Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-13 Thread John Mikes
Brent wrote:
*But it also entails that The World of Warcraft and what I dreamed last
night exist.*
*Brent*
Of course! they exist as themselves - not in context of 'QM or the Bible,
or anything else'. Anything we think of exists - at least in our thought
(at that time?) when it occurred. There is no sure way to distinguish
between 'existence' in diverse aspects of our figments (human thoughts).
Brent also mentions proof and axioms:
*...1.Incompleteness is the non-existence of some proofs.*
2,*That some functions are not-computable only implies their existence in
the sense that they are implied by some axioms.*
**
1.- Thanks, Brent, although I would not use for some 'nonexisting' the
word proof. Proof is tricky: it refers to thinking within the 'model' with
justification 'within' as well. Leading to in-model TRUTH. In my
agnosticism (incomplete knowledge?) 'proof'' (truth?) is questionable.

 2.- In my vocabulary axioms are human inventions to make 'sciemtific'
concepts feasible, not vice versa. One way to look beyond the conventional
may be to disregard axioms and find  different relations from the
'accepted'. Such method - in the agnostic thinking - may lead to
*NEW*findings in addition to the 'registered' (scientific?)
knowledge-base, what
I am willing to assign as anticipatory - a domain (Robert Rosen) I would
love to understand.
(Are we restricted here to mathematical 'functions'? I like to expand my
thinking domain.)

Problem: Bruno's retort:
*And this entails (and explains) the appearance of the physical universe,
but in a derived and most sophisticated higher order (epistemological)
sense, not in the arithmetical sense (indeed the physical universe become a
non trivial and non computable object, obeying partially computable laws,
etc.
Bruno *
Assuming (what I do not) that a so called arithmetical sense is a 'higher
order' - not the one invented within the bounds of our human logical
churning. Indeed: the 'existence' of the physical universe (a figment we
live by) is non-trivial, with one caveat of mine:
*Nothing OBEYS our (partially computable, or any other 'physical'?) LAWS, *this
is the wrong expression. We derived (mostly within a debatable statistical
method) the habits we so far observed, deduced their (mostly mathematically
quantized behavior) and call them laws. Those laws are valid as long as
the borders of our statistical considerations hold in THAT respect.
Conventional sciences are mostly built and exercised within such
limitations.






*


*
On Wed, May 11, 2011 at 1:28 PM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:

   On 5/11/2011 1:56 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


 On 10 May 2011, at 20:11, meekerdb wrote:

 On 5/10/2011 9:01 AM, David Nyman wrote:

 On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchalmarc...@ulb.ac.be marc...@ulb.ac.be
 wrote:


  What does it mean for numbers to understand?

 Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it means the
 same things for the numbers.

 This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
 convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
 behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
 indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
 is not IN FACT conscious (!).


 How does he establish that it is not conscious?

 This alone should be enough (as indeed
 he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
 matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as Deutsch
 argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It seems as
 if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
 puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
 assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully IMO);
 the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
 vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
 resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
 processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations) must
 emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence, if
 computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
 likewise suffice as that of the material.


 The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed does not
 entail computed = exists and if you hypothesize the latter it explains
 too much.


 But comp precisely prevents the possibility that exists = is computed.
 For example comp entails the existence of many non computable functions,
 incompleteness, etc. That is what theoretical computer science illustrates
 (usually by diagonalization).


 Incompleteness is the *non-existence* of some proofs.  That some functions
 are not-computable only implies their existence in the sense that they are
 implied by some axioms.



 Now, the reverse, that is, computed = exists, is trivially true, with
 exists used in the usual arithmetical sense, like in prime numbers
 exists.


 But it also entails that The World of Warcraft and what I dreamed 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-12 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 11 May 2011, at 19:28, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/11/2011 1:56 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:



On 10 May 2011, at 20:11, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/10/2011 9:01 AM, David Nyman wrote:

On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchalmarc...@ulb.ac.be  wrote:



What does it mean for numbers to understand?

Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it  
means the

same things for the numbers.


This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that  
it

is not IN FACT conscious (!).


How does he establish that it is not conscious?


This alone should be enough (as indeed
he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as  
Deutsch
argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It  
seems as

if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully  
IMO);

the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations)  
must
emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence,  
if

computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
likewise suffice as that of the material.


The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed  
does not entail computed = exists and if you hypothesize the  
latter it explains too much.


But comp precisely prevents the possibility that exists = is  
computed. For example comp entails the existence of many non  
computable functions, incompleteness, etc. That is what theoretical  
computer science illustrates (usually by diagonalization).


Incompleteness is the non-existence of some proofs.


... of some proof of some arithmetical truth. Yes, and ...?



That some functions are not-computable only implies their existence  
in the sense that they are implied by some axioms.




Now, the reverse, that is, computed = exists, is trivially true,  
with exists used in the usual arithmetical sense, like in prime  
numbers exists.


But it also entails that The World of Warcraft and what I dreamed  
last night exist.


This is already the case with Everett. The interesting question is not  
what exist, but what is accessible with reasonable probabilities from  
my current situation. And here comp does not explains too much. It  
might still predict too much, but the point is that comp is precise  
enough to make this testable, and that up to now, it explains pretty  
well the origin of QM, and the existence of qualia which QM per se  
even fails to address.


Bruno



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



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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-11 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 10 May 2011, at 20:11, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/10/2011 9:01 AM, David Nyman wrote:

On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchalmarc...@ulb.ac.be  wrote:



What does it mean for numbers to understand?

Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it  
means the

same things for the numbers.


This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
is not IN FACT conscious (!).


How does he establish that it is not conscious?


This alone should be enough (as indeed
he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as  
Deutsch
argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It seems  
as

if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully IMO);
the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations) must
emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence, if
computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
likewise suffice as that of the material.


The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed  
does not entail computed = exists and if you hypothesize the  
latter it explains too much.


But comp precisely prevents the possibility that exists = is  
computed. For example comp entails the existence of many non  
computable functions, incompleteness, etc. That is what theoretical  
computer science illustrates (usually by diagonalization).


Now, the reverse, that is, computed = exists, is trivially true,  
with exists used in the usual arithmetical sense, like in prime  
numbers exists.


And this entails (and explains) the appearance of the physical  
universe, but in a derived and most sophisticated higher order  
(epistemological) sense, not in the arithmetical sense (indeed the  
physical universe become a non trivial and non computable object,  
obeying partially computable laws, etc.


