Re: FIN Again (was: Re: James Higgo)

2001-08-29 Thread Jacques Mallah

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jacques Mallah writes:
  The problem comes when some people consider death in this context.  
I'll try to explain the insane view on this, but since I am not myself 
insane I will probably not do so to the satisfaction of those that are.

I have mixed feelings about this line of reasoning, but I can offer
some arguments in favor of it.

I guess you mean in favor of FIN.  How about against it too, since you 
have mixed feelings?

  The insane view however holds that the mind of the killed twin 
somehow leaps into the surviving twin at the moment he would have been 
killed.  Thus, except for the effect on other people who might have known 
the twins, the apparent death is of no consequence.

It's not that the mind leaps.  That would imply that minds have
location, wouldn't it?  And spatial limits?  But that notion doesn't
work well.

Mind is not something that is localized in the universe in the way
that physical objects are.  You can't pin down the location of a mind.
Where in our brains is mind located?  In the glial cells?  In the neurons?
The whole neuron, or just the synapse?  It doesn't make sense to imagine 
that you can assign a numerical value to each point in the brain which 
represents its degree of mind-ness.  Location is not a property of mind.

A computationalist would say that the mind is due to the functioning of 
the brain, and thus is located where the parts that function are.
But this is totally irrelevant.  Suffice it to say that a mind is 
associated with that brain, while a different mind would be associated with 
a different brain.

Hence we cannot speak of minds leaping.

I remind you that _I_ never said they leap, could leap, or that such a 
thing is logically possible at all.  I said only that the insane hold such a 
view, which many posters on this list do.  Whatever they may mean by what 
they say, the effect is best described as saying they think minds leap.

It makes more sense to think of mind as a relational phenomenon, like
greater than or next to, but enormously more complicated.  In that
sense, if there are two identical brains, then they both exhibit the
same relational properties.  That means that the mind is the same in
both brains.  It's not that there are two minds each located in a brain, 
but rather that all copies of that brain implement the mind.

Nope.  That make no (0) sense at all.  Sure, you could _define_ a mind 
to be some computation, as you seem to want, rather than being a specific 
implementation of that computation.  But that's a rather silly definition, 
since it's a specific implementation that would be associated with conscious 
thinking of a particular brain, and thus with measure.
Of course, even a twin who dies could never have the same computation as 
one that lived, since HALT is obviously a significant difference in the 
computation.

Further support for this model can be found by considering things from
the point of view of that mind.  Let it consider the question, which
brain am I in at this time?  Which location in the universe do I occupy?
There is no way for the mind to give a meaningful, unique response to
this question.

There's no way to know for sure, you mean.  OK, I agree with that.  You 
can still guess with high confidence.  In any case, there's still a fact of 
the matter, regardless of whether you know that fact.

Any answer will be both wrong and right.

That makes no sense.  The answer will be either wrong XOR right, for a 
particular mind; but you can't know for sure which of those minds is you.  
Hence you use indexical Bayesian reasoning or SSA.

In this model, if the number of brains increases or decreases, the mind
will not notice, it will not feel a change.

Surviving minds won't notice a change.  Dead minds won't feel a thing, 
which is the reason death sucks.

No introspection will reveal the number of implementations of itself that 
exist in a universe or a multiverse.

True, although with the SSA you can make some reasonable guesses.

This is only dangerous if the belief is wrong, of course.  The contrary
belief could be said to be dangerous in its way, if it were wrong as well.
(For example, it might lead to an urgent desire to build copies.)

Even supposing the logical belief to be wrong - what's so dangerous 
about building copies?  In any case, that would require a lot more tech than 
we have.

 I have repeated pointed out the obvious consequence that if that were 
true, then a typical observer would find himself to be much older than the 
apparent lifetime of his species would allow; the fact that you do not find 
yourself so old gives their hypothesis a probability of about 0 that it is 
the truth.  However, they hold fast to their incomprehensible beliefs.

This is a different argument and has nothing to do with the idea of
leaping, which is mostly what I want to take issue with.

Sure it has to do with it, because it proves 

Re: imps.

