So do you think it's plausible to argue that all organism are intelligent, at least in some basic or fundamental respect? — Wayfarer
My argument would be that all life and mind is semiotic. And so that means they have
pragmatic intelligence. As levels of encoding, they can learn - in Darwinian fashion - to live and persist in their material worlds.
And that, therefore, the emergence of living organisms is also the manifestation of intelligence - not the work of an 'intelligent designer', but an incipient tendency towards conscious existence that might plausibly begin to flourish wherever the conditions were suitable. — Wayfarer
Well now you edge into language that smuggles in "consciousness" as its ultimate destination. And consciousness is a technical term employed by Cartesian representationlism. It presumes that the ultimate evolutionary goal might be the kind of rationalising philosopher who sits in an armchair in a darkened room just passively contemplating the facts of reality. Or perhaps more in your case, a guru passively engaged with nothingness in a tropical glade.
:razz:
But if you stop short of that - if you retain the stress on pragmatic action, and avoid crossing over into a passive, sensory and static conception of consciousness - then you can see a natural arc of progression.
Maslow's hierarchy of needs, no less.
'What is latent', my Hindu philosophy lecturer used to say, 'becomes patent'. — Wayfarer
For sure. I do take a Hegelian dialectical view that evolution involves historical progress. We are ascending towards some antithetical bounding limit that is a triumph over unruly disorder and the arrival at Platonic/Hegelian/Peircean perfection of some kind.
But then I also stress that this "perfection" is of the pragmatic kind. Which is the unromantic conclusion that would make the happy holist upset.
So as I have said often enough, modern humans climbed the semiotic ladder. Our world encoding machinery has become increasingly abstracted from the world it would regulate. We have genes and neurons. But we have added further semiotic machinery in the form of words and numbers.
Language organises our social worlds and gives us the habit of self-addressed speech as well. We gain self-awareness, freewill, higher emotions, recollective memories, prospective imaginations. All those good things that led us to take over the planet and start bending it to our collective desires.
Then along comes maths and the power to apply its completely abstracted view of reality in terms of technology - machines and computers.
But look at what we actually do with all this semiotic prowess. In the end, we just obey the thermodynamic imperative to entropify. We don't do anything smarter that a bacterium filling up a petrie dish and choking itself in its own material waste, starving itself to death with its own depletion of the environment's limited resources.
There is no "enlightenment" that will be made patent at the end of this evolutionary journey.
Or if there is some further step that comes after the current epoch, it will have to be one that continues the same old entropic game to its next pragmatic level. And sure, I can sketch what that means in practice. It is the obvious stuff - like realising we need to invest in recycling and renewables as a properly organised living structure is all about being "closed for material causality".
The paradox is the one I describe - the need to both entropify (that is, waste energy to heat), and yet to keep the materials that do the job locked into the system that does the entropifying.
You can't drive a car far, no matter how much fuel is available, if everything is dropping off, or dripping out, as you fly along the highway. It has to hold together to be the combustion-propelled structure that is.
This Logos is at the same time a force and a law, an irresistible force which bears along the entire world and all creatures to a common end, an inevitable and holy law from which nothing can withdraw itself, and which every reasonable man should follow willingly.
Yep. This is fine as antique metaphysics. Logos and flux, order and disorder, laws and initial conditions, constraints and degrees of freedom. All ways of talking about cosmic existence as evolutionary persistence.
But what if the logos is the second law of thermodynamics?
Well it is. But maybe humans just aren't intellectually equipped to complete the technological revolution they started. Maybe burning the free lunch of a billion years of accumulated fossil carbon in a 300 year belch was a little short-sighted. And things like ecology are "just too complicated" for humanity in general to understand - in the necessary gut-felt and immediate way that would involve reversing back down Maslow's hierachy of needs.
:meh:
You've got to laugh.
There can be a purely physical description of the neurophysiological processes that give rise to an experience, and also of the physical behavior that is typically associated with it, but such a description, however complete, will leave out the subjective essence of the experience – how it is from the point of view of its subject
I see that kind of perspective as part of the problem, not part of the solution.
Sorry to be hard, but hippie idealism failed for good and obvious reasons. Humanity has maths and so it builds machines. The failure of society to take a unified view of that - one that couples the subjective and objective view of reality in a pragmatic, long range, fashion - is where it all starts to go wrong.
We now run society as a machine - both a physical and intellectual one. There are transport systems and economic systems. The world that good engineering understands. Then there is the big divide that is all our culture, entertainment, consumption, social game playing.
We don't just encourage a dualistic "two worlds" approach to life, we fiercely demand it as the way humans can live with all the comforts of technology, and none of its responsibilities.
That leads to the completely predictable reckoning.
We should be busy coupling the two sides of the equation. Again, the simple and obvious stuff. Just bring in the carbon tax already. Connect consumerism and population growth to its environmental consequences. Etc.
But things are rolling too far and too fast. Smart folk will already be factoring in generalised collapse into their future models.
So if you want the complete Hegelian arc of biosemiosis, this is my summary.
History has always worked this way. The invention of photosynthesis nearly killed all life on earth because free oxygen is a deadly toxin, while using up all the CO2 turned the planet into a global snowball.
Photosynthesis might at first seem a miracle source of free energy - just point your leaves at the sun and flourish. But only 1% of life - bacteria eking out an existence in the small pools of meltwater that lingered in the ice-over tropics - survived this catastrophic innovation.
Life had to complete the job and evolve the inverse of photosynthesis, which is oxygen consuming and CO2 excreting respiration. After a few hundred million years things began to recover with that.
The Gaian material cycle was closed once more. One organism's waste was another organism's food. By complementing each other this way, a new global metabolic economy could be established - one with much more evolutionary complexity because the whole biotic game had been shifted up a gear to be driven by the "boundless" renewable energy of the Sun.
So biosemiosis is indeed a theory of everything when it comes to life and mind on Earth. The latent will be made patent.
Imagine if we did crack fusion. And the world hasn't collapsed into generalise chaos before we do. What kind of social beings would we have to be to flourish in that kind of world - where AI will also be as real as it is going to get?
How do we invent the culture, the politics, the mores, the institutions, that might intersect a future that is a step beyond the fast-failing now?
My argument is that the only framework is the one nature has always known. One way or the other, nature will fix things its way.
It will be quite hard for us to actually kill the planet. What's another half billion years for the re-emergence of something more complex than a world of cockroaches and weeds? The Sun won't burn out until another 7 billion years after that.
Yep. You got to laugh.
:cry: