Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread Stathis Papaioannou

2009/4/3 Brent Meeker meeke...@dslextreme.com:

 But if you're going to derive physics from consciousness you need to
 explain what connects across the gap - why is it still you.  I
 appreciate that part of the answer is memories, although Bruno seems to
 think they are inessential.  But even if they are part of the answer
 there still seems to me to be a problem in that almost all memories are
 *not* in consciousness at any one time.  So must we invoke unconscious
 memories (which are where?) or some other factor that provides the
 continuity of self or do we simply assert that you are no one in
 particular when you are not remembering anything.  My speculation is
 that there there is subconscious memory on the very short term,
 ~second, which provides continuity .  This operates even when you are
 asleep so that there is continuity of events in you dreams.  If you
 suffer a concussion the continuity is broken and you have gap in  memory
 and in consciousness.  This immediate memory provides continuity between
 times when you recall long-term memories, which are the ones Quentin is
 concerned with.

I have been using the term memories to include more than just long
term memories. For example, I have a feeling of being me which
persists from moment to moment. Even though I can't put this feeling
into words, I would know immediately if something happens to change
it, since then I would no longer feel myself. While specific to each
person, nevertheless this basal feeling would be more generic than the
feeling + superimposed complex cognition, since the latter would have
higher information content.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread Brent Meeker

Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
 2009/4/3 Brent Meeker meeke...@dslextreme.com:

   
 But if you're going to derive physics from consciousness you need to
 explain what connects across the gap - why is it still you.  I
 appreciate that part of the answer is memories, although Bruno seems to
 think they are inessential.  But even if they are part of the answer
 there still seems to me to be a problem in that almost all memories are
 *not* in consciousness at any one time.  So must we invoke unconscious
 memories (which are where?) or some other factor that provides the
 continuity of self or do we simply assert that you are no one in
 particular when you are not remembering anything.  My speculation is
 that there there is subconscious memory on the very short term,
 ~second, which provides continuity .  This operates even when you are
 asleep so that there is continuity of events in you dreams.  If you
 suffer a concussion the continuity is broken and you have gap in  memory
 and in consciousness.  This immediate memory provides continuity between
 times when you recall long-term memories, which are the ones Quentin is
 concerned with.
 

 I have been using the term memories to include more than just long
 term memories. For example, I have a feeling of being me which
 persists from moment to moment. Even though I can't put this feeling
 into words, I would know immediately if something happens to change
 it, since then I would no longer feel myself. While specific to each
 person, nevertheless this basal feeling would be more generic than the
 feeling + superimposed complex cognition, since the latter would have
 higher information content.


   
And doesn't this feeling of being me requires very short terms 
(~second) memory?  I've called it immediate memory to distinguish it 
from the short term memory which seems to be on the order of a few minutes.

Brent

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 02 Apr 2009, at 13:23, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:


 2009/4/2 Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be:

 I would say that if you are at a fork where one version of you loses
 all memories and another does not, then you will find yourself going
 down the no memory loss path.

 At which point? Also, why is it that we din't survive them to the
 continuation where we don't ever mage very weird (amnesic) dreams.
 We would not survive salvia at all.

 This sounds a bit like the argument which says that if QI is true, we
 could never fall asleep, since we don't experience unconsciousness and
 therefore we would only experience the worlds where we stay awake
 indefinitely.


For being awake you have to be conscious.
For being conscious, you don't have to be awake.

The probability that I go from state A to state B is given by the  
number of computations going from A to B.
The problem with amnesic teleportation, that is teleportation with  
partial amnesia in the reconstituted person, is that it introduce a  
fuzziness on the first person uncertainty domain.
What are your prediction in the following experience, where the  
protocol is told to you in advance: you are triplicated in Sidney,  
Beijing and Kigali. But in Sidney you loose your long term memory: you  
remember perfectly the triplication experience, your name, but nothing  
of your life.  In Beijing you lost your short term memory, you  
remember your whole life except the last hour, and thus you forget the  
triplication experience, and thus the protocol. In Kigali you keep  
your whole memory. I suppose that you will never recover the memories  
(this is in the protocol). How do you quantify the first person  
indeterminacy?

