My only concern about cannabis is the study that it did impair mathematical 
abilities. That is about it for me. In a few areas of the US, legal cannabis 
has been permitted. Which doesn't stop the thugsters from selling it illegally, 
under price. That is a social issue and not a medical one. On whether 
consciousness requires a material substrate, I have no preference, because 
honestly it is not up to me. It's the universe, I just work here.  On the other 
hand I do hold with the idea of taking whatever advantage, even neuro-chemical, 
of the knowledge of anything the facts provides? The Beyond 1492 project likely 
needs funding, and I suspect that computer science, eventually, will provide 
for such a adaptation. My feeling is we don't need more religions to benefit 
us, but instead mental apps based on whatever facts we can uncover, be it flesh 
or spirit? 


-----Original Message-----
From: Bruno Marchal <[email protected]>
To: Everything List <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Jul 21, 2021 6:32 am
Subject: Re: Hitler against Godel's Theorem

There are some relations. Note that "my theory" is just Descartes theory, and 
it can be found in old Indian text too, or Chinese text. It probably exists 
since an ape use a piece of wood to extend its arm, and it is the "simplest" 
theory of mind and matter since long. now, its digital version comes from the 
discovery of the universal machine in arithmetic (Turing, Kleene, Post, ...) 
and it entails the reversal physics/theology, or physics/theology (using the 
original sense of the greek). So, I don't want this to look as if I was 
bragging, but the key is that I have no theory, just a theorem, with a 
constructive proof making Digital and Indexical Mechanism testable (Digital 
means we use the Church-Thesis, and Indexical means that the assumption is 
personal "*I* say "yes" for the digital body/brain transplant). Schmidhuber has 
participated to this list, and the problem for him was that all finite sequence 
is predictable leading to some doubt on the first person indeterminacy, a bit 
like Clark and Bruce Kellet today). That problem is not serious, as the point 
is that in Helsinki (if you remember) you cannot write in the prediction diary, 
neither W, nor M, but only (W v M) if you want the prediction validated by the 
two reconstituted person. Than that first person indeterminacy extends to the 
infinitely many computations in arithmetic, leading to a many-histories 
interpretation (Brough by all universal numbers) of arithmetic.
This result is shocking for the dogmatic believer in Aristotle theology, with a 
materialist ontological commitment.  There are many, as we are lied on this 
since 1492 years, and when you see that cannabis is still schedule one, despite 
the lies are recent and easily debunked, you can imagine that materialism will 
remain with thus for sometime, but it will be abandoned by lack of evidences, 
like vitalism has been abandoned in biology.
When you understand that all computations are run in arithmetic, you understand 
that the burden of proof is in the hand of those who claim to have evidences 
for their material ontological commitment. Nevertheless, Mechanism makes the 
dream argument rigorous, and eventually, Materialism is shown to require some 
magic to make some computations more "real" than others. The careful 
observations of Nature confirms mechanism, up to now. My work shows how to test 
this, and why quantum physics confirmed the most striking feature of digital 
mechanism. I dont know the truth, and my meta-goal is to show that we can do 
theology with the scientific attitude, including physical experimentation. This 
helps also to distinguish clearly physics (the science of the observable and 
prediction) and theology/metaphysics: the science questioning the nature of the 
fundamental reality.
Bruno

On Tuesday, July 20, 2021 at 8:30:19 PM UTC+2 [email protected] wrote:

Your theory strikes me of a related theory by Canadian philosopher, John Leslie 
(Emeritus, Guelph University) who did the logic  of "ethical requiredness," for 
the universe, Plus he employs some of your Neo-Platonism.* He also has employed 
the Bloc Universe in his writings, using sort of Einstein's letter to the 
family of Michel Besso as a condolence. Frame reference and all that.  Leslie 
has termed himself an atheist in the sense of no personal deity as you have 
stated below. 
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337952476_Infinite_Minds_A_Philosophical_Cosmology

*For that matter so does Swiss digital philosopher, Juergen 
Schmidhuber.https://people.idsia.ch/~juergen/
Hope everyone whose system can take (I'd avoid the very young) gets vaxed? Good 
luck. 

-----Original Message-----
From: Bruno Marchal <[email protected]>
To: Everything List <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Jul 20, 2021 3:46 am
Subject: Re: Hitler against Godel's Theorem

Hmm... I just reply from the new mail address, but of course, I don't have 
(yet) the permission. Some difficulties to change the setting. I copy my answer 
directly on the webpage of this list.
Hi spudboy100,
Thanks! Do we have the choice in what we are observing? 
Yes and No. To take the paradigmatic exemple, imagine that you are in Helsinki, 
and you will be scanned, copy, destroyed, and reconstitute in Washington and 
Moscow. For a third person observer looking at this, you are in W and in M. 
From your (multiple) first person view, you feel that a choice or a selection 
has been made, but that cannot possibly be "your choice". Indeed in Helsinki 
you might desire to become the one in Moscow, but the guy in Washington will 
illustrate that indeed it was not a question of choice, unless he suicides 
himself immediately somehow. You could, when still in Helsinki, write a letter, 
or a mail, to the people in Washington, asking them to NOT make the 
reconstitution, making Moscow into a "probability 1 by default", though, and 
this illustrates that making a choice is a form of suicide. If you are in love 
with Alice and Eve, and decide to marry Eve, it is somehow equivalent with 
killing the "you" who would have lived with Alice.In that sense, I answer 
"yes". We do have partial choice in observing or moving in our life, and it is 
a sort of preselection among our (infinitely many) futures.Can we make better? 
I guess so. At least relatively to what you might consider as better, for 
example by selection the option which maximize this or that things that you 
might prefer, for you or for other you care about.
With the "many-worlds", or "many-histories" or the non quantum (a priori) 
"many-computations" in arithmetic, the quantum woo is minimized, in fact the 
whole quantum is explained through the common "amoeba" first person 
indeterminacy in arithmetic You can see (Indexical, Digital) Mechanism as the 
hypothesis using the less magic, in fact only the magic of mathematical logic 
or computer science. No need of a magical personal-god, or impersonal-god, just 
elementary arithmetic which execute all computations in the bloc-universe, or 
better bloc-mindscape manner. Something we know, or should know, since the 
1930s.
Bruno
On Tuesday, July 20, 2021 at 3:57:45 AM UTC+2 [email protected] wrote:

