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"Integrative Science”: The Death-Knell of Scientific Materialism?
various ^ | various | vanity with much help

Posted on 07/05/2003 4:20:08 PM PDT by betty boop

“Integrative Science”: The Death-Knell of Scientific Materialism?

A Meditation Excerpting from:
Toward an Integrative Science,” Menas Kefatos and Mihai Drãgãnescu;
The Fundamental Principles of the Universe and the Origin of Physical Laws,” Attila Grandpierre;
The Dynamics of Time and Timelessness: Philosophy, Physics and Prospects for Our Life,” Attila Grandpierre.

Kafatos is University Professor of Interdisciplinary Science, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Drãgãnescu is affiliated with the Romanian Academy, Bucharest, Romania.
Grandpierre is chief research assistant of the Konkoly Observatory of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary.


BEFORE WE EMBARK ON THIS “MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR,” we need some clarifications:

RE: Scientific Materialism: Harvard Genetics Professor Richard Lewontin (a Marxist, as Grandpierre takes pains to point out) writes:
 

We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counterintuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is absolute….

In other words, matter in its motions is assumed to be (against all reason, if need be) the ultimate basis of Reality. The corollary to this is that nothing can exist that is not explainable on the basis of purely material causes arising within normal space-time. All phenomena of life can be explained by physical laws governing electromagnetism, gravity, chemistry, and quantum fields. Anything not explicable on that basis is held a priori not to exist. Consciousness is not any kind of natural principle in its own right, but is merely the epiphenomenon of the electrochemical activity of a (more or less random) succession of brain states.

RE: Integrative Science: According to Kefatos and Drãgãnescu (et al.), consciousness is “the last great frontier of science.” The “integrative science” of which they speak is both structural (“Standard Model” quantum mechanics; i.e., quantum theory as “renormalized” for Einsteinian Relativity) and phenomenological (having to do with qualia; i.e., subjective experience, sensations, feelings, thoughts — that is, with consciousness itself). It also involves information science and mathematics, particularly set theory and, given discoverable symmetries at all levels of nature, geometry. The newly-perceived urgency of the consciousness problem is to some extent a by-product of the measurement problem of quantum mechanics; that is, the problem of the observer.

Kefatos and Drãgãnescu write:
 

The non-locality of quantum processes in the universe is a strong argument for an underlying deep reality out of space and time (Kafatos, Nadeau, 1990, 1999, Kafatos 1998, Kafatos 1999): 

“Quantum theory states that whatever is meant by the word reality, it has to be non-local and counter to the view of local, realistic classical theories. The experimental evidence is revealed by the Aspect and Gisin experiments [...] and imply a non-local, undivided reality which reveals itself in the physical universe through non-local correlations and which can be studied through complementary constructs or views of the universe. Quantum theory and its implications open, therefore, the door for the thesis that the universe itself may be conscious (although this statement cannot be proven by the usual scientific method which separates object from subject or the observed from the observer).” — Kafatos (1999).

It is evident that the structural science has arrived at the frontier of a deep reality, which is outside of space and time (Drãgãnescu, 1979, 1985), and has opened the doors of a realm of reality in which phenomenological processes become predominant. This level of reality is the source of all that is phenomenological, and also is the source of the deep energy used and formed by phenomenological information into strings, membranes or elementary particles. 

The structural science that remained purely structural (with its prequantum or classical domain, then with the quantum domain of the Standard Theory and followed with the quantum domain of Supersymmetry and Strings) until it reached the frontiers of deep reality, will be transformed entirely into a structural-phenomenological science because of a gnoseological wave, produced by some knowledge of deep reality. The phenomenological is always present in all reality of the universe either in a closed or an intro-open way. 

When it is closed (the structural is hiding the phenomenological), in a very good first approximation, the reality may be treated as structural, but in a second approximation the phenomenological has to be taken into account. The classical physics, in a second approximation will admit phenomenological processes, because these are always present in the substrate of all things in a holistic way. 