Accepting probabilities, what would you consider as being more  
correct among

1) S = 1/3, B = 1/3 K = 1/3,
2) S = 0, B = 0, S = 1,
3) S = 0, B = 1/2, K = 1/2,
4) S = 1/2, B = 0, K = 1/2,





 That argument is invalid, unless we are falling asleep
 permanently, i.e. dying. If we fall asleep and wake up again, or
 experience amnesia and recover, then the worlds where that happens are
 *not* excluded by QI. They are simply worlds where you have a gap in
 consciousness, as valid when you are calculating subjective
 probabilities as the (in general far less common) worlds where there
 is no such gap.

I agree with you (except I am agnostic on the existence of gap of  
consciousness). The problem, imo, arise with partial amnesia and  
partial recovery, ... and (I think) who we are ... in the long run. Do  
we need to have an ever developing brain to be (first person) immortal?

Bruno



http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~marchal/




--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread John Mikes
Brent,
I read this discussion and 'try' not to get involved (never succeedG).
*
Ourselves w/wout our memories? what else? These terms come from the ancient
religious fable about a 'soul' - the person in the faith-domain.
Even the old Indians made 'reincarnation' hazy without memories and the only
item to be reincarnated was a nebulous 'identity without identity'.
*
In your very logical and 'cool-headed' reply below I cannot help but detect
the 'physicist' as first line, going into anything else from there.
Gap? I and you? concepts of materialist physiscs base, which is not
proven the fundament of them all, rather a consequence in a certain
mindset (whatever that may be). We 'feel' something like 'I' and make it
the spiritus rector of them all, looking for where is it? (one step
better: how does it do it?) while it may be a limited consequence of
what we don't understand but use.
Unconscious memories? if we ever live in a dynamics of timeless
interconnection into the totality (no space either, only in our wish to
[co]-ordinate our limited views): rather  'take another  look at - what we
call - *memory recall* and perceive it according to our upest-to-date
mindset.
Dynamic relational adjustments incorporated. Or whatever is beyond our
limited imagination (solipsist view about the *existence* especially based
on a physically related view).* 'Where are they'?* in the spaceless realm.
(Dis-)Continuity? absolutely physical.
And a second is not a 'short term' in a timeless view.
- *RELATIONS.*

I can make one statement and that looks to me unbeatable (as well as
unprovable): *We don't know, but think (feel?) we do*.
Have a good springtime
John M

On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 2:03 PM, Brent Meeker meeke...@dslextreme.comwrote:


 Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
  2009/4/2 Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be:
 
 
  I would say that if you are at a fork where one version of you loses
  all memories and another does not, then you will find yourself going
  down the no memory loss path.
 
  At which point? Also, why is it that we din't survive them to the
  continuation where we don't ever mage very weird (amnesic) dreams.
  We would not survive salvia at all.
 
 
  This sounds a bit like the argument which says that if QI is true, we
  could never fall asleep, since we don't experience unconsciousness and
  therefore we would only experience the worlds where we stay awake
  indefinitely. That argument is invalid, unless we are falling asleep
  permanently, i.e. dying. If we fall asleep and wake up again, or
  experience amnesia and recover, then the worlds where that happens are
  *not* excluded by QI. They are simply worlds where you have a gap in
  consciousness, as valid when you are calculating subjective
  probabilities as the (in general far less common) worlds where there
  is no such gap.
 
 
 
 But if you're going to derive physics from consciousness you need to
 explain what connects across the gap - why is it still you.  I
 appreciate that part of the answer is memories, although Bruno seems to
 think they are inessential.  But even if they are part of the answer
 there still seems to me to be a problem in that almost all memories are
 *not* in consciousness at any one time.  So must we invoke unconscious
 memories (which are where?) or some other factor that provides the
 continuity of self or do we simply assert that you are no one in
 particular when you are not remembering anything.  My speculation is
 that there there is subconscious memory on the very short term,
 ~second, which provides continuity .  This operates even when you are
 asleep so that there is continuity of events in you dreams.  If you
 suffer a concussion the continuity is broken and you have gap in  memory
 and in consciousness.  This immediate memory provides continuity between
 times when you recall long-term memories, which are the ones Quentin is
 concerned with.

 Brent

 


--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread Stathis Papaioannou

2009/4/4 Brent Meeker meeke...@dslextreme.com:

 I have been using the term memories to include more than just long
 term memories. For example, I have a feeling of being me which
 persists from moment to moment. Even though I can't put this feeling
 into words, I would know immediately if something happens to change
 it, since then I would no longer feel myself. While specific to each
 person, nevertheless this basal feeling would be more generic than the
 feeling + superimposed complex cognition, since the latter would have
 higher information content.



