What's a better adjective than "intelligent" to describe machines capable of doing certain tasks (e.g. calculations) that are analogous to those carried out using human intelligence and that distinguish these machines from those that cannot carry out such tasks? — Baden
But we are just machines. We have inputs and outputs, memory and a CPU. It's just we are so much more complex than current computers that we class ourselves apart when we are basically the same. — Devans99
So, you have your own theory as to how the mind works? — Wallows
Has anyone else recognized this as a fundamental cognitive distortion and how does one combat it or not fall into its lure? — Wallows
The cause of unhappiness is the belief you should always be happy, clinging to or chasing after happiness. Further, projecting into the ego ideal (a target state of mind would be part ego ideal, e.g., something you'd like to be except aren't) is associated with most unhealthy and volatile manic states; identification with the ego ideal is like trying to trick yourself or hide from the true Self; we are taught from our parents and society's conditioning to do this in a variety of ways, so deconditioning from these insalubrious dynamics of extrinsic locus of control and motivation is requisite to establish peace and balance. E.g., feelings of humiliation and shame will hold one back from his highest potential and peace of mind. Where did one learn to feel ashamed?distress, depression, and a whole host of other negative affective moods. — Wallows
Go back to what I said. Your reply is like a bee complaining about how the bee hive influences their perception of reality. — Harry Hindu
Good statement. Technological determinism runs far deeper than just a "tool" as some would suppose.....but even they treat such things as mere tools — MindForged
If human beings are outcomes of natural processes, then it only makes sense to say that the things we've created are are natural as well. Separating human beings from nature would be an "anthropocentric activity". — Harry Hindu
Computers perform actions - namely complex mathematical and logical calculations — MindForged
Substitute anything else for "consciousness" in the above sentence and you'll realize how absurd it is. — SophistiCat
If it involves computational theory of mind, I'll have to choke it down. AI being anything like a mind, or genetic determinism, and such anthorpogenic conceptual projections are what I try to consistently argue against. There should be some kind of dialectic involved, to be sure, so perhaps there will be fuel to be found in your reading recommendations.You obviously didn't check out evolutionary psychology so you're just not knowing what you're talking about here. — Harry Hindu
Action potentials, yes. Plants have senses. Actually, they share genes with humans; mutated genes in deaf people mess up the hair cells in cochlea ; the same genes mutated in plants deforms their root hairs . All meat lovers should have to slaughter their own animal, if they continue to eat meat afterward, they're alright with me. The convenience of buying food off the shelf is unreal if we want to be self-sufficient: suffice it to say that that's not where your food came from. If people weren't so dependent on other people for alimentation, it might change their perspective entirely. In a way that makes sense. Some of the most self-sufficient animals are meat eaters or at least omnivores. Living from the earth clears up confusion as I see it. The point: when you are faced with ontological directness (sun and earth), you'd probably eat what you had to in case you might die otherwise (a dyed in the wool vegan would start frog gigging, I'm sure). Having so much choice at the market is a bit of a puerile dependence. Gardening is possibly my favorite activity because it feels right to be more self-sufficient in a market society of commercialized people as products and consumers. Haven't hunted yet, though it could still happen. Btw, factory farms are hideous and we likely agree if that's where you're coming from. Always take no more food than what you need. Mass production and industrialization are enormities. Surplus grain from cash cropping rots away in bunkers. Meat recalls. Diseases on factory farms leads to millions of animals' needless deaths with no food value, usually chickens. What a waste. There's a lot more going on than animal cruelty, here. We're all complicit in the market society.Do plants have a nervous system? — chatterbears
Instincts, which is built-in (unconscious) knowledge thanks to natural selection.