When it is intro-open (the phenomenological is directly available through the structural), the structural approximation is not anymore possible, and this, we believe, is the case for trying to understand mind and consciousness. 

The “important forms of consciousness” that Kefatos and Drãgãnescu want to take into consideration are, broadly speaking, the following:

(1) natural human consciousness (related to mind and life);
(2) artificial, supposedly human-like consciousness (to be eventually obtained if some structures of hardware develop quantum phenomena similar to those of the human mind); and
(3) Fundamental Consciousness of existence (I kid you not: That prospect ought to give Richard Lewontin the heeby-jeebies, but probably won’t, since apparently he is determined to rule it out on a priori grounds).

More practically speaking, the phenomena of mind and consciousness are seen by these men as relating to:

(1) understanding the foundations of quantum physics;
(2) the explanation of biological evolution and life in general;
(3) the existence of intelligent robots and the possibility of conscious robots;
(4) the cosmology of the universe and the sense that it, perhaps, is related to the Fundamental Consciousness;
(5) the underlying deep reality as a basis for the Fundamental Consciousness and as a source for minds and consciousness in the universe.

They go on to say:
 

The structural-phenomenological theories consider the phenomenal experience as a fundamental phenomenon, which cannot be explained by contemporary physics, either classical or quantum. These theories may be: b1) dualistic, considering that the phenomenal experience is transcendental; b2) intrinsic, considering that the phenomenological properties are inherent in the nature of quantum phenomena, for instance, at the level of the quantum wave function; b3) extrinsic, considering that an extra-ingredient, outside all the physical ingredients known today, is necessary for explaining phenomenal experience....

Dualistic theories (b1) cannot be retained in modern-day science. Such theories are showing that important aspects of mind and consciousness cannot be explained by contemporary science. 

Some structural-phenomenological theories consider that quantum processes in the brain inherently involve ‘experience’ phenomena, whereas others propose a quantum physics rooted in the deepest layer of existence where the source (the extra-ingredient) of the phenomenological senses may be found.... 

The existence of such a deep source was proposed many years ago by Bohm (1980, 1985) — see also Bohm & Hiley (1993), Peat (1999) — and Drãgãnescu (1979, 1985). David Bohm named ‘active information,’ the deep information, considered by him not to be of the digital form, but related to the nature of senses. Today, a great number of scientists from domains like physics, chemistry and information science are recognizing not only mental ‘experience’ as a scientific truth, but they consider that such a manifestation is a general phenomenon of existence.....

In their own environment (informatter) the generation of phenomenological senses cannot be described formally, it is a non-formal process, although a general frame of tendencies for such phenomena are perhaps present. This process of non-formal processing might explain the phenomena of intuition and [creativity] of the mind and consciousness.

Continuing the explication of Kefatos and Drãgãnescu, quote:

THE COMPETITION OF TWO PRINCIPLES
“There are two contrary principles today that are haunting the community of scientists:

“A) The structural science is sufficient to explain all nature,... life, mind and consciousness.

“B) The structural science is not sufficient, and is incomplete for explaining all existence,... life, mind and consciousness....

“The inertia of structural science is very great, and many scientists are declaring in an open way that they believe firmly in principle A [e.g., Lewontin, Dawkins, Pinker, Dennett, et al.]. They hope, for instance, that the living cell or the brain will be completely modeled in the frame of the structural science on digital computers, because physical law is amenable to computer simulation and biological structures are derived from physical law....

“We predict that science will renounce principle A for principle B due primarily to the difficulties enountered in the explanation of mind and consciousness.... The problem of consciousness leads...not only to the last frontier, mostly unexplored, of science, but also to perhaps the most important frontier for mankind in the 21st century....”

Kefatos and Drãgãnescu note that “integrative science” would bring new ways of doing science:

-- based on foundational principles that cut across different levels;
-- able to address the phenomenological realms;
-- start from the whole to study the parts;
-- to find connections from all fields of human experience (e.g., perennial philosophies, metaphysics, etc.) to explore and enlarge scientific frontiers (as expressed in foundational principles);
-- returning to structural approaches to make concrete suggestions for new theories, which are based on phenomenological realms but in turn provide structural solutions;
-- prescribing general approaches from where current structural theories can be derived (e.g., category theory of mathematics as the common underlying language of physical/mental/deep reality realms);
-- it will not insist on separating object from subject.


