If I cared about skinning the psychological cat.  I'm more interested in what 
could be implemented with the hardware than what happens to be. 

On 9/19/18, 2:41 PM, "Friam on behalf of Nick Thompson" 
<[email protected] on behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    Marcus, 
    
    But doesn't psychology supervene upon physiology.  I.e., aren't there an 
infinite number of ways to physiologically skin the psychological cat?  
    
    Nick 
    
    Nicholas S. Thompson
    Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
    Clark University
    http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
    
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marcus Daniels
    Sent: Monday, September 17, 2018 3:23 PM
    To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
    Subject: Re: [FRIAM] do animals psychologize?
    
    I wasn't making a hypothesis about type, I was making one about degree -- 
that unless a computing system has some number of functional units and a 
certain degree of connection between those functional units, some 
representations and calculations on those representations won't be practical.   
 A predator may (in effect) have very high-speed square root operations as it 
relates to predatory pursuit motor skills, but no abstract representation of 
what a number is.   The particular behaviors of individual functional units 
seem to be what you are calling physiology.   I'm speculating that if one has a 
reasonable model of the functional units, then one can build artificial neural 
systems from that component model, and from those, estimate what different 
species could calculate.   Can a certain neural net of some size learn an 
arbitrary distribution of some dimensionality?
    
    On 9/17/18, 1:01 PM, "Friam on behalf of Nick Thompson" 
<[email protected] on behalf of [email protected]> wrote:
    
        Marcus, 
        
        I have never understood how it comes to be that people answer a 
psychological question with a physiological answer.  I, of course, share your 
belief that all psychological functions are physiologically (or electronically) 
mediated.   Still, for instance, it would seem odd to me, if I asked a person 
if an animal can calculate the square root of three, for that person to answer, 
"That animal does not have the sort of brain that can calculate the square root 
of three".  The natural course of argument would seem for me for the person to 
answer the question about the calculation activities of the animal and THEN go 
on, perhaps, to explain that answer in terms of the physiological limitations 
of the animal's brain.  
        
        We once had a famously smart cat.  One day we were watching TV and a 
cat came on.  Our cat roused itself from dosing on the rug, went over and 
looked behind the tv, came back to the rug, looked at the TV, looked at us 
disgustedly, and lay down on the rug with its back to the TV.  It never roused 
to a cat on the TV again.   No cat would be dumb enough to be fooled by 
pornography.   I don't know what that proves about the question at hand, but I 
love cat stories. 
        
        Nick 
        
        Nicholas S. Thompson
        Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
        Clark University
        http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
        
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marcus 
Daniels
        Sent: Monday, September 17, 2018 1:53 PM
        To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
<[email protected]>
        Subject: Re: [FRIAM] do animals psychologize?
        
        I would say this relates to the reality (or not) of first-world 
problems.   Humans that thrive in the first world must form (or be educated to 
acquire) higher-order representations.    Psychologizing is one process that 
leads to higher-order representations.    In an artificial deep neural network, 
the neurons in the higher layers represent more and more abstract 
interpretations of inputs that have be presented, but it can take hundreds of 
thousands of neurons and dozens of layers.  
        
        One might imagine pets that have fewer neurons and less connectivity 
amongst neurons could still develop higher-level representations provided that 
these adaptations did not interfere with other essential information processing 
functions -- keeping in mind the most important function for a pet is probably 
anticipating the meaning of human signals.  
        
        Anyway, we'll make great pets. 
        
        Marcus
        
        On 9/17/18, 11:30 AM, "Friam on behalf of Nick Thompson" 
<[email protected] on behalf of [email protected]> wrote:
        
            Yes, Glen and Marcus.  Very interesting. 
            
            But, "Do animals psychologize?" 
            
            N
            
            Nicholas S. Thompson
            Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
            Clark University
            http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
            
            -----Original Message-----
            From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marcus 
Daniels
            Sent: Monday, September 17, 2018 10:57 AM
            To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
<[email protected]>
            Subject: Re: [FRIAM] do animals psychologize?
            
             Glen writes:
              
            "Even in your example, we might notice that even though there are N 
licenses
            doled out, the deer population continues to rise.  It would be
            over-intervention to simply issue more licenses. Perhaps the people 
getting
            the licenses are mostly an aging population who don't hunt much 
anymore but
            have some semi-automated approach to getting a license?"
            
            A population estimation input comes from tagging stations relative 
to issued
            licenses by category of deer, so they can & do close-the-loop by 
way of
            enforcement.  
            The population estimation techniques require some assumptions, of 
course.   
            
            Marcus 
            
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