So much of our attention in logic and math is focused on using processes to 
turn specific inputs into even more specific binary outputs. Very little 
attention is paid to what inputs and outputs are or to the understanding of 
what truth is in theoretical terms. The possibility of inputs is assumed 
from the start, since no program can exist without being ‘input’ into some 
kind of material substrate which has been selected or engineered for that 
purpose. You can’t program a device to be programmable if it isn’t already. 
Overlooking this is part of the gap between mathematics and reality which 
is overlooked by all forms of simulation theory and emergentism. Without 
some initial connection between sensitive agents which are concretely real 
and non-theoretical, there can be no storage or processing of information. 
Before we can input any definitions of logical functions, we have to find 
something which behaves logically and responds reliably to our 
manipulations of it.

The implications of binary logic, of making distinctions between true/go 
and false/stop are more far reaching than we might assume. I suggest that 
if a machine’s operations can be boiled down to true and false bits, then 
it can have no capacity to exercise intentionality. It has no freedom of 
action because freedom is a creative act, and creativity in turn entails 
questioning what is true and what is not. The creative impulse can drive us 
to attack the truth until it cracks and reveals how it is also false. 
Creativity also entails redeeming what has been seen as false so that it 
reveals a new truth. These capabilities and appreciation of them are well 
beyond the functional description of what a machine would do. Machine logic 
is, by contrast, the death of choice. To compute is to automate and reduce 
sense into an abstract sense-of-motion. Leibniz called his early computer a 
“Stepped Reckoner”, and that it very apt. The word reckon derives from 
etymological roots that are shared with ‘reg’, as in regal, ruler, and 
moving straight ahead. It is a straightener or comb of physically embodied 
rules. A computer functionalizes and conditions reality into rules, step by 
step, in a mindless imitation of mind. A program or a script is a frozen 
record of sense-making in retrospect. It is built of propositions defined 
in isolation rather than sensations which share the common history of all 
sensation.

The computing machine itself does not exist in the natural world, but 
rather is distilled from the world’s most mechanistic tendencies. All that 
does not fit into true or false is discarded. Although Gödel is famous for 
discovering the incompleteness of formal systems, that discovery itself 
exists within a formal context. The ideal machine, for example, which 
cannot prove anything that is false, subscribes to the view that truth and 
falsehood are categories which are true rather than truth and falsehood 
being possible qualities within a continuum of sense making. There is a 
Platonic metaphysics at work here, which conjures a block universe of forms 
which are eternally true and good. In fact, a casual inspection of our own 
experience reveals no such clear-cut categories, and the goodness and truth 
of the situations we encounter are often inseparable from their opposite. 
We seek sensory experiences for the sake of appreciating them directly, 
rather than only for their truth or functional benefits. Truth is only one 
of the qualities of sense which matters.

The way that a computer processes information is fundamentally different 
than the way that conscious thought works. Where a consistent machine 
cannot give a formal proof of its own consistency, a person can be certain 
of their own certainty without proof. That doesn’t always mean that the 
person’s feeling turns out to match what they or others will understand to 
be true later on, but unlike a computer, we have available to us an 
experience of a sense of certainty (especially a ‘common sense’) that is an 
informal feeling rather than a formal logical proof. A computer has neither 
certainty nor uncertainty, so it makes no difference to it whether a proof 
exists or not. The calculation procedure is run and the output is 
generated. It can be compared against the results of other calculators or 
to employ more calculations itself to assess a probability, but it has no 
sense of whether the results are certain or not. Our common sense is a 
feeling which can be proved wrong, but can also be proved right informally 
by other people. We can come to a consensus beyond rationality with trust 
and intuition, which is grounded the possibility of the real rather than 
the realization of the hypothetical. When we use computation and logic, we 
are extending our sense of certainty by consulting a neutral third party, 
but what Gödel shows is that there is a problem with measurement itself. It 
is not just the ruler that is incomplete, or the book of rules, but the 
expectation of regularity which is intrinsically unexpected.

One of the trickiest problems with the gap between the theoretical and the 
concrete us that the gap itself is real rather than theoretical. There can 
be no theory of why reality is not just information, since theory itself 
cannot access reality directly. Reality is not only formal. Formality is 
not real. There is a bias within formal logic which favors certainty. This 
is at the heart of the utility of logic. In mathematician Bruno Marshall’s 
book “The Amoeba’s Secret”, his view on dreams hints at what is beneath the 
surface of the psychology of mathematics. He writes

“What struck me was the asymmetry existing between the states of dreaming 
and of being awake: when you are awake, you can never be truly sure that 
you are. By contrast, when dreaming, you can sometimes perceive it as such.”

Surely most of us have no meaningful doubt that we are awake when we are 
awake. The addition of the qualification of being “truly sure” that we are 
awake seems to assume that there is a deeper epistemology which is possible 
– as if being awake required a true certainty on top of the mere fact of 
being awake. To set the feeling of certainty above the content of 
experience itself is an inversion; a mistake of privileging the 
expectations of the intellect over the very ground of being from which 
those expectations arise.

Likewise, to say that we can sometimes perceive our dreaming in a lucid 
dream is to hold the dream state to a different epistemological standard 
than we do of being awake. If we could be awake and not really be sure that 
we are, then certainly we could think that we are having a lucid dream, but 
could be similarly misinformed. We could be dead and living in an afterlife 
from which we will never return or some such goofy possibility. 
Mathematical views of reality seem to welcome a kind of escapist sophism 
which gives too much credence to rabbit holes and not enough to the whole 
rabbit.

That we sometimes tell when we are dreaming means only that we are more 
awake within our dream than usual – not that our usual awareness is any 
more true or sure than it ever is. If we are uncertain in waking life and 
certain in dreams, it is because our capacity to tell the difference is 
real and not a dream or theory. There is no way to prove that we are awake, 
but neither is there any need to prove it since it is self-evident. Any 
proof that we could have could theoretically be duplicated in a dream also, 
but that does not mean that there is no difference between dream and 
reality. The difference is more than can be learned by ‘proof’ alone.

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