Today, humans go to some length to record history, to preserve companies and 
their assets.  But for some reason preserving the means to do things -- the 
essence of a mind -- this has this different status.  Why not seek to inherit 
minds too?  Sure, I can see the same knowledge base can be represented in 
different ways.   But, studying those neural representations could also be 
informative.   What if neural structures have similar topological properties 
given some curriculum?  What a waste to create that neural structure over and 
over..

Good points all.   My mortal-individual chauvinist  is suspect in this discussion of providing bias.

One view is that we go to great lengths to record history so that we might recognize it's rhyme schemes and avoid repeating the mistakes we might recognize in it.  I see corporate entities somewhat the same as dynasties and find it easier to be critical of their (repeated) failures than the glory of their "great achievements".

I also think that in the grand competition between the Engineering and the Evolutionary models of "progress" is relevant here.   Evolution is decidedly inefficient in the value-system of Evolution.  Some may believe that Engineering replaces Evolution as a means of progress/innovation.


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 7:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive heuristics


On 4/12/22 5:53 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
I am not saying such a system would not need to be predatory or parasitic, just 
that it can be arranged to preserve the contents of a library.
And I can't help knee-jerking that when a cell attempts to live forever (and/or 
replicate itself perfectly) that it becomes a tumour in the
organ(ism) that gave rise to it, and even metastasizes, spreading it's hubris 
to other organs/systems.

Somehow, I think the inter-planetary post-human singularians are more like metastatic cells than 
"the future of humanity".   Maybe that is NOT a dead-end, but my mortality-chauvanistic 
"self" rebels.   Maybe if I live long enough I'll come around... or maybe there will be a 
CAS mediated edit to fix that pessimism in me.


On Apr 12, 2022, at 4:29 PM, glen <[email protected]> wrote:

Dude. Every time I think we could stop, you say something I object to. >8^D 
You're doing it on purpose. I'm sure of it ... like pulling the wings off flies 
and cackling like a madman.

No, the maintenance protocol must be *part of* the meat-like intelligence. 
That's why I mention things like suicide or starving yourself because your wife 
stops feeding you. To me, a forever-autopoietic system seems like a perpetual 
motion machine ... there's something being taken for granted by the conception 
... some unlimited free energy or somesuch.

On 4/12/22 16:16, Marcus Daniels wrote:
That meat-like intelligence could live forever with the right maintenance 
protocol.
-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of glen
Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 4:11 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive
heuristics Ha! 8^D But neither the ANN clone, nor the *stereotyped*
heuristics generated by an autonomous car capture the high-dimensional 
opportunity I believe meat organisms experience. Yes, the subsequent evolution 
of the ANNs and the stereotyped out-group are more concrete than most synthetic 
minds. But my claim, were I to actually hold it and try to state it more 
clearly, is that meat, living in meat space, is more open than those 2 
examples. It's the openness that provides the meat with the opportunity. The 
ANNs and autonomous car are more fixed, more closed.
However, I do believe machine intelligence *will* reach meat intelligence. But 
it'll have to look a lot more like meat intelligence to do so. It's already 
looking a lot more like meat intelligence than it was even 10 years ago. And if 
we stay at this supralinear rate (or higher), it'll happen sooner than I, this 
meat bag, thinks.
On 4/12/22 15:58, Marcus Daniels wrote:
Now it is entirely possible to take a massive pre-trained neural net like GPT3 
and run it in two places at once or have different instances use a baseline and 
take divergent paths from different training.
None of that is possible for humans, at least yet.    Some autonomous cars even 
know enough to be afraid of the police!  (Regarding concreteness.)  
https://electrek.co/2022/04/10/gm-cruise-autonomous-taxi-pulled-over-by-police-in-san-francisco-without-humans-bolts-off-u-cruise-responds/

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of glen
Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 3:47 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Selective cultural processes generate adaptive
heuristics

Exactly. Both of these (low turnover wisdom propagation & "flat" infoscape) 
fail in my conception because they lack the concrete (definit) particulars. Even if we have 
one 400 year old vampire telling funny stories to a 30 year vampire about a now-exploded 
vampire from 700 years ago, the sheer *number* of anecdotes required to capture a 400 year 
lifespan *forces* some abstraction ... some leaving out of important detail.

And even if the concrete details of why, say, Galileo was such an OCD 
journaling nerd can be found in biographies or whatnot, actually reading and 
learning about all the persnickety nonsense that was *crucial* to the arrival 
at, emergence of, any given inflection point, ... even if that concrete detail 
is logged/documented out there somewhere, nobody can learn it all. Each learner 
is forced to take an abstracted slice through it.

What the commitment to meat space interactions is, is a way to ensure that the 
concreteness remains ... at least within *some* small "open ball", you're 
getting a high-dimensional opportunity. I think of it in terms of the space vs time 
tradeoff and (yes, broken record) the parallelism theorem. Sure, a sequential system can 
simulate a parallel one perfectly, but only if you give it the time to do so ... and the 
amount of time it takes to do it is related to the amount of space the parallel system 
uses. Another way to think of it is the project management triangle: cheap, fast, or 
good. But those are low-dimensional. The space being balanced by organisms in the world 
is high-dimensional.

On 4/12/22 14:19, Steve Smith wrote:
Generations past (and under-mobile near-subsistence cultures today) have more 
intergenerational households and neighborhoods providing the heterarchical/holarchical 
connection/communication you suggest.   Or so my "just so" story relates.

The expansive breadth offered by global (near-instantaneous, global) 
communication/publication/relationship connections possibly makes up for that 
in the large, a major refactoring of problems and solutions.

I personally suffer from the lack of cross-cultural, cross-class experience of 
frequenting a neighborhood "watering hole" (pub/tavern/saloon) in the way Glen 
seems to enjoy (cultivate). My oldest regular drinking-philosophy buddy would be over 110 
today (he died over 20 years ago from alcohol-related illness) and until about 5 years 
ago I had a small cohort of 30ish imbibing interlocutors.  I blame COVID, but the reasons 
are probably larger and more nefarious.
--
Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙


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