Bruno

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



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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-11 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 11 May 2011, at 00:29, John Mikes wrote:


Hi, Bruno,
excuse me for getting lost between you and Brent. You are absolutely  
right: I did not follow, study and understand those many thousand  
pages of discussions over the more than a decade on this list,  
together with the many tenthousand pages (not) learned to understand  
them. Indeed I am out of the vocabulary.


Those are redundant explanation of the content of the sane04 paper,  
which is about 20 pages long.






Here are some little nitpicks I feel I can respond to:
you wrote:
 ? (I guess you are trivializing the notion of consciousness).  
You might be right, but with comp the light switch is a non well  
defined object, like any piece of matter. So what you say is not  
false, but senseless.

\
I was trying to trivialize Brent's robot, as you identified: 'any  
piece of matter'. And my example was trivial, in such respect.
About my inquiry for consciousness: I questioned WHAT ARE WE  
TALKING ABOUT?

your reply:

...Indeed, comp does solve the 'hard problem', up to a reduction of  
physics to a modality of universal machine's self-reference (making  
the theory testable).


does not enlighten me: a modality of universal machine's self  
reference draws my question:

WHAT modality?


The modality of Gödel's provability predicate, and its (8) intensional  
variants (which I used also in my arithmetical intepretation of  
Platinus/Plato).






HOW does that self reference work?


It is a chapter of theoretical computer science.





Testability is not an argument, it may be a way TO an argument. Did  
the hard problem change from its original content which was the  
topical identification of physical data measurable in our neuronal  
system? (Mind-Body?)


Yes. the mind-body problem is reduced into an explanation of the  
illusion of bodies in the dream by numbers (we *assume* comp, and a  
dream is an infinity of computations in the universal dovetailing).





(Plus: as I recall you were not too concrete about our knowledge of  
the universal Machine either).


Ask precision. But all this is standard theoretical computer science.





LIFE in my views is not biological, biology (and other life  
sciences) try to get a handle on CERTAIN aspects we select in the  
generality we may call 'life'.


Biology is the science of life. It is not life itself, of course. all  
science can only grasp tiny aspect of what they are studying.




I think we agreed that there is no such thing as The TRUTH - there  
are tenets you or me may accept as 'true' in some sense.
I think I already sent you my 'draft' about Science-Religion about  
belief systems.


But I do believe in The Truth. I don't know it, of course, that is  
why I propose assumption and reasoning.


Best,

Bruno



On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 8:39 AM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be  
wrote:

Hi John,

On 09 May 2011, at 21:35, John Mikes wrote:

A stimulating discussion, indeed. I side with Brent in most of his  
remarks and question SOME of Bruno's in my 'unfounded' agnostic  
worldview of 'some' complexity of unrestricted everything - beyond  
our capabilities to grasp.

Which IMO does not agree with Bruno's
I don't think this hard problem is soluble.


It is not Bruno's, but Brent's.



Looking at the inductive 'evolution' in our epistemology my  
agnosticism seems more optimistic than this.



Indeed, comp does solve the 'hard problem', up to a reduction of  
physics to a modality of universal machine's self-reference (making  
the theory testable).




Within our present capabilities is missing from the statement, but  
our capabilities increased constantly - not only by the  
introduction of 'zero' in math or the Solar system (1st grade  
cosmology) of Copernicus. I do not restrict the grand kids of the  
grand kids of our grand kids. I lived through an epoch from right  
after candlelight with horses into MIR, the e-mail and DNA.

I would not guess 'what's next'.

To retort  Brent's AI-robot I mention a trivial example: I have a  
light-switch on my wall that is conscious about lighting up the  
bulbs whenever it gets flipped its button to 'up'.


?



It does not know that 'I am' doing that, but does what it 'knows'.


? (I guess you are trivializing the notion of consciousness). You  
might be right, but with comp the light switch is a non well defined  
object, like any piece of matter. So what you say is not false, but  
senseless.





The rest is similar, at different levels of complexity - the Mars  
robot still not coming close to 'my' idea-churning or Bruno's math.


And IMO biology is not 'reduced to chemistry (which is reduced to  
physics)' - only the PART we consider has a (partial?) explanation  
in those reduced sciences, with neglected other phenomena outside  
such explanatory restrictions. Just as 'life' is not within  
biology, which may be closer to it than chemistry. or physics, but  
genetics is further on and still not 'life'.


What is life? I think that 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-11 Thread meekerdb

On 5/11/2011 1:56 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 10 May 2011, at 20:11, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/10/2011 9:01 AM, David Nyman wrote:

On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchalmarc...@ulb.ac.be  wrote:



What does it mean for numbers to understand?

Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it 
means the

same things for the numbers.


This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
is not IN FACT conscious (!).


How does he establish that it is not conscious?


This alone should be enough (as indeed
he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as Deutsch
argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It seems as
if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully IMO);
the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations) must
emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence, if
computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
likewise suffice as that of the material.


The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed 
does not entail computed = exists and if you hypothesize the 
latter it explains too much.


But comp precisely prevents the possibility that exists = is 
computed. For example comp entails the existence of many non 
computable functions, incompleteness, etc. That is what theoretical 
computer science illustrates (usually by diagonalization).


Incompleteness is the *non-existence* of some proofs.  That some 
functions are not-computable only implies their existence in the sense 
that they are implied by some axioms.




Now, the reverse, that is, computed = exists, is trivially true, 
with exists used in the usual arithmetical sense, like in prime 
numbers exists.


But it also entails that The World of Warcraft and what I dreamed last 
night exist.


Brent



And this entails (and explains) the appearance of the physical 
universe, but in a derived and most sophisticated higher order 
(epistemological) sense, not in the arithmetical sense (indeed the 
physical universe become a non trivial and non computable object, 
obeying partially computable laws, etc.


Bruno

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





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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-10 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 May 2011, at 20:30, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/9/2011 11:00 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 May 2011, at 18:57, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in  
our human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we  
cannot pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of  
complexity usable in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not -  
be only according to their number of neurons as our  
conventional sciences teach. Or some may use senses we are  
deficient in, maybe totally ignorant about. (We have a  
deficient smelling sense as compared to a dog and missing  
orientation's senses of some birds, fish, turtle)
In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human  
observations are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight
John.


Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities;  
even within the self-awareness there are different kinds.  
Referring to my favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a  
rover has awareness of it's position on the planet.  It has  
awareness of it's battery charge and the functionality of  
various subsystems.  It has awareness of its immediate goal  
(climb over that hill) and of some longer mission (proceed to  
the gully and take a soil sample).  It's not aware of where  
these goals arise (as humans are not aware of why they fall in  
love).  It's not aware of it's origins or construction.  It's  
not a social creature, so it's not aware of it's position in a  
society or of what others may think of it.


I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see  
that it is a complex of many things, just as when we came to  
understand life we found that it is a complex of many different  
processes.


Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the  
notion of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we  
can reduce a third person describable phenomenon to another one  
(for example we can argue that biology is in principle reduced to  
chemistry, which is reduced to physics). For consciousness there  
is an hard problem, which is the mind-body problem, and most  
people working on the subject agree that it needs another sort of  
explanation. Then comp shows that indeed, part of that problem,  
is that if we use the traditional mechanistic rationale, we  
inherit the need of reducing physics to number theory and  
intensional number theory, with a need to explicitly distinguish  
first person and third person distinction. In a sense, the hard  
problem of consciousness leads to an hard problem of  
matter (the first person measure problem). Of course, I do think  
that mathematical logic put much light on all of this, especially  
the self-reference logics. Indeed, it makes the problem a purely  
mathematical problem, and it shows quanta to be a particular case  
of qualia. So we can say that comp has already solved the  
conceptual problem of the origin of the coupling consciousness/ 
matter, unless someone can shows that too much white rabbits  
remains predictible and that normalization of them is impossible,  
in which case comp is refuted.


Bruno


I don't see that reducing consciousness to mathematics is any  
different than reducing it to physics.


It is more easy to explain the illusion of matter to an immaterial  
consciousness, than to explain the non-illusion of consciousness to  
something material.


Consciousness can be explained by fixed point property of number  
transformation, in relation to truth, and this explains 99% of  
consciousness (belief in a reality) and 100% of the illusion of  
matter, which is really the illusion that some particular universal  
number plays a particular role.


Each time I demand a physicist to explain what is matter, he can  
only give to me an equation relating numbers. With math, it is  
different, we have all relation between numbers, and we can  
understand, by listening to them, why some relation will take the  
form of particular universal number, having very long and deep  
computations, and why they will be taken statistically as  
describing a universe or a multiverses.





Aren't you are still left with the hard problem which now  
becomes Why do these number relations produce consciousness?.


Not true. The math explains why some number relatively to other  
numbers develop a belief in a reality, and it explains why such a  
belief separates into a communicable part and a non communicable  
part. This is entirely explained by the G/G* splitting and their  
modal variant (based on the classical theory of knowledge).






I don't think this hard problem is soluble.


An explanation gap remains, but then those number can understand  
why an explanation gap has to 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-10 Thread Bruno Marchal

Hi John,

On 09 May 2011, at 21:35, John Mikes wrote:

A stimulating discussion, indeed. I side with Brent in most of his  
remarks and question SOME of Bruno's in my 'unfounded' agnostic  
worldview of 'some' complexity of unrestricted everything - beyond  
our capabilities to grasp.

Which IMO does not agree with Bruno's
I don't think this hard problem is soluble.


It is not Bruno's, but Brent's.



Looking at the inductive 'evolution' in our epistemology my  
agnosticism seems more optimistic than this.



Indeed, comp does solve the 'hard problem', up to a reduction of  
physics to a modality of universal machine's self-reference (making  
the theory testable).




Within our present capabilities is missing from the statement, but  
our capabilities increased constantly - not only by the introduction  
of 'zero' in math or the Solar system (1st grade cosmology) of  
Copernicus. I do not restrict the grand kids of the grand kids of  
our grand kids. I lived through an epoch from right after  
candlelight with horses into MIR, the e-mail and DNA.

I would not guess 'what's next'.

To retort  Brent's AI-robot I mention a trivial example: I have a  
light-switch on my wall that is conscious about lighting up the  
bulbs whenever it gets flipped its button to 'up'.


?



It does not know that 'I am' doing that, but does what it 'knows'.


? (I guess you are trivializing the notion of consciousness). You  
might be right, but with comp the light switch is a non well defined  
object, like any piece of matter. So what you say is not false, but  
senseless.





The rest is similar, at different levels of complexity - the Mars  
robot still not coming close to 'my' idea-churning or Bruno's math.


And IMO biology is not 'reduced to chemistry (which is reduced to  
physics)' - only the PART we consider has a (partial?) explanation  
in those reduced sciences, with neglected other phenomena outside  
such explanatory restrictions. Just as 'life' is not within biology,  
which may be closer to it than chemistry. or physics, but genetics  
is further on and still not 'life'.


What is life? I think that here it is just a question of vocabulary,  
unless you think about a precise biological phenomenon which would  
escape the actual theories? In science we bever pretend to know the  
truth, but we have to take the theories seriously enough if only to  
find the discrepancy with the facts.
Of course, since theology has been taking out of science, many  
scientist (more than I thought when young) have a theological  
interpretation of science (and some without knowing it). They are  
doubly wrong of course.




Yes, consciousness - the historic word applied by many who did not  
know what they are talking about and applied it in the sense needed  
to 'apply' to THEIR OWN theoretical needs - is an artifact not  
identifiable, unless we reach an agreement WHAT IT IS  (if it IS  
indeed).


Here I totally disagree. We cannot define in 3p terms what is  
consciousness, but we know pretty well what it is. We dispose of many,  
many, many, personal examples, and that is enough for knowing what it  
is, even if we cannot define it. The comp theory explains entirely  
what it is, and why we cannot define it. It explains also why it has  
to be, and what role it has in the origin of the physical realm.




In my wording the complexity that defines many of the applicable  
tenets form some PROCESS(es), not a mathematically identifiable  
expression - nor 'awareness' as in another domain. The 'hard  
problem' is still open.


I don't think so. I am not sure you have study the posts, or the  
paper, where the solution is explained. If you do, I will ask you to  
tell us what is missing.





We need a new insight.
We are hindered by too much mental blockage due to accepted  
(believed? calculated?) hearsay assumptions and their consequences.  
We 'guess' what we do not know.


We always guess what we do not know. Always. The rest is authoritative  
argument, or argument by authority.


Bruno





You see, I should keep my mouse shut...