2001-08-29 Thread Jacques Mallah

From: Marchal [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jacques Mallah wrote
 It doesn't matter, of course.  First, the measure of James-like 
beings (summing over time) is now known to be smaller than we thought it 
would be; that's true no matter what.

Sometimes you speak like if you *have* solved your implementation
problem.

I'm not sure what you mean.  Anyway, I might have.  My proposal is on my 
web page in the Plank Syposium paper
http://hammer.prohosting.com/~mathmind/100y.htm

How could you know now?

What, that his measure was reduced?  Surely you heard that news.
To be precise, if the fact that he might die this way was something we 
anticipated, then indeed his total measure would be reduced by the event, 
but our knowledge of that reduction would not depend on our being in the 
world where he died.  So we would not have extra reason to feel bad about 
the reduction.  But this news came as more of a surprise, wouldn't you say?

With the comp hyp., or just the QM hyp., (and this in a completely provable 
way taking just Everett memory machines in the non relativistic setting), 
you should not sum up on time, but you must sum up on *all* consistent 
neighborhoods. (Time and space emerges on that eventually through comp).

I don't know what you mean.  A couple of points though: 1) You know that 
as I've said before, Everett's memory-based formulation is not 
computationalist and IMO he would have readily admitted that it was only 
meant as a preliminary ansatz to start studying the MWI.  2) The 
nonrelativistic setting surely includes space and time a priori.

You really speak like a quantum Bohmian, discarding quasi-magically all
computational histories but one.

I never did anything like that,  have no clue why you think I did.

Decoherence explains only why those worlds get rather quickly
inaccessible for most of *each* of us,

Obviously.  Any preschool kid should know that, so why do you bring it 
up now?

Why do you put many world in your signature?

I put Many Worlder to let people know a little about my beliefs.

The James Higgos of the other worlds are zombie or what?

Eh?  Why do you ask?

How do you distinguish yourself from numerically indentical
counterparts?

Depends what you mean.  Are the numbers 5 and 6 identical?  I don't 
think so.  But look on a number line at the internal structure of these 
points.  They look the same.  They're just located in different spots, in 
this case in Plato's funhouse.  Same with two different implementations of 
the same computation, whether in Plato's funhouse or a physical world.  If 
you disagree and say they are the same, give me $6 and I'll give you $5.

 - - - - - - -
   Jacques Mallah ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
 Physicist  /  Many Worlder  /  Devil's Advocate
I know what no one else knows - 'Runaway Train', Soul Asylum
 My URL: http://hammer.prohosting.com/~mathmind/

_
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Re: FIN

2001-08-29 Thread Jacques Mallah

From: Saibal Mitra [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jacques Mallah wrote:
  `` I have repeated pointed out the obvious consequence that if that were 
true, then a typical observer would find himself to be much older than the 
apparent lifetime of his species would allow; the fact that you do not find 
yourself so old gives their hypothesis a probability of about 0 that it is 
the truth.  However, they hold fast to their incomprehensible beliefs.´´

According to FIN, however, the probability of being alive at all is almost 
zero, which contradicts our experience of being alive.

Whatchya mean?  I wouldn't mind acquiring a new argument against FIN to 
add to the ones I give, but your statement doesn't appear to make any sense.

 - - - - - - -
   Jacques Mallah ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
 Physicist  /  Many Worlder  /  Devil's Advocate
I know what no one else knows - 'Runaway Train', Soul Asylum
 My URL: http://hammer.prohosting.com/~mathmind/

_
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp




QTI/FIN

2001-08-29 Thread Saibal Mitra



Jacques Mallah wrote:

`` I have repeated pointed out the obvious consequence 
that if that were true, then a typical observer would find himself to be 
much older than the apparent lifetime of his species would allow; the fact 
that you do not find yourself so old gives their hypothesis a probability of 
about 0 that it is the truth. However, they hold fast to their 
incomprehensible beliefs.´´

According to FIN, however,the probability of being alive 
at all is almost zero, which contradicts our experience of being 
alive.

Saibal