The cross-disciplinary approach of integrative science is also evident in the work of Attila Grandpierre. A specialist in solar physics, he asks the pregnant question: Is biology reducible to physics? And answers with a resounding: NO! On Grandpierre’s speculation, the foundational universal laws boil down to three categories: the physical, the biological (psychological) and the noetic (logic [mathematics], reason).

As his speculative conjecture goes, the latter two cannot be derived from the first of these. And the reason for that is the most basic law of physics is the principle of least action — more familiarly known to philosophers as the Law of Parsimony. Following Ervin Bauer, who Grandpierre identifies as the greatest biological thinker of our era, he says that there is a  fundamental principle of biological life that exists as a countering force against the laws of physics, and that the two types of law express in tension:
 

By my evaluation, the most thorough, systematic, insightful foundational work of theoretical biology, which is at the same time also explicitly articulated in mathematical formulations is that of Ervin Bauer (1920, 1935/1967). It is hard to evaluate the real significance of his work, and its marginal influence to the present-day science seems to be rooted largely in historical circumstances and in the ignorance of dominant materialism. Ervin Bauer was born (1890) and educated in Hungary. He ha[d] been working in the most productive period of his life (1925–1937) in Soviet Union, in Moscow and Leningrad. He became arrested and jailed in prison in 1937 and died as a victim of Stalin’s massacres in 1942 (Tokin, 1963/1965, 11–26). 

In his main work “Theoretical Biology” (1935/1967) he formulated the key requirements of living systems. The first requirement is that “the living system is able to change in a constant environment, it has potential energies available to work”. His second requirement tells that a living system acts against the physical and chemical laws and modifies its inner conditions. His third, all-inclusive requirement of living systems tells that “The work made by the living system, within any environmental conditions, acts against the realisation of that equilibrium which would set up on the basis of the initial conditions of the system in the given environment by the physical and chemical laws” (Bauer, 1967, 44). This third requirement does not contradict to the laws of physics since the living system has some internal equipment, the use of which may modify the final state reached from the same initial state in the same environment. “The fundamental and general law of the living systems is the work made against the equilibrium, a work made on the constituents of the system itself” (ibid., 48). 

...Bauer formulates the universal law of biology in the following form: “The living and only the living systems are never in equilibrium, and, supported by their free energy reservoir, they are continuously invest[ing] work against the realisation of the equilibrium which should occur within the given outer conditions on the basis of the physical and chemical laws” (ibid., 51). 

“One of the most spectacular and substantial difference[s] between machines and living systems is that in the case of machines the source of the work is not related to any significant structural changes. The systemic forces of machines ... work only if the constituents of the machine are taken into motion by energy sources which are outer to these constituents. The inner states of the constituents of a machine remain practically constant.  The task of the constituents of a machine is to convert some kind of energy into work. In contrast, in the living systems the energy of the internal build-up, of the structure of the living matter is transformed into work. The energy of the food is not transformed into work, but to the maintenance and renewal of their internal structure and inner states. Therefore, the living systems are not power machines” (ibid., 64). The fundamental principle of biology acts against the changes which would set up in the system on the basis of the Le Chatelier-Braun principle (ibid., 59). The Bauer-principle recognises the problem of the forces acting at the internal boundary surfaces as the central problem of biology....