John





On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 2:30 PM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:
On 5/9/2011 11:00 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

On 09 May 2011, at 18:57, meekerdb wrote:

On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:

On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:
Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our  
human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot  
pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity  
usable in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only  
according to their number of neurons as our conventional sciences  
teach. Or some may use senses we are deficient in, maybe totally  
ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling sense as compared to a  
dog and missing orientation's 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-10 Thread David Nyman
On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:

 What does it mean for numbers to understand?

 Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it means the
 same things for the numbers.

This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
is not IN FACT conscious (!).  This alone should be enough (as indeed
he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as Deutsch
argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It seems as
if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully IMO);
the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations) must
emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence, if
computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
likewise suffice as that of the material.  From this perspective, as
you say, it is then of the essence that any explanation must mean the
same things for the numbers as it does for me.

David


 On 09 May 2011, at 20:30, meekerdb wrote:

 On 5/9/2011 11:00 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

 On 09 May 2011, at 18:57, meekerdb wrote:

 On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:

 On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:

 On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

 Thanks, Russell,
 I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
 HOWEVER:
 We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our
 human terms and views.
 Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot
 pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity usable in
 their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only according to their 
 number
 of neurons as our conventional sciences teach. Or some may use senses 
 we are
 deficient in, maybe totally ignorant about. (We have a deficient 
 smelling
 sense as compared to a dog and missing orientation's senses of some 
 birds,
 fish, turtle)
 In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human
 observations are 'real'.
 Thanks for setting me straight
 John.

 Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities; even
 within the self-awareness there are different kinds. Referring to my
 favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a rover has awareness of it's
 position on the planet.  It has awareness of it's battery charge and the
 functionality of various subsystems.  It has awareness of its immediate 
 goal
 (climb over that hill) and of some longer mission (proceed to the gully 
 and
 take a soil sample).  It's not aware of where these goals arise (as 
 humans
 are not aware of why they fall in love).  It's not aware of it's origins 
 or
 construction.  It's not a social creature, so it's not aware of it's
 position in a society or of what others may think of it.

 I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see that
 it is a complex of many things, just as when we came to understand life 
 we
 found that it is a complex of many different processes.

 Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the notion
 of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we can reduce a 
 third
 person describable phenomenon to another one (for example we can argue 
 that
 biology is in principle reduced to chemistry, which is reduced to 
 physics).
 For consciousness there is an hard problem, which is the mind-body 
 problem,
 and most people working on the subject agree that it needs another sort of
 explanation. Then comp shows that indeed, part of that problem, is that if
 we use the traditional mechanistic rationale, we inherit the need of
 reducing physics to number theory and intensional number theory, with a 
 need
 to explicitly distinguish first person and third person distinction. In a
 sense, the hard problem of consciousness leads to an hard problem of
 matter (the first person measure problem). Of course, I do think that
 mathematical logic put much light on all of this, especially the
 self-reference logics. Indeed, it makes the problem a purely mathematical
 problem, and it shows quanta to be a particular case of qualia. So we can
 say that comp has already solved the conceptual problem of the origin of 
 the
 coupling consciousness/matter, unless someone can shows that too much 
 white
 rabbits remains predictible and that normalization of them is impossible, 
 in
 which case comp is refuted.

 Bruno

 I don't see that reducing consciousness to mathematics is any different
 than 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-10 Thread meekerdb

On 5/10/2011 9:01 AM, David Nyman wrote:

On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchalmarc...@ulb.ac.be  wrote:



What does it mean for numbers to understand?


Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it means the
same things for the numbers.


This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
is not IN FACT conscious (!).


How does he establish that it is not conscious?


This alone should be enough (as indeed
he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as Deutsch
argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It seems as
if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully IMO);
the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations) must
emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence, if
computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
likewise suffice as that of the material.


The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed does not entail 
computed = exists and if you hypothesize the latter it explains too much.


Brent


 From this perspective, as
you say, it is then of the essence that any explanation must mean the
same things for the numbers as it does for me.

David





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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-10 Thread David Nyman
On 10 May 2011 19:11, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:

 This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
 convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
 behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
 indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
 is not IN FACT conscious (!).

 How does he establish that it is not conscious?

Sorry if this wasn't clear.  In this context, by Aristotelian
machine I simply meant Chalmers' zombie.  It's unconscious by
stipulation, i.e. he points out that the ascription of first-person
consciousness is inessential to a complete (in principle) account of
its (or indeed our) behaviour in third-person terms.

 The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed does not
 entail computed = exists and if you hypothesize the latter it explains
 too much.

The critical issue would indeed seem to be whether when you
hypothesize the latter it explains too much.  If so, then I guess by
Bruno's lights comp would be refuted (i.e the conjunction of CTM and a
primitive material TOE).

David

 On 5/10/2011 9:01 AM, David Nyman wrote:

 On 10 May 2011 13:21, Bruno Marchalmarc...@ulb.ac.be  wrote:


 What does it mean for numbers to understand?

 Suppose I can answer this in a way that you understand. Then it means the
 same things for the numbers.

 This seems to me to be a very central point.  Chalmers gives very
 convincing arguments why an Aristotelian machine's expressed
 behaviour (including its thoughts and beliefs) are
 indistinguishable from a conscious person's - excepting only that it
 is not IN FACT conscious (!).

 How does he establish that it is not conscious?

 This alone should be enough (as indeed
 he argues) to demonstrate the inadequacy of such a metaphysics of
 matter, unless consciousness itself is to be denied (which, as Deutsch
 argues in his most recent book, is just bad explanation).  It seems as
 if, starting from an Aristotelian perspective, there is no way this
 puzzle can be resolved even with the addition of various ad hoc
 assumptions (such as Chalmers himself attempts, unsuccessfully IMO);
 the assumed primacy of material processes inevitably ends in the
 vitiation of mental explanation, in this view of the matter.  To
 resolve the puzzle it seems that material processes and mental
 processes (or, one might say, material and mental explanations) must
 emerge as deeply correlated aspects of a single narrative. Hence, if
 computationalism is to be the explanation for the mental, it must
 likewise suffice as that of the material.

 The problem with computationalism is that exists = is computed does not
 entail computed = exists and if you hypothesize the latter it explains
 too much.

 Brent

  From this perspective, as
 you say, it is then of the essence that any explanation must mean the
 same things for the numbers as it does for me.

 David




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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-10 Thread John Mikes
Hi, Bruno,
excuse me for getting lost between you and Brent. You are absolutely right:
I did not follow, study and understand those many thousand pages of
discussions over the more than a decade on this list, together with the many
tenthousand pages (not) learned to understand them. Indeed I am out of the
vocabulary.

