missed something philosophically important.
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