Now Definition 2 and 3 is very useful when evaluating the level of biology if it represents or not an autonomous ontological level irreducible to the physical principle. If new threats emerge on the development or complexification of a system, these emergent characteristics may still belong to the realm of physics. Emergent materialism is a monist ontology based on the belief that physical principles may trigger processes that determine the development of emergent processes, including the living processes, too. With the use of Definitions 1, 2 and 3 I show here that the concept of emergent materialism in the biological context is based on a false belief. The material behaviour (Definition 2) tends towards the physical equilibrium. The biological behaviour is governed by the life-principle (Definition 3) which acts just against the material behaviour. It can do this only by a proper modification of the boundary conditions of the physical laws. The biological modification of the (internal) boundary conditions of (living) organism is behind the realm of physics. The biological activity acts on the degrees of freedom that are not active in the material behaviour. Therefore, we found a gap between the realms of physics and biology. If the biological principle is active, because the conditions of its activity (a certain amount of complexity, suitable material structures, energies etc.) are present, it realises a thorough and systematic modification of internal boundary conditions of living organisms. In comparison, in an abstracted organism in which the biological principle is not active, the same internal boundary conditions would be not modified, and so the organism should fall towards physical equilibrium [i.e., physical death from the standpoint of the organism]. In principle, it would be possible to fill the gap with processes in which the biological modification is not realised in a rate necessary to govern the physical processes. In practice, such intermediate processes are strongly localised in space and time, and the ontological gap is maintained by the continuous and separate actions of the physical and biological principles. This formulation offers us an unprecedented insight into the ultimate constituent of reality. Using the newly found formulation of the ultimate principle of matter, our Definition 1 may be formulated in a more exact manner: 

Definition 1': any existent is regarded as an “ultimate reality”, if it is based on a universal and ontologically irreducible ultimate principle
 
Now if biology is based on an ultimate principle different and independent from the physical principle, this should mean that biology is not reducible to physics. If the principle of life did not exist as a separate and independent principle from physics, then the accidentally starting biological processes would, after a short period, quickly decline towards the state of equilibrium, towards physical “equilibrium death” (here we generalise the concept of “heat death” including not only thermodynamic equilibrium). But as long as biological laws are irreducible to physical ones, the tendency towards physical equilibrium due to the balancing tendencies of the different physico-chemical gradients cannot prevail, for they are overruled by the impulses arising from the principle of life. The main point is that the biological impulses [have] a nature which elicits, maintains, organise and cohere the processes which may otherwise set up only stochastically, transiently, unorganisedly and incoherently when physical principles are exclusive.

The essential novelty of the biological phenomenon therefore consists in following a different principle, which is able to govern the biological phenomena even when the physical principles keep their universal validity. Until a process leads to a result that is highly improbable by the laws of physics, it may be still a physical process. But when many such extremely improbable random process is elicited, and these extremely improbable events are co-ordinated in a way that together they follow a different ultimate principle which makes these processes a stable, long lifetime, lawful process, then we met with a substantial novelty which cannot be reduced to a lower level principle.

An analogy may serve to shed light to the way of how biology acts when compared to physics. It is like Aikido: while preserving the will of the attacker and modifying it using only the least possible energy, we get a result that is directly the opposite of the will of the attacking opponent. It is clear that the ever-conspicuous difference between living beings and seemingly inanimate entities lies in the ability of the former to be spontaneously active, to alter their inner physical conditions according to a higher organising principle in such a way that the physical laws will launch processes in them with an opposite direction to that of the “death direction” of the equilibrium which is valid for physical systems. This is the Aikido principle of life. A fighter practising the art of Aikido does not strive after defending himself by raw physical force, instead he uses his skill and intelligence to add a small power impulse, from the right position, to the impetus of his opponent’s attack, thus making the impetus of the attacker miss its mark. Instead of using his strength in trying to stop a hand coming at him, he makes its motion faster by applying some little technique: he pulls on it. Thus, applying little force, he is able to suddenly upset the balance of the attack, to change it, and with this to create a situation advantageous for him. 