Here are some little nitpicks I feel I can respond to:
you wrote:
 *? (I guess you are trivializing the notion of consciousness). You
might be right, but with comp the light switch is a non well defined object,
like any piece of matter. So what you say is not false, but senseless*.
\
I was trying to trivialize Brent's robot, as you identified: 'any piece of
matter'. And my example was trivial, in such respect.
About my inquiry for consciousness: I questioned *WHAT ARE WE TALKING
ABOUT?*
your reply:

*...Indeed, comp does solve the 'hard problem', up to a reduction of
physics to a modality of universal machine's self-reference (making the
theory testable).*

does not enlighten me: a modality of universal machine's self reference
draws my question:
*WHAT *modality? *HOW* does that self reference work? *Testability* is not
an argument, it may be a way *TO* an argument. Did the hard problem change
from its original content which was the topical identification of physical
data measurable in our neuronal system? (Mind-Body?)
(Plus: as I recall you were not too concrete about our knowledge of the
universal Machine either).

*LIFE* in my views is not biological, biology (and other life sciences) try
to get a handle on CERTAIN aspects we select in the generality we may call
'life'.
I think we agreed that there is no such thing as *The TRUTH -* there are
tenets you or me may accept as 'true' in some sense.
I think I already sent you my 'draft' about Science-Religion about belief
systems.

Have a good time

John M



On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 8:39 AM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:

 Hi John,

  On 09 May 2011, at 21:35, John Mikes wrote:

  A stimulating discussion, indeed. I side with Brent in most of his
 remarks and question SOME of Bruno's in my 'unfounded' agnostic worldview of
 'some' complexity of unrestricted everything - beyond our capabilities to
 grasp.
 Which IMO does not agree with Bruno's
* I don't think this hard problem is soluble. *


 It is not Bruno's, but Brent's.



  Looking at the inductive 'evolution' in our epistemology my agnosticism
 seems more optimistic than this.



 Indeed, comp does solve the 'hard problem', up to a reduction of physics to
 a modality of universal machine's self-reference (making the theory
 testable).



  Within our present capabilities is missing from the statement, but our
 capabilities increased constantly - not only by the introduction of 'zero'
 in math or the Solar system (1st grade cosmology) of Copernicus. I do not
 restrict the grand kids of the grand kids of our grand kids. I lived through
 an epoch from right after candlelight with horses into MIR, the e-mail and
 DNA.
 I would not guess 'what's next'.

 To retort  Brent's AI-robot I mention a trivial example: I have a
 light-switch on my wall that is *conscious* about lighting up the bulbs
 whenever it gets flipped its button to 'up'.


 ?


  It does not know that 'I am' doing that, but does what it 'knows'.


 ? (I guess you are trivializing the notion of consciousness). You might be
 right, but with comp the light switch is a non well defined object, like any
 piece of matter. So what you say is not false, but senseless.




  The rest is similar, at different levels of complexity - the Mars robot
 still not coming close to 'my' idea-churning or Bruno's math.

 And IMO biology is not 'reduced to chemistry (which is reduced to physics)'
 - only the *PART we consider* has a (partial?) explanation in those
 reduced sciences, with neglected other phenomena outside such explanatory
 restrictions. Just as 'life' is not *within* biology, which may be closer
 to it than chemistry. or physics, but genetics is further on and still not
 'life'.


 What is life? I think that here it is just a question of vocabulary, unless
 you think about a precise biological phenomenon which would escape the
 actual theories? In science we bever pretend to know the truth, but we have
 to take the theories seriously enough if only to find the discrepancy with
 the facts.
 Of course, since theology has been taking out of science, many scientist
 (more than I thought when young) have a theological interpretation of
 science (and some without knowing it). They are doubly wrong of course.



  Yes, consciousness - the historic word applied by many who did not know
 what they are talking about and applied it in the sense needed to 'apply' to
 *THEIR OWN* theoretical needs - is an artifact not identifiable, unless we
 reach an agreement *WHAT IT IS*  (if it IS indeed).


 Here I totally disagree. We cannot define in 3p terms what is
 consciousness, but we know pretty well what it is. We dispose of many, 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-09 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our  
human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot  
pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity  
usable in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only  
according to their number of neurons as our conventional sciences  
teach. Or some may use senses we are deficient in, maybe totally  
ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling sense as compared to  
a dog and missing orientation's senses of some birds, fish, turtle)
In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human  
observations are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight
John.


Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities; even  
within the self-awareness there are different kinds. Referring to  
my favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a rover has awareness  
of it's position on the planet.  It has awareness of it's battery  
charge and the functionality of various subsystems.  It has  
awareness of its immediate goal (climb over that hill) and of some  
longer mission (proceed to the gully and take a soil sample).  It's  
not aware of where these goals arise (as humans are not aware of why  
they fall in love).  It's not aware of it's origins or  
construction.  It's not a social creature, so it's not aware of it's  
position in a society or of what others may think of it.


I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see that  
it is a complex of many things, just as when we came to understand  
life we found that it is a complex of many different processes.


Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the notion  
of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we can reduce a  
third person describable phenomenon to another one (for example we can  
argue that biology is in principle reduced to chemistry, which is  
reduced to physics). For consciousness there is an hard problem, which  
is the mind-body problem, and most people working on the subject agree  
that it needs another sort of explanation. Then comp shows that  
indeed, part of that problem, is that if we use the traditional  
mechanistic rationale, we inherit the need of reducing physics to  
number theory and intensional number theory, with a need to explicitly  
distinguish first person and third person distinction. In a sense, the  
hard problem of consciousness leads to an hard problem of  
matter (the first person measure problem). Of course, I do think that  
mathematical logic put much light on all of this, especially the self- 
reference logics. Indeed, it makes the problem a purely mathematical  
problem, and it shows quanta to be a particular case of qualia. So we  
can say that comp has already solved the conceptual problem of the  
origin of the coupling consciousness/matter, unless someone can shows  
that too much white rabbits remains predictible and that normalization  
of them is impossible, in which case comp is refuted.


Bruno


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



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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-09 Thread meekerdb

On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our 
human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot 
pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity 
usable in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only 
according to their number of neurons as our conventional sciences 
teach. Or some may use senses we are deficient in, maybe totally 
ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling sense as compared to a 
dog and missing orientation's senses of some birds, fish, turtle)
In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human 
observations are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight
John.


Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities; even 
within the self-awareness there are different kinds. Referring to 
my favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a rover has awareness 
of it's position on the planet.  It has awareness of it's battery 
charge and the functionality of various subsystems.  It has awareness 
of its immediate goal (climb over that hill) and of some longer 
mission (proceed to the gully and take a soil sample).  It's not 
aware of where these goals arise (as humans are not aware of why they 
fall in love).  It's not aware of it's origins or construction.  It's 
not a social creature, so it's not aware of it's position in a 
society or of what others may think of it.


I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see that 
it is a complex of many things, just as when we came to understand 
life we found that it is a complex of many different processes.


Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the notion 
of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we can reduce a 
third person describable phenomenon to another one (for example we can 
argue that biology is in principle reduced to chemistry, which is 
reduced to physics). For consciousness there is an hard problem, which 
is the mind-body problem, and most people working on the subject agree 
that it needs another sort of explanation. Then comp shows that 
indeed, part of that problem, is that if we use the traditional 
mechanistic rationale, we inherit the need of reducing physics to 
number theory and intensional number theory, with a need to explicitly 
distinguish first person and third person distinction. In a sense, the 
hard problem of consciousness leads to an hard problem of matter 
(the first person measure problem). Of course, I do think that 
mathematical logic put much light on all of this, especially the 
self-reference logics. Indeed, it makes the problem a purely 
mathematical problem, and it shows quanta to be a particular case of 
qualia. So we can say that comp has already solved the conceptual 
problem of the origin of the coupling consciousness/matter, unless 
someone can shows that too much white rabbits remains predictible and 
that normalization of them is impossible, in which case comp is refuted.


Bruno


I don't see that reducing consciousness to mathematics is any different 
than reducing it to physics.  Aren't you are still left with the hard 
problem which now becomes Why do these number relations produce 
consciousness?.  I don't think this hard problem is soluble.  Rather 
what can be solved is how to make devices, like intelligent Mars Rovers 
and parts of brains the doctor can insert, which act conscious.  And 
further to understand which computations correspond to different kinds 
of thoughts, such as awareness of self as a part of society or 
feeling of guilt or  I'm in Moscow.  When we have that kind of 
engineering mastery of AI, the hard problem will be seen as a 
simplistic, archaic wrong question.


Brent

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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-09 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 09 May 2011, at 18:57, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in  
our human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot  
pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity  
usable in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only  
according to their number of neurons as our conventional sciences  
teach. Or some may use senses we are deficient in, maybe totally  
ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling sense as compared  
to a dog and missing orientation's senses of some birds, fish,  
turtle)
In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human  
observations are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight
John.


Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities;  
even within the self-awareness there are different kinds.  
Referring to my favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a  
rover has awareness of it's position on the planet.  It has  
awareness of it's battery charge and the functionality of various  
subsystems.  It has awareness of its immediate goal (climb over  
that hill) and of some longer mission (proceed to the gully and  
take a soil sample).  It's not aware of where these goals arise  
(as humans are not aware of why they fall in love).  It's not  
aware of it's origins or construction.  It's not a social  
creature, so it's not aware of it's position in a society or of  
what others may think of it.


I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see  
that it is a complex of many things, just as when we came to  
understand life we found that it is a complex of many different  
processes.


Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the  
notion of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we  
can reduce a third person describable phenomenon to another one  
(for example we can argue that biology is in principle reduced to  
chemistry, which is reduced to physics). For consciousness there is  
an hard problem, which is the mind-body problem, and most people  
working on the subject agree that it needs another sort of  
explanation. Then comp shows that indeed, part of that problem, is  
that if we use the traditional mechanistic rationale, we inherit  
the need of reducing physics to number theory and intensional  
number theory, with a need to explicitly distinguish first person  
and third person distinction. In a sense, the hard problem of  
consciousness leads to an hard problem of matter (the first  
person measure problem). Of course, I do think that mathematical  
logic put much light on all of this, especially the self-reference  
logics. Indeed, it makes the problem a purely mathematical problem,  
and it shows quanta to be a particular case of qualia. So we can  
say that comp has already solved the conceptual problem of the  
origin of the coupling consciousness/matter, unless someone can  
shows that too much white rabbits remains predictible and that  
normalization of them is impossible, in which case comp is refuted.


Bruno


I don't see that reducing consciousness to mathematics is any  
different than reducing it to physics.


It is more easy to explain the illusion of matter to an immaterial  
consciousness, than to explain the non-illusion of consciousness to  
something material.


Consciousness can be explained by fixed point property of number  
transformation, in relation to truth, and this explains 99% of  
consciousness (belief in a reality) and 100% of the illusion of  
matter, which is really the illusion that some particular universal  
number plays a particular role.


Each time I demand a physicist to explain what is matter, he can only  
give to me an equation relating numbers. With math, it is different,  
we have all relation between numbers, and we can understand, by  
listening to them, why some relation will take the form of particular  
universal number, having very long and deep computations, and why they  
will be taken statistically as describing a universe or a multiverses.





Aren't you are still left with the hard problem which now becomes  
Why do these number relations produce consciousness?.


Not true. The math explains why some number relatively to other  
numbers develop a belief in a reality, and it explains why such a  
belief separates into a communicable part and a non communicable part.  
This is entirely explained by the G/G* splitting and their modal  
variant (based on the classical theory of knowledge).






 I don't think this hard problem is soluble.


An explanation gap remains, but then those number can understand why  
an explanation gap has to remain, for purely logical reason. This  
explain why we do feel that there is something non 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-09 Thread meekerdb

On 5/9/2011 11:00 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 09 May 2011, at 18:57, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:


On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our 
human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot 
pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity 
usable in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only 
according to their number of neurons as our conventional sciences 
teach. Or some may use senses we are deficient in, maybe totally 
ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling sense as compared to 
a dog and missing orientation's senses of some birds, fish, turtle)
In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human 
observations are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight
John.


Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities; 
even within the self-awareness there are different kinds. 
Referring to my favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a rover 
has awareness of it's position on the planet.  It has awareness of 
it's battery charge and the functionality of various subsystems.  
It has awareness of its immediate goal (climb over that hill) and 
of some longer mission (proceed to the gully and take a soil 
sample).  It's not aware of where these goals arise (as humans are 
not aware of why they fall in love).  It's not aware of it's 
origins or construction.  It's not a social creature, so it's not 
aware of it's position in a society or of what others may think of it.