 And doesn't this feeling of being me requires very short terms
 (~second) memory?  I've called it immediate memory to distinguish it
 from the short term memory which seems to be on the order of a few minutes.

Yes, it obviously requires some kind of very short term memory, since
I would be instantly aware if something changed. When I use the term
memory in discussions on personal identity I assume that it covers
this sort of memory as well as the memory of who I am and what the
last word I typed was.



-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread Stathis Papaioannou

2009/4/4 Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:

 The probability that I go from state A to state B is given by the
 number of computations going from A to B.
 The problem with amnesic teleportation, that is teleportation with
 partial amnesia in the reconstituted person, is that it introduce a
 fuzziness on the first person uncertainty domain.
 What are your prediction in the following experience, where the
 protocol is told to you in advance: you are triplicated in Sidney,
 Beijing and Kigali. But in Sidney you loose your long term memory: you
 remember perfectly the triplication experience, your name, but nothing
 of your life.  In Beijing you lost your short term memory, you
 remember your whole life except the last hour, and thus you forget the
 triplication experience, and thus the protocol. In Kigali you keep
 your whole memory. I suppose that you will never recover the memories
 (this is in the protocol). How do you quantify the first person
 indeterminacy?

 Accepting probabilities, what would you consider as being more
 correct among

 1) S = 1/3, B = 1/3 K = 1/3,
 2) S = 0, B = 0, [K] = 1,
 3) S = 0, B = 1/2, K = 1/2,
 4) S = 1/2, B = 0, K = 1/2,

I would say (3), but I have long been troubled by such questions
because there is no clearly correct answer.

 That argument is invalid, unless we are falling asleep
 permanently, i.e. dying. If we fall asleep and wake up again, or
 experience amnesia and recover, then the worlds where that happens are
 *not* excluded by QI. They are simply worlds where you have a gap in
 consciousness, as valid when you are calculating subjective
 probabilities as the (in general far less common) worlds where there
 is no such gap.

 I agree with you (except I am agnostic on the existence of gap of
 consciousness). The problem, imo, arise with partial amnesia and
 partial recovery, ... and (I think) who we are ... in the long run. Do
 we need to have an ever developing brain to be (first person) immortal?

No, because in ordinary life we gradually forget things the longer ago
they happened, especially if they are felt to be less significant.


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Dual Aspect Science

2009-04-03 Thread Colin Hales
Hi folks,
I am finally getting somewhere. My paper has just been published. :

Hales, C. 'Dual Aspect Science', Journal of Consciousness Studies vol. 
16, no. 2-3, 2009. 30-73.

Under dual aspect science exploration and deliverables take on two 
fundamental forms:

Laws-of-appearance ( = T, what we do now) 
Laws-of-structure( = T' what we are recently/partly doing but wasn't 
organised/recognised).

A physics of P-consciousness becomes empirically tractable under the DAS 
framework set of  structure (T') descriptions.  The DAS paper resulted 
from empirical science (observation of scientists) and is a framework 
which is empirically testable - the procedure is in the paper. No 
philosophy is required. The observed behaviour of scientists operating 
under the framework is decisive.

I can deliver a .PDF of the paper to anyone who is interested (off list).

The idea is that science's output (= laws of nature) actually has two 
intimately enmeshed 100% mutually consistent but very different forms:
T (grammars as per usual)
T'   (computational output in a generalised dynamic form of cellular 
automaton)

The former is a set of forever-uncertain rules about 100% certain 
(agreed) things.
The latter is a set of 100% certain (chosen/agreed) rules about  
forever-uncertain structural primitives.

The two are 'joined' and empirically supported by the one single 
evidence system - P-consciousness.

This nicely (mirror-) symmetric knowledge framework eliminates a raft of 
strange behavioural inconsistencies in science (in the behaviour of 
scientists). DAS finally enables us to formally deal with the underlying 
structure of things in an empirically viable way. It means that 
scientists trading in loops, strings, froth, branes etc etc finally have 
a home. All we have to do is use our theory to make a prediction of the 
appearance brain material consistent with the delivery of 
P-consciousness as predicted by the T' aspect structural primitive of 
choice. T-aspect science cannot possibly do this. In the paper is a 
large list of the kinds of predictions to expect of your T'-aspect.