The Aikido principle of life is similar to the art of yachting. There, too, great changes can be achieved by investing small forces. As the yachtsman, standing on board the little ship, makes a minute move to shift his weight from one foot to the other, the ship sensitively changes its course. Shifting one’s weight requires little energy, yet its effect is amplified by the shift occurring in the balance of the hull. Control is not exerted on the direct surface physical level, but on the level of balance; it is achieved via altering balance in a favourable direction that against much larger forces, the effect of very small forces prevails. However, being able to alter balance in a favourable direction presupposes a profound (explicit or implicit) knowledge of contributing factors, also the attitude and ability to rise above direct physical relations, as well as the ability to independently bring about the desired change. If life is capable of maintaining another “equilibrium of life”, by a process the direction of which is contrary to the one pointing towards the physical equilibrium, then the precondition of life is the ability to survey, to analyse, and to spontaneously, independently and appropriately control all the relevant physical and biological states. Thus, indeed, life cannot be traced back to the general effect of the “death magnet” of physical equilibrium and mere blind chance that are the organisation factors available for physics. The principle of life has to be acknowledged as an ultimate principle which is at least as important as the basic physical principle, and which involves just the same extent of “objectivity” as the physical principle. If it is a basic feature of life that it is capable of displaying Aikido-effects, then life has to be essentially different from the inanimateness of physics, just as the principle of the behaviour of the self-defending Aikido disciple is different from the attacker’s one. Thus in the relationship of the laws of life and those of physics, two different parties are engaged in combat, and the domain of phenomena of two essentially different basic principles are connected. Practising the art of Aikido is possible only when someone recognise[s] and learn[s] the principle and practice of Aikido. Now regarding the origin of the principle of Aikido, it results from the study of the art of fight. Regarding the origin of the principle of biology, it cannot result from the physical laws by a physical principle, since the ultimate principle of physics acts just the contrary to the life principle. Therefore, the life principle shows up as an independent ultimate principle above the realm of physics. [Boldface added]

In his paper on Time — easily the most challenging of the three papers cited here for the intelligent non-specialist, but worth engaging all the same [and which was presented at a NATO science conference in 2002] — Grandpierre speculates on Soul as a first principle:

“Analysing the concept of ‘soul’ it is found ... that in some ancient high culture the soul is conceptualised as the ultimate driving factor of life. The Dictionary of Hungarian Language ... determines the concept of the soul as the following: ‘1. <By a primitive> concept the soul is the hypothesised, more-or-less material ultimate carrier of life phenomena, which departs the body at the moment of death’. At the same time, a closer scrutiny reveals that this allegedly ‘primitive’ conceptualisation is related to the deepest scientific concept of mankind, which is the concept of ‘first principles’. Eisler ... stated that soul appeared as a (first) principle at the special kind of animism of ancient Greek philosophers.

“Scientific research attempts to reveal facts and deeper relations. Science begins when we search the laws behind the phenomena. Now laws may be regarded as deeper level relations behind the immediate, brute facts. Although laws help us to explain and predict phenomena, they may be regarded as being only the first steps on the way to find the most clear and most transparent truth possible, which is the ultimate aim of science. Therefore, the real basis of science is related to the laws behind the laws, and to find the ultimate law which is able to explain all the laws intermediate between empirical facts and mental understanding. Now the concept that developed the notion of ultimate and universal laws, the first principles, may be regarded as the highest point of scientific conceptualisation. Therefore, soul as a universal first principle, as an ontological principle is a scientifically remarkable concept from which one can expect fundamental insights into ... Nature.” [Boldface added]

I'll spill the beans on Grandpierre, though you’ll have to read his paper(s) to follow the scientific basis and reasoning for his “solar/‘soul-ar’” hypothesis: In the end, this solar physicist speculates that the final cause of our universe and all life in it is extra-cosmic — completely outside of space and time. This is the same Fundamental Consciousness about which both Kefatos and Drãgãnescu  also speculate.

This is a “new kind of science,” indeed. May it prosper!
 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: consciousness; materialism; quantumtheory; soul
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To: betty boop
Planck's original idea was that black-body radiation was emitted in discrete chunks. The scale parameter for these chunks in Planck's constant. (You may wish to check the Net for a description.) The classical limit is that black-body radiation is emitted continuously. The classical computation does not agree with experiment.

Other things use Planck's constant. Angular of an electron in an atom is in units of h/(2 pi) as is the intrinsic spin of the electron.

