But what *is* the distribution of deaths for brain/cns animals? with or without 
scaling? Is it 75 years for humans? Is it Gaussian? Surely not. Does it differ 
if you base it on biomass instead of number of organisms?

I can't help but think of behavior like Gödel's ... starving because you only trust one 
person to give you food ... or all the "geniuses" who went insane ... or all 
the teenagers that die from stupidity or recklessness. I also can't help but think about 
the role, if there is one, of all the ancient people who serve no role other than maybe 
as some sort of focus or semantic hook for their family/friends. If we believe in 
evolutionary pressure, surely we believe in some multidimensional front, of which 
biological death is only a sub-front. But I guess anything made up of dna and cells with 
nuclei would accumulate cruft at about the same rate.

As for decoupling cognitive power from bit rot, *if* the gizmos had a "healthy" 
garbage collector, then the faster rate might help. But if the overhead of GC is somehow 
pegged to the processor rate (or the kind of instructions being executed), then it might 
not.

On 4/12/22 14:26, Roger Critchlow wrote:
This japanese toddlers put me in mind of Ten Meter Tower 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cU2AvkKA4kM 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cU2AvkKA4kM>.  Is he going to jump?  Is she 
climbing back down?

  -- rec --

On Tue, Apr 12, 2022 at 4:48 PM Marcus Daniels <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    If there is something essential about turnover, then it seems like the rate 
would be informative.  Why 75 years and not 25 or 1000?  Why should every kind 
of life form conform to about 75 years?
    Is there a universal logical depth that explains the need for cognitive 
death, and thus death?    If we change the processor rate to be 100 times 
faster than a human, should those gizmos or organisms expire more quickly?

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Friam <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> 
On Behalf Of glen
    Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 1:38 PM
    To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
    Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive 
heuristics

    Yeah, that article is typical Haidt, full of just enough good evidence to 
blind you to the sanctimonious doctrinal pedantry that surrounds it. Within 
several clumps of postulates, one clump as small as 2 sentences, he contradicts 
himself but somehow thinks the narrative stays coherent. Pffft.

    *If* there is something structural about brain/CNS animals that allows further flex and slop 
between mind and body, that something ... that "muscle" ... will be exercised through 
generational turnover ... i.e. death. Trying to forcibly graft "our" (in scare quotes 
because I disagree with Haidt so starkly) nostalgia onto the evolving culture is guaranteed to fail.

    p.s. An important element directly contradicting Haidt's "get off my lawn" is laid out 
here: https://doctorow.medium.com/the-algospeak-dialect-74961b4803b7 
<https://doctorow.medium.com/the-algospeak-dialect-74961b4803b7> It takes me longer and longer to 
learn new lingo. And facility with a lingo is often used for gatekeeping.  But, from my own perspective, 
it's trivial to gauge the authenticity of an in-group's commitment to their gestalt by watching how they 
induct/indoctrinate proximal outsiders. I can still land an "E for effort" in most contexts, 
where I try anyway.


    On 4/12/22 11:59, Marcus Daniels wrote:
     > For example, this article [1] speaks to the potential fragility of 
cultural evolution.  Wouldn't it make sense to loosen the mind/cognition coupling 
if it is possible to do so?
     > What is uniquely useful about human animals as an adaptive vehicle?
     >
     > [1] 
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2022/05/social-media-democracy-trust-babel/629369/
 
