David, 

Can somebody forward this on to Mike Daly, whose email I can NEVER recover?

I was taught this fascinating trope in graduate school... yes, THAT long ago.  
There is a second shoe, however.  Yes the retina (cochlea, etc.) is that 
sensitive BUT the neural noise is much louder than that.  So ... I think this 
is the right language ... even though the elements are sensitive to the 
smallest stimuli possible, the whole system cannot resolve stimuli that small 
... anywhere near.   To do what it does, it needs to weed out its own noise.  
So accuracy in vision is not a question of accuracy of the elements, but of the 
ingenuity of construction.  Note, for instance that we wear our retinas 
"backwards": we actually see THOUGH the many layers of the retina because the 
light sensitive elements ... the rods and cones ... are at the back of the 
retina.  So all that sensitivity of light sensing elements is rudely cast away 
in the organization of the retina.  It's like we are a football players who 
wear our jerseys inside out but boast about the precision, detail, and color of 
our logos.    


Hope you are well.  Where are you well?  

All my Peirce books were lost in the mail coming here, so I have been focusing 
on my garden.  Mild, calm June.  May be the best garden ever.  But my mind?  
Not so sure about that. 

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 Prof David West
Sent: Friday, June 21, 2019 4:15 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [FRIAM] sensitive, aren't we?

Doing some reading on quantum consciousness and embodied mind and came across 
these items:


https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-human-eye-could-help-test-quantum-mechanics/

https://www.nature.com/news/people-can-sense-single-photons-1.20282

(A Rebecca Holmes from Los Alamos Natl. Labs is part of the Scientific American 
reported research.)

not only can the human eye perceive individual photons (and perhaps quanta 
level phenomena) "The healthy human cochlea is so sensitive that it can detect 
vibration with amplitude less than the diameter of an atom, and it can resolve 
time intervals down to 10µs [i.e., microseconds, or millionths of a second]. It 
has been calculated that the human ear detects energy levels 10- fold lower 
than the energy of a single photon in the green wavelength…” Regarding human 
tactile and related senses (haptic, proprioceptive), it has recently been 
determined that “human tactile discrimination extends to the nanoscale [ie, 
within billionths of a meter],” this research having been published in the 
journal, Scientific Reports (Skedung et al 2013)"

interesting stuff
dave west



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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
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