While Planck's constant is really a fundamental constant of the universe, we can ask the question of what would be the physics if it were changed. If Planck's constant were to be much smaller (zero in the limit) then classical mechanics is recovered.
301 posted on 07/08/2003 8:19:53 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Right Wing Professor
It was easy to detect chaotic beahvior in classical systems; it was very hard to find it in quantum systems.

Some treatise that I read last year (I don't remember which one) claimed a proof that QM cannot be chaotic. QM is a linear system and chaos only arises from non-linear systems. The randomness in QM is of a different nature than the (pseudo) randomness of chaos.

302 posted on 07/08/2003 8:22:51 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: RightWhale
We create laws as concepts to form concepts of matter, but atoms may or may not know of laws and they certainly don't act according to laws.

That is just plain false. Matter does behave according to scientific laws. There are tons of them out there explaining the behavior of material things and the reason why we can be typoing to each other accross who knows how many miles is because those laws have enabled us to make the things which allow this communication. These laws are tested on a daily basis and they have been found to be true in numerous wasy. To say what you are saying is to say that science and all that has been built upon its fruits is just a hallucination.

I don't think you will convince many with such a viewpoint.

303 posted on 07/08/2003 8:23:26 PM PDT by gore3000 (Intelligent people do not believe in evolution.)
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To: gore3000
Name one scientific law that is complete and correct over the entire possible range of values possible in its domain.
304 posted on 07/08/2003 8:30:11 PM PDT by js1138
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To: RightWhale; betty boop
The rocks don't have much to say, but they make up for it in enthusiasm.

Don't tell that to a geologist! They ascertain they speak very highly of them. (I'll leave it up to you to decide which "they" and "them" are which.)

305 posted on 07/08/2003 8:38:20 PM PDT by unspun ("Do everything in love." - No I don't look anything like her but I do like to hear "Unspun w/ AnnaZ")
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To: betty boop; Alamo-Girl; unspun
Yep, it's "all my fault," Hank.

This is the only thing in my post you found worthy of responding to. Interesting.

Unfortunately, I think I basically get the gist of "what you mean." It looks like nihilism to me.

So my argument that existence is primary, because there must be some being that is conscious and something for that being to be conscious of before consciousness is possible is "nihilistic" in your view.

Well, I quote you, "I think I basically get the gist of 'what you mean.'" I will not bother to tell you what it, "looks like," to me. You know what you are and what your true intentions are, and now you know I know.

I admit that some of your responses, your evasions, your apparent shrillness baffled me. I could not imagine why some of my most innocuous responses elicited such strong reactions. It is apparent now.

But you needn't worry or be upset by my posts. Others are not going to be influenced by me. You have the winning hand. Most people would much prefer your position to mine. It is much easier to have your truth "revealed" and not be responsible for what you believe.

Hank

306 posted on 07/08/2003 8:38:30 PM PDT by Hank Kerchief
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To: js1138
Name one scientific law that is complete and correct over the entire possible range of values possible in its domain.

Who cares about such a rhetorical question. Point is that scientific laws work, work reliably and many are the basis of further laws which have been found to work reliably. They are very good and for you or others to dismiss them is to dismiss all of science and indeed all of modern society. You must destroy all that civilization has accomplished in order to deny the laws science has discovered.

It is a strange philosophy you adhere to which to be 'real' must destroy most of the reality around you.

307 posted on 07/08/2003 8:47:06 PM PDT by gore3000 (Intelligent people do not believe in evolution.)
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To: Hank Kerchief
I get paid a lot of money for my writing, because I make difficult concepts easy to understand.

Al Gore
Hillary Clinton
O-k... you won't say who you are, but what kind of person(s) pay you?

Somehow, it doesn't seem that the answer to this is the consumer. A false economy, then?

308 posted on 07/08/2003 9:53:04 PM PDT by unspun ("Do everything in love." - No I don't look anything like her but I do like to hear "Unspun w/ AnnaZ")
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To: betty boop
I think you give me too much credit. I'm not gracious; I use this forum to a large extent as a mechanism to think out loud and get some useful feedback. Maybe we all do that.