<https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2022/05/social-media-democracy-trust-babel/629369/>
     >
     > -----Original Message-----
     > From: Friam <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> On Behalf Of glen
     > Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 11:50 AM
     > To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
     > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive 
heuristics
     >
     > Well, I'd argue that cultural evolution is a higher order language like 
chemistry to physics, biology to chemistry, sociology to biology, etc. We can use 
the higher order language agnostically, leaving the metaphysics for the 
philosophers (until/unless practical demands force us to solve some cross-trophic 
relation).
     >
     > On 4/12/22 11:39, Marcus Daniels wrote:
     >> Or to put it another way, what good is cultural evolution?
     >>
     >> -----Original Message-----
     >> From: Friam <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> On Behalf Of glen
     >> Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 11:36 AM
     >> To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
     >> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive 
heuristics
     >>
     >> But going back to less memorable/intuitive communicated heuristics, 
*if* our minds/cognitions are loosely coupled to our bodies (I'm thinking more 
polyphenism and robustness, not dualism), then we should be able to see the 
memorability/intuitiveness increase. But if there's a large portion of mind/cognition 
embedded/embodied in our flesh, then memorability/intuitiveness of new ideas will 
remain unrelated through generations of dead/replaced bodies.
     >>
     >> My claims that communication is illusory and all thought is tightly 
coupled to one's body reject the former. I.e. I don't think 
memorability/intuitiveness increases as ideas age. Rather, as bodies die, the new 
bodies are slightly restructured to better fit those ideas. It's a 
fake-it-till-you-make-it. The only reason we have young kids that understand quantum 
coherence (or Instagram) better than the old farts did is because the young kids grew 
into the idea.
     >>
     >> No dead bodies ⇒ no cultural evolution.
     >>
     >> On 4/12/22 11:19, Marcus Daniels wrote:
     >>> The contrast between fewer replication cycles of vampires that live 
thousands of years vs. many generations of short-lived mortals seems related..
     >>> Is the walk deep and informative, or is the key thing to stay away 
from attractors?
     >>> If there are truly billions of individuals, then short trips can 
explore a large space -- if there is communication between individuals and across 
generations.
     >>> -----Original Message-----
     >>> From: Friam <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> On Behalf Of glen
     >>> Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 11:05 AM
     >>> To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
     >>> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive 
heuristics
     >>>
     >>> What always seems to be missing in these discussions is the (my?) always present 
ability to [re]parse the world at will. Yes, there are gravity wells or attractors where if you 
start insisting on a security detail everywhere you go, you'll end up like Trump, Romney, or 
Sanders, surrounded by a nearly impermeable membrane that disallows authentic "go with the 
flow" non-consciousness/non-deliberation. But my tendency to (or ability to) prefer writing a 
script/macro over doing some computation manually doesn't interfere in a substantial way with my 
ability to do the manual labor in any given iteration. The size of the computation can interfere, 
but not the attractor.
     >>>
     >>> That's what makes me episodic, the lack of stickiness to whatever 
professionalization I've engaged in before. On a humble day, I claim it's because I'm just 
too stupid and lazy to really invest in building the attractor. On an arrogant day, I claim 
those who build and get stuck in such attractors are mindless automatons who can't think 
their way out of a paper bag. >8^D
     >>>
     >>> On 4/12/22 10:42, Marcus Daniels wrote:
     >>>> Vitalik Buterin remarked, “An emotional part of me says that once you 
start going down that way, /professionalizing/ is just another word for losing your soul” 
[1]
     >>>>
     >>>> That sounds plausible.  However, I have long thought that an 
important part of productivity is to find consciousness-lowering habits.   Just attach to 
whatever is front of you and forget about the motivations and the big picture.  For one 
thing, it is rare that one can really change the big picture.  For two it is necessary to 
get in the critical path of a process to disrupt it.  The nihilistic episodic personality 
doesn’t have to impose a narrative before going on excursion.  Too much evaluation and 
reflection and one’s action as a virion cannot move forward!   There is plenty of time to 
wake up a judgmental brain process once embedded.  But what are judgements really informed 
by if sampling is based on an outsiders’ view?   This kind of ties into Glen’s local reset 
idea.
     >>>>
     >>>> [1] https://time.com/6158182/vitalik-buterin-ethereum-profile/ 
<https://time.com/6158182/vitalik-buterin-ethereum-profile/> 
<https://time.com/6158182/vitalik-buterin-ethereum-profile/ 
<https://time.com/6158182/vitalik-buterin-ethereum-profile/>>
     >>>>
     >>>> *From:* Friam <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> *On Behalf Of *Steve Smith
     >>>> *Sent:* Tuesday, April 12, 2022 10:19 AM
     >>>> *To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
     >>>> *Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive 
heuristics
     >>>>
     >>>> Marcus -
     >>>>
     >>>>            Steve writes:
     >>>>
     >>>>            < Arguments for generational rather than 
Individual/personal growth and transformation...
     >>>>
     >>>>            “I don’t think we should try to have people live for a really 
long time,” Musk recently told Insider. “It would cause asphyxiation of society because the 
truth is, most people don’t change their mind. They just die. So if they don’t die, we will be 
stuck with old ideas and society wouldn’t advance.” >
     >>>>
     >>>>
     >>>>
     >>>>            Maybe not?
     >>>>
     >>>>
     >>>>
     >>>> https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-022-01769-4 
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-022-01769-4>  
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-022-01769-4 
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-022-01769-4>>
     >>>>
     >>>> I do think there is plenty of room for individual 
growth/transformation in one lifetime and perhaps Psi research will (continue to) provide 
yet-more tools for facilitating that.
     >>>>
     >>>> It isn't clear to me that merely loosening up neural pathways so that 
they can be re-created yields healthy growth as such.   I'd like to think it can be, but as 
the neo-luddite that I tend toward, I can't help but seeing the myriad ways it can go wrong 
as well.  This negative ideation is probably a self-referential example of the topic itself.
     >>>>
     >>>> Following RECs original subject:  I'm interested I suppose in understanding 
more-better the myriad scales and dimensions of adaptivity of "Life Itself", with the human 
(individual as well as cultural) experience being the one most relevant to my own life, but not 
exclusively.
     >>>
     >>>

--
Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙


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