I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see 
that it is a complex of many things, just as when we came to 
understand life we found that it is a complex of many different 
processes.


Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the 
notion of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we can 
reduce a third person describable phenomenon to another one (for 
example we can argue that biology is in principle reduced to 
chemistry, which is reduced to physics). For consciousness there is 
an hard problem, which is the mind-body problem, and most people 
working on the subject agree that it needs another sort of 
explanation. Then comp shows that indeed, part of that problem, is 
that if we use the traditional mechanistic rationale, we inherit 
the need of reducing physics to number theory and intensional number 
theory, with a need to explicitly distinguish first person and third 
person distinction. In a sense, the hard problem of consciousness 
leads to an hard problem of matter (the first person measure 
problem). Of course, I do think that mathematical logic put much 
light on all of this, especially the self-reference logics. Indeed, 
it makes the problem a purely mathematical problem, and it shows 
quanta to be a particular case of qualia. So we can say that comp 
has already solved the conceptual problem of the origin of the 
coupling consciousness/matter, unless someone can shows that too 
much white rabbits remains predictible and that normalization of 
them is impossible, in which case comp is refuted.


Bruno


I don't see that reducing consciousness to mathematics is any 
different than reducing it to physics.


It is more easy to explain the illusion of matter to an immaterial 
consciousness, than to explain the non-illusion of consciousness to 
something material.


Consciousness can be explained by fixed point property of number 
transformation, in relation to truth, and this explains 99% of 
consciousness (belief in a reality) and 100% of the illusion of 
matter, which is really the illusion that some particular universal 
number plays a particular role.


Each time I demand a physicist to explain what is matter, he can only 
give to me an equation relating numbers. With math, it is different, 
we have all relation between numbers, and we can understand, by 
listening to them, why some relation will take the form of particular 
universal number, having very long and deep computations, and why they 
will be taken statistically as describing a universe or a multiverses.





Aren't you are still left with the hard problem which now becomes 
Why do these number relations produce consciousness?.


Not true. The math explains why some number relatively to other 
numbers develop a belief in a reality, and it explains why such a 
belief separates into a communicable part and a non communicable part. 
This is entirely explained by the G/G* splitting and their modal 
variant (based on the classical theory of knowledge).






 I don't think this hard problem is soluble.


An explanation gap remains, but then those number can understand why 
an explanation gap has to remain, 


What does it mean for numbers to understand?  I take it you mean for 
something like a Godel 

Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-09 Thread John Mikes
A stimulating discussion, indeed. I side with Brent in most of his remarks
and question SOME of Bruno's in my 'unfounded' agnostic worldview of 'some'
complexity of unrestricted everything - beyond our capabilities to grasp.
Which IMO does not agree with Bruno's
   * I don't think this hard problem is soluble. *
Looking at the inductive 'evolution' in our epistemology my agnosticism
seems more optimistic than this. Within our present capabilities is missing
from the statement, but our capabilities increased constantly - not only by
the introduction of 'zero' in math or the Solar system (1st grade cosmology)
of Copernicus. I do not restrict the grand kids of the grand kids of our
grand kids. I lived through an epoch from right after candlelight with
horses into MIR, the e-mail and DNA.
I would not guess 'what's next'.

To retort  Brent's AI-robot I mention a trivial example: I have a
light-switch on my wall that is *conscious* about lighting up the bulbs
whenever it gets flipped its button to 'up'. It does not know that 'I am'
doing that, but does what it 'knows'. The rest is similar, at different
levels of complexity - the Mars robot still not coming close to 'my'
idea-churning or Bruno's math.

And IMO biology is not 'reduced to chemistry (which is reduced to physics)'
- only the *PART we consider* has a (partial?) explanation in those reduced
sciences, with neglected other phenomena outside such explanatory
restrictions. Just as 'life' is not *within* biology, which may be closer to
it than chemistry. or physics, but genetics is further on and still not
'life'.
Yes, consciousness - the historic word applied by many who did not know what
they are talking about and applied it in the sense needed to 'apply' to *THEIR
OWN* theoretical needs - is an artifact not identifiable, unless we reach an
agreement *WHAT IT IS*  (if it IS indeed).
In my wording the complexity that defines many of the applicable
tenets form some PROCESS(es), not a mathematically identifiable expression -
nor 'awareness' as in another domain. The 'hard problem' is still open. We
need a new insight.
We are hindered by too much mental blockage due to accepted (believed?
calculated?) hearsay assumptions and their consequences. We 'guess' what we
do not know.

You see, I should keep my mouse shut...

John





On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 2:30 PM, meekerdb meeke...@verizon.net wrote:

  On 5/9/2011 11:00 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


 On 09 May 2011, at 18:57, meekerdb wrote:

 On 5/9/2011 1:34 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:


 On 07 May 2011, at 19:36, meekerdb wrote:

 On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

 Thanks, Russell,
 I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
 HOWEVER:
 We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our
 human terms and views.
 Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot
 pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity usable in
 their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only according to their 
 number
 of neurons as our conventional sciences teach. Or some may use senses we 
 are
 deficient in, maybe totally ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling
 sense as compared to a dog and missing orientation's senses of some 
 birds,
 fish, turtle)
 In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human
 observations are 'real'.
 Thanks for setting me straight
 John.


 Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities; even
 within the self-awareness there are different kinds. Referring to my
 favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a rover has awareness of it's
 position on the planet.  It has awareness of it's battery charge and the
 functionality of various subsystems.  It has awareness of its immediate 
 goal
 (climb over that hill) and of some longer mission (proceed to the gully 
 and
 take a soil sample).  It's not aware of where these goals arise (as humans
 are not aware of why they fall in love).  It's not aware of it's origins 
 or
 construction.  It's not a social creature, so it's not aware of it's
 position in a society or of what others may think of it.

 I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see that it
 is a complex of many things, just as when we came to understand life we
 found that it is a complex of many different processes.