Just for confirmation, Bruno, you message has been received if not completely 
comprehended by myself, but just as a saying "received" by your email provider. 
My only thought might be is "Do we have a choice in what we are observing?" 
Moreover, "if we somehow do, can we make better by observing." Many would say 
this is quantum woo, and that is fine by me. The follow up would be, mayhaps if 
we form a 'better node' say, of millions of observer's we could fix things 
better? As in Quantum Woo style-all focus upon the same thing? 
Probably not, so it's back to work for scientists and engineers....


-----Original Message-----
From: Bruno Marchal <[email protected]>
To: Everything List <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Jul 19, 2021 9:07 am
Subject: Re: Hitler against Godel's Theorem

I have answered this, but I don't find my answer. Penrose use Gödel's theorem 
to argue that we are not machine, by a reasoning similar to one already found, 
and refuted, by Emil Post, and later developed (wrongly) by Lucas and Penrose. 
Eventually Penrose got it right, and that kind of argument does not show that 
Gödel's incompleteness is a problem for Mechanism, but it does show that a 
machine cannot know which machine she is, nor which computations support it in 
arithmetic, which is indeed a step in the reduction of the laws of physics to 
the statistics on all relative computations in arithmetic. That explains why, 
after deriving the phenomenology of the wave collapse from the Schroedinger 
equation, like Everett did, it is still necessary to derive the wave equation 
from the statistics on all computations (as seen from inside, which is the hard 
part to define, except that it becomes easy once we get the theology of the 
machine.
The propositional machine theology G1* has been given here. It is the modal 
logic with all theorem of G as axioms, + []A ->A, + p -> []p (for p 
propositional letter), and importantly without the Necessitation rule. And G is 
the (normal modal logic) with axiom []([]A -> A) -> []A (the Löb formula). A 
normal modal theory has [](A->B) -> ([]A -> []B) as axioms, and is closed for 
the Modus ponens and the necessitation rule.
Then the logic of the observable is given by the modal logic of the intensional 
variant, defined in G1(*) by the logic of []A & <>t & A, and some related.That 
gives a quantum logic for the observable by universal numbers in arithmetic, 
naturally related to the many computations structure implied by elementary 
arithmetic or Turing equivalent.
More on this later. I am also testing the mail system, and if the google-group 
still recognise my old adresses. 
Bruno

On Thursday, June 3, 2021 at 1:28:36 PM UTC+2 Lawrence Crowell wrote:

It is Penrose's thesis that consciousness is a sort of Godel trick. Back in the 
1980s as an undergraduate I would have agreed with this, when I started reading 
about this. I read Hofstadter's book "Godel, Escher, Bach" and began pondering 
these things. I have however come to think there were problems with this. It is 
clear humans are not consistent Turing machines or computers. Computers are 
infernally consistent, and can compute numerical sequences, but they do not 
make an inductive leap in saying the set of natural numbers has infinite 
cardinality. Humans can rather easily see the set is infinite and however make 
mistakes. 
LC
On Wednesday, June 2, 2021 at 11:47:26 AM UTC-5 [email protected] wrote:

On Tue, Jun 1, 2021 at 8:38 AM Lawrence Crowell <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> Godel's theorems are our friend. It is even a friend in physics. With physics 
>I think it is a "sieve" that conforms physical principle to have horizon 
>conditions, whether uncertainty principles or event horizons in GR, that 
>conform physical reality to fit within the Church-Turing thesis.

Some claim Godel proved that the human mind is more than just a Turing Machine, 
but I disagree. Godel found a way to use numbers to write a sentence that talks 
about itself, it says "I am not provable in this formal system", and the 
operations of a particular Turing Machine are analogous to a formal system; 
however a human being can look at that sentence and see that it is true even 
though the machine itself could never produce it, therefore the human mind can 
do something the Turing machine can't. However, what Godel proved is that an 
operating system powerful enough to perform arithmetic THAT IS CONSISTENT 
cannot be complete, and he says no operating system can prove its own 
consistency. But when human beings are not doing formal logic exercises but 
just living everyday lives their operating system is most certainly not 
consistent, they can have two logically contradictory opinions at the same 
time, a brief glance at politics shows it is very common. And humans can be 
absolutely positively 100% certain about something, (that is to say they have 
proven it to their own satisfaction), and still be dead wrong. Godel's 
biography illustrates this point, he refused to eat and died of starvation 
because he was absolutely positively 100% certain that his food was being 
poisoned.
So we are inconsistent Turing machines.  And even today we could easily make a 
machine that could answer any question, provided you don't mind if it sometimes 
gave an answer that was wrong or even idiotic.

John K Clark 

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