Check out the field of evolutionary psychology. — Harry Hindu
If learning requires memory, and there's no other kind of learning which doesn't require memory, then how would an infant begin to learn in the first place? There is a chicken and egg problem. Young children have only a modicum of memory to navigate the infinitely complex world they live in (far more complex than could ever be remembered), yet they aren't completely helpless. Why? Imagination and intelligence. Imagination isn't learned or all that dependent on memory in the same way understanding, judgement, thinking, and mentation are unlearned and not dependent on memory (they're built into the mind as it becomes conscious) . Even though it is a bit of an enigma, the mind has its own organization to it prior to any memory; the organization is intelligence. Memories themselves are rather stuck the way they are with no ability to figure out how to combine themselves with other memories to make wholes or to divide into smaller fragments. What is it that creates these combinatorial contexts of memories and edits them? It's not the memories themselves. Memories aren't self emergent, they're combined or divided, emergently or reductively, by a preexisting manifold of mental organization.Living things, including brains, don't just "restructure their hardware" randomly, or for no reason. Input is required to influence those changes (learning). Learning requires memory. Your input (experiences of the world) over your lifetime has influenced changes in your hardware and software. A robot with a computer brain could be programmed to update its own programming with new input. Actually, computers do this already to a degree. Input from the user changes the contents of the software (the variables) and how the hardware behaves. — Harry Hindu
We are the masters of our language, not the the other way around; we create meanings. If we apply the word 'intelligent' to something other than a human being, then that is what the word means. And supposing that the origin of this meaning is anthropomorphic, as you seem to assume, so what? — SophistiCat
"We solemnly believe that although humans have been around for a million years, you feel strongly that they had just the right amount of technology between 1835 and 1850. Not too little, not too much." — Marchesk
To overcome our addiction of anthropomorphism may be the first step to understanding the mechanics of existence — BrianW
Defend? I'm not interested in defending any of my ideas. This isn't to say I don't have inclinations, or strong feelings about some issues, but I'd rather think of it as mutual exploration of each others' ideas.Make up your mind then. Did you intend to defend a substance ontology or a process one in talking about this "substrate" you call "mind". — apokrisis
I believe you are trying to say what I am saying. See above. — schopenhauer1
"Self" and "world" are concepts, mental impressions...not the originating mind itself (mind as substrate).No it bloody isn't. The psychological process produces the difference between a "self" and a "world". That is the function. — apokrisis
The agency is automatically confounded. Only the process itself or the event itself, inasmuch as it's incomprehensible, can ever be a perfect, non representational image of itself.The whole of this would constitute the psychological function that is the one of modelling the world in a way that minimises its capacity to confound our agential intentions. — apokrisis
So again, you are not being clear about what point you mean to make. — apokrisis
Meter reading, really. Isn't it interesting how the most important meters, physiological processes and biochemical pathways keeping us alive are autonomic/automatic? See, this is where I'd say we must stretch the definition of cognition to include perfect absence of automation.But the mental impression is the evidence whether the functional goal is getting met. — apokrisis
New minds are being born constantly. — apokrisis
I disagree as the same function can be realised at many different places and times. — apokrisis
Again, are these differences that make a difference to the mind in question? Your response is all over the shop. — apokrisis
panpsychic claim that there is such a thing as "the mind" and our minds participate in the greater mind that is the Cosmos, or existence, or God's mind, or something. — apokrisis
Yet we are most definitely participants. We aren't separate from the process/event...we only think we are; thought forms are lain over it and then assume an agency or reality of their own. It doesn't matter what the dogmatic point of departure, science or religion, the truth of the event/process is there regardless of what we think about it. And you are it dreaming of your separateness; even though it seems less illusive, our individual agency is a prime barrier to understanding process/event, and so much more so with any collective agency hobgoblinry. It's far more woo to go on believing something other than that has already been debunked by the new physics: the observer is inseparable from the observed: but I'd say a pure act of observation becomes dumb and mute, inasmuch as it isn't translatable into language and thereby communicable.Process philosophy itself has been pretty much hijacked as a term by theist philosophers. So that shifts you into a different kind of distinction. You wouldn't be seeking a better description of physical nature but talking about what it is like to be participating in the divine cosmic mind. :grin: — apokrisis
Why are numbers so important, here? Shouldn't we be able to discuss objectivity at the individual level? We can't ignore the inherent delimitation of consciousness and mentalese when discussing these things, can we? Understanding begins once we know how laws of consciousness and the spectrum of subjectivity to "objectivity" works for one person at a time. To begin to speak of two people as though they were one is to skip over most of the discussion. It's a huge jump from the individual to the collective on the topic of objectivity, if we must refer to the collective as necessary to the discussion of objectivity....I'm sure it's better to keep it to what communicates, what is possible and what isn't, objectively, between no more than two people.Therefor, the higher number of consensus among the highest numbers of people who are as objective as they can possibly be with their subjective minds, is what objectivity means to us humans. — Christoffer
An object existing objectively means it exists without an observers existence. To be objective means putting forth an argument or statement that is focused on the actual facts rather than the interpretations of those facts.
Example: There is a painting of a flower in a room. Ten people gets the task of going into the room and then come out and write down a description of what they saw in that room. All of these descriptions become a subject interpretation of the fact (the painting of a flower). But the sum of all those interpretations is the objective viewpoint. I.e a single person cannot hold a purely objective opinion or viewpoint, but a collective can, as long as the interpretations are presented, as close as they individually can, to be objective. — Christoffer
Mathematicians are human computers...or mentats if you like. Once there was only the abacus for a computer.Computational universality has nothing to do with mathematicians — tom
What does that question even mean? — tom
I didn't know human brains differed that much from other mammal's brains, functionally? The human mind is what differs most patently, not the brain. As to why we are so self aware compared to other organisms is a question we should be very careful in limiting to any sort of computation.Humans have something other animals do not - a computationally universal brain, and a self aware mind. — tom
It has been proved that, according to known physics, a universal computer can emulate any physical system exactly. It's not odd, it's reality. — tom