Tnanks to some insomnia, I did write some more about consciousness. I have no idea if its of any use.

This is going to sound a bit like Buber or Tillich. While it's not consciously based on either's thought, I did read some of Buber's writings in my younger days, without a great deal of comprehension, true, but it's possible the ideas have been percolating around. And I read gobs of Tillich plagiarized in MLK' s thesis. MLK was pretty faithful to his original sources :-/

OK, what do we mean by consciousness? I would argue it's the feeling of personhood, of the 'I', that we have, which transcends thought or perception or volition. If you've ever been extremely drunk, or delirious due to disease, or under the influence of other psychotropic agents, you've undoubtedly experienced conscious states where thought or perception or volition were severely compromized. Nothelessless, there's always a feeling of 'I' ness in there, something in the center that knows you're drunk or deranged and is basically unaffected. And when you dream, although even ordinary logic is twisted, there's an 'I' there. That's what I would call consciousness.

We don't have any direct experience of anyone else's consciousness, but we mostly make the suppostion that someone else who looks and acts like us also has this kernel of consciousness. I say mostly because i understand sociopaths don't do this. I would argue that when we're very close to someone, we can in effect use part of our own consciousness to form a mental model of theirs; if our model is a good one; if it's based on observation of the other rather than our own ego, then to some extent it's detached from us, and it gives us a feeling of empathy, or agape, or whatever - a selfless and direct perception of the other within ourselves.

While none of this is scientific, I'd argue it's the best we can do to overcome the problem of solipsism; that we each on our own have a very limited sampling of 'consciousness' - our own - and without empathy have nothing to compare it with, so the usual means we use to figure out what something is are almost useless.

OK, where I'm going is this? If we're going to study consciousness; clearly it has to start with the brain, because that seems to be where it resides. And, to be crude, some of the best experimental data we have on brain function comes from brain damage. A lot of this is very basic - Luria, the great Soviet neurosurgeon, had a massive database of brain-injured Russian soldiers, and was able to correlate various forms of dysfunction with particular injuries. Trouble is, I don't think he had the inclination or the freedom to go asking metaphysical questions, though he may have reported phenomena which might be useful to you in some of his voluminous writings.

I don't know if you've ever had to deal with someone very close to you who developed dementia. I've unfortunately had to do this twice. One of the more horrible things about it is when the dementia has progressed significantly, and the loved one's motor control, cognition, memory and awareness of the world around them seems to be mostly gone, occasionally there are flashes where they seem to realize who they are, but can't figure out what's happening to them, and are scared. I think one has got to be close to the person to see this, but I'd argue it's real, and not merely an illusion. When someone is far gone, there's a natural tendency to look for hopeful signs the person we love is still 'in there', and that's likely to be misleading; but no one goes looking for horror in a loved one's eyes. No one has to my knowledge been able to write what it's like to be in severe Alzheimers, and so we can't easily tell if there's consciousness at that level of brain injury, but I'm sure from my own experience (or empathy, though with the caveat my wife tells me I'm the least empathetic person she's ever met) that the person retains personhood or consciousness into fairly severe brain damage.

So where does this lead? If consciousness can survive some fairly major brain damage, it's no delicate interplay of thousands of neural signals. I don't know, and haven't researched, whether there are regions of the brain whose loss seems to diminish a persons' humanity or consciousness, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if there were clues buried in dry clinical language in the medical literature. On the other hand, maybe it's a function of the entirity and not of one of the parts. But I am sure, if you want to find it, the brain is where you have to go looking.

309 posted on 07/09/2003 2:09:16 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: unspun
...please 'splainittome why it is that people claim such a wild thing as the universal... phenomological... principle of "the problem of the observer"...