I have used my loop structure - cellular automaton. It predicts brains 
look and operate like they do, although its hard to see at first.  It is 
to be written up and published ASAP. Maybe others would like to see how 
they can do the same with other structural primitives.

The abstract is below. I also have a 'DAS how to/reader user guide' 
which will help you distil the DAS paper - which is a bit of a monster - 
43 pages. The computational exploration of loops is, in effect, the 
actual scientific delivery-form of the 'entropy calculus' I have spoken 
about from time to time here.

I discuss the nature and forms of TOE in the DAS paper. They have 2 
forms as well. Indeed the T'-aspect TOE is literally the rules and 
initialisation of the 'natural CA'. You can't analytically express it. 
You have to compute it and slice it to observe it.

Enough for now!

cheers
colin hales

*ABSTRACT*. Our chronically impoverished explanatory capacity in respect 
of P-consciousness is highly suggestive of a problem with science 
itself, rather than its lack of acquisition of some particular 
knowledge. The hidden assumption built into science is that science 
itself is a completed human behaviour. Removal of this assumption is 
achieved through a simple revision to our science model which is 
constructed, outlined and named ‘dual aspect science’ (DAS). It is 
constructed with reference to existing science being ‘single aspect 
science’. DAS is consistent with and predictive of the very explanatory 
poverty that generated it and is simultaneously a seamless upgrade; no 
existing law of nature is altered or lost. The framework is completely 
empirically self-consistent and is validated empirically. DAS  
eliminates the behavioural inconsistencies currently inhabiting a world 
in which single aspect science has been inherited rather than chosen and 
in which its presuppositions are implemented through habit rather than 
by scientific examination of options by the scientists actually carrying 
out science. The proposed DAS framework provides a working vantage point 
from which an explanation of P-consciousness becomes expected and 
meaningful. The framework requires that we rediscover what we scientists 
do and then discover something new about ourselves: that how we have 
been doing science is not the entire story. Dual aspect science shows us 
what we have not been doing. 

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: Altered states of consciousness

2009-04-03 Thread Brent Meeker

Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
 2009/4/4 Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:
 
 The probability that I go from state A to state B is given by the
 number of computations going from A to B.
 The problem with amnesic teleportation, that is teleportation with
 partial amnesia in the reconstituted person, is that it introduce a
 fuzziness on the first person uncertainty domain.
 What are your prediction in the following experience, where the
 protocol is told to you in advance: you are triplicated in Sidney,
 Beijing and Kigali. But in Sidney you loose your long term memory: you
 remember perfectly the triplication experience, your name, but nothing
 of your life.  In Beijing you lost your short term memory, you
 remember your whole life except the last hour, and thus you forget the
 triplication experience, and thus the protocol. In Kigali you keep
 your whole memory. I suppose that you will never recover the memories
 (this is in the protocol). How do you quantify the first person
 indeterminacy?

 Accepting probabilities, what would you consider as being more
 correct among

 1) S = 1/3, B = 1/3 K = 1/3,
 2) S = 0, B = 0, [K] = 1,
 3) S = 0, B = 1/2, K = 1/2,
 4) S = 1/2, B = 0, K = 1/2,
 
 I would say (3), but I have long been troubled by such questions
 because there is no clearly correct answer.
 
 That argument is invalid, unless we are falling asleep
 permanently, i.e. dying. If we fall asleep and wake up again, or
 experience amnesia and recover, then the worlds where that happens are
 *not* excluded by QI. They are simply worlds where you have a gap in
 consciousness, as valid when you are calculating subjective
 probabilities as the (in general far less common) worlds where there
 is no such gap.
 I agree with you (except I am agnostic on the existence of gap of
 consciousness). The problem, imo, arise with partial amnesia and
 partial recovery, ... and (I think) who we are ... in the long run. Do
 we need to have an ever developing brain to be (first person) immortal?
 
 No, because in ordinary life we gradually forget things the longer ago
 they happened, especially if they are felt to be less significant.
 
 

And complicating things even more we may not be able to remember something on 
request but then remember it later.  I've often experienced this kind of 
Poincare effect.  There's also some evidence that hypnosis can recover memories 
not otherwise available.  So forgetting and remembering are not simple 
contraries.

Brent

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
Everything List group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---