 Life and consciousness are different notion with respect to the notion
 of explanation we can find from them. In case of life, we can reduce a 
 third
 person describable phenomenon to another one (for example we can argue that
 biology is in principle reduced to chemistry, which is reduced to physics).
 For consciousness there is an hard problem, which is the mind-body problem,
 and most people working on the subject agree that it needs another sort of
 explanation. Then comp shows that indeed, part of that problem, is that if
 we use the traditional mechanistic rationale, we inherit the need of
 reducing physics to number theory and intensional number theory, with 

Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-07 Thread Bruno Marchal


On 06 May 2011, at 18:43, Brent Meeker wrote:[On the everything  
list]



On 5/5/2011 11:18 PM, Russell Standish wrote:

On Tue, May 03, 2011 at 03:31:50PM -0400, John Mikes wrote:


Russell,

this is my personal way of thinking in realization of the continual
epistemic enrichment what earlier authors missed. I do not vouch for
correctness of my ideas, they are like a level in an advancement I  
found
followable in view of the latest epistemic additions in a  
continuously

changing world(view).
Self-awareness is definitely at the level of human complexity.


There is evidence of self-awareness in a handful of other species,
including most of the great apes, bottlenose dolphins and asian
elephants. Many of these same species appear capable of developing
rudimentary language capability.

I would not be surprised to see a number of other species also show
evidence of self-awareness in time - including some birds, and maybe
even some cephalopods. However, I am also equally sure that most
species are incapable of it - too many species fail the tests we pose
of them.



Prof Russell Standish  Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)
Principal, High Performance Coders
Visiting Professor of Mathematics  hpco...@hpcoders.com.au
University of New South Wales  http://www.hpcoders.com.au




http://www.theonion.com/video/scientists-successfully-teach-gorilla-it-will-die,17165/


Hard to really conclude from one video, but it is still very  
interesting. I forward it on the FOR list where some people argue that  
non human animals are not conscious. This video illustrates that some  
non-human mammals might even be *self-conscious*, and thus probably  
Löbian.
Next step: we should give some salvia to the gorilla, so that he could  
begin to doubt the body-picture argument for their own end, because,  
in that video, the gorilla might just have been brainwashed to take  
its end for granted, from some (third person) pictures. This shows how  
much self-consciousness can delude us and makes us confusing first  
person views and third person descriptions. Of course such an illusion/ 
confusion are reasonable from a darwinian short term struggle of life  
perspective.
The more you have neurons, the more you *can* be deluded, and 'nature  
exploits that fact.


David Nyman replied:


On the other hand:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=beCYGm1vMJ0


Well, yes, this is definitely convincing :)

Bruno


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



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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-07 Thread John Mikes
Thanks, Russell,

I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our human
terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot pursue or
understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity usable in their
'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only according to their number of
neurons as our conventional sciences teach. Or some may use senses we are
deficient in, maybe totally ignorant about. (We have a deficient smelling
sense as compared to a dog and missing orientation's senses of some birds,
fish, turtle)

In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human observations
are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight

John.

On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 8:33 AM, Bruno Marchal marc...@ulb.ac.be wrote:


  On 06 May 2011, at 18:43, Brent Meeker wrote:[On the everything list]

  On 5/5/2011 11:18 PM, Russell Standish wrote:

 On Tue, May 03, 2011 at 03:31:50PM -0400, John Mikes wrote:



  Russell,


  this is my personal way of thinking in realization of the continual

  epistemic enrichment what earlier authors missed. I do not vouch for

  correctness of my ideas, they are like a level in an advancement I found

  followable in view of the latest epistemic additions in a continuously

  changing world(view).

  Self-awareness is definitely at the level of human complexity.



 There is evidence of self-awareness in a handful of other species,

 including most of the great apes, bottlenose dolphins and asian

 elephants. Many of these same species appear capable of developing

 rudimentary language capability.


 I would not be surprised to see a number of other species also show

 evidence of self-awareness in time - including some birds, and maybe

 even some cephalopods. However, I am also equally sure that most

 species are incapable of it - too many species fail the tests we pose

 of them.




 

 Prof Russell Standish  Phone 0425 253119 (mobile)

 Principal, High Performance Coders

 Visiting Professor of Mathematics  hpco...@hpcoders.com.au

 University of New South Wales  http://www.hpcoders.com.au


 





 http://www.theonion.com/video/scientists-successfully-teach-gorilla-it-will-die,17165/


 Hard to really conclude from one video, but it is still very interesting. I
 forward it on the FOR list where some people argue that non human animals
 are not conscious. This video illustrates that some non-human mammals might
 even be *self-conscious*, and thus probably Löbian.
 Next step: we should give some salvia to the gorilla, so that he could
 begin to doubt the body-picture argument for their own end, because, in
 that video, the gorilla might just have been brainwashed to take its end for
 granted, from some (third person) pictures. This shows how much
 self-consciousness can delude us and makes us confusing first person views
 and third person descriptions. Of course such an illusion/confusion are
 reasonable from a darwinian short term struggle of life perspective.
 The more you have neurons, the more you *can* be deluded, and 'nature
 exploits that fact.

 David Nyman replied:

  On the other hand:

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=beCYGm1vMJ0


 Well, yes, this is definitely convincing :)

 Bruno


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



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Re: Animal consciousness and self-consciousness (was Re: Self-aware = Consciousness?)

2011-05-07 Thread meekerdb

On 5/7/2011 8:19 AM, John Mikes wrote:

Thanks, Russell,
I am gladly standing corrected about our fellow smart animals.
HOWEVER:
We speak about a self-awareness as we, humans identify it in our 
human terms and views.
Maybe other animals have different mental capabilities we cannot 
pursue or understand, as adjusted to their level of complexity usable 
in their 'menatality'. It may - or may not - be only according to 
their number of neurons as our conventional sciences teach. Or some 
may use senses we are deficient in, maybe totally ignorant about. (We 
have a deficient smelling sense as compared to a dog and missing 
orientation's senses of some birds, fish, turtle)
In our anthropocentric boasting we believe that only our human 
observations are 'real'.

Thanks for setting me straight
John.


Not only do other species have different perceptual modalities; even 
within the self-awareness there are different kinds. Referring to my 
favorite example of the AI Mars rover, such a rover has awareness of 
it's position on the planet.  It has awareness of it's battery charge 
and the functionality of various subsystems.  It has awareness of its 
immediate goal (climb over that hill) and of some longer mission 
(proceed to the gully and take a soil sample).  It's not aware of where 
these goals arise (as humans are not aware of why they fall in love).  
It's not aware of it's origins or construction.  It's not a social 
creature, so it's not aware of it's position in a society or of what 
others may think of it.


I expect that when we have understood consciousness we will see that it 
is a complex of many things, just as when we came to understand life we 
found that it is a complex of many different processes.


Brent

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