At the microscopic level, before an event or "observation" or measurement takes place, only a probabilistic description can be given as the momentum and position of the particles involved. This description is mathematically quite rigorous and deterministic and is the basis for "electronic revolution"; i.e. it has been very very economically productive so there is no doubt as to the quality of the math. Microscopic affects all of the macroscopic, i.e. microscopic becomes macroscopic, and the "hitch" is that probabilities routinely become hard reality but nobody has a clue as to how or why this happens because there is nothing is the math or reason that requires resolution in any particilar way. Yet it happens an infinite number of times daily in our reality. The physicists have only succeeded so far in glossing over the problem. If there is any one significant unresolved 21st Century scientific issue, this is my candidate for "it".

310 posted on 07/09/2003 6:24:08 AM PDT by Phaedrus
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To: Hank Kerchief
Do you have a reading comprehension problem?

It depends on what I'm reading. Perhaps you missed my point about historical anachronism.

You stated that there is not one verse of Scripture that says a person "ought to be a Christian". That statement is true, but it's a little like saying that there is not one verse of Scripture that says a person ought to drive a Mercedes.

Anyway, I hope you will pardon me if I praise God that I bear that name.

Cordially,

311 posted on 07/09/2003 7:43:45 AM PDT by Diamond (Husband of wife over 40)
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To: unspun
Sorry. I'm just catching up. Did somebody run you through the Bohr atom/Copenhagen interpretation QM diva story? I'll catch up with the thread later tonight.
312 posted on 07/09/2003 7:54:33 AM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: Phaedrus; <1/1,000,000th%; All
With bb being busy today, it gives many of us an opportunity to catch up with many words, figures, concepts, and even much reality. Thank you for your comments, please make more until I understand better, at least. ;-)
313 posted on 07/09/2003 7:58:00 AM PDT by unspun ("Do everything in love." - No I don't look anything like her but I do like to hear "Unspun w/ AnnaZ")
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To: gore3000
Who cares about such a rhetorical question. Point is that scientific laws work, work reliably and many are the basis of further laws which have been found to work reliably.

There is , I think, a difference between saying matter behaves according to scientific laws, and saying scientific laws describe the behavior of matter. The descriptions are never complete and sufficient, although they are obviously sufficient to support technology and industry.

314 posted on 07/09/2003 7:59:28 AM PDT by js1138
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To: unspun
At least one significant aspect of my earlier post is that there is nothing, no thing, tangible that has been identified as responsible for the transition from probability to actuality and lots of effort over almost a century has been expended toward identifying some such. The Materialists therefore do not have the answer, try as they might to splain the problem away. And the door is thus wide open for consciousness, intent and/or Free Will to supplant the euphemistic "observer".
315 posted on 07/09/2003 8:23:40 AM PDT by Phaedrus
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To: Phaedrus
At the microscopic level, before an event or "observation" or measurement takes place, only a probabilistic description can be given as the momentum and position of the particles involved. This description is mathematically quite rigorous and deterministic and is the basis for "electronic revolution"; i.e. it has been very very economically productive so there is no doubt as to the quality of the math. Microscopic affects all of the macroscopic, i.e. microscopic becomes macroscopic, and the "hitch" is that probabilities routinely become hard reality but nobody has a clue as to how or why this happens because there is nothing is the math or reason that requires resolution in any particilar way.

This is rather specious.

Let's take a specific example; the crossed Stern Gerlach apparatus you'll fined in Feynman's lectures, and many other places. (It's a thought experiment, and for various reasons I'm convinced that if you tried to do it you would have difficulty getting the same result, but my objections are unrelated to the basic point, so let's ignore them).

OK, a Stern-Gerlach experiment is designed to measure the component of angular momentum of a particle along one axis. The easiest case is a so called 'spin 1/2' particle; its angular momentum can have only two measured values along any axis, +1/2 and -1/2. So you take a thermalized beam of spin 1/ 2 particles, put them through the apparatus, and separate the particles according to their angular momentum along the z axis (L_z). Half the particles (approximately) are in the +1/2 beam, and half in the -1/2 beam. You then take the +1/2 particles, and put them through a SG apparatus along x. What you find for any single particle is that it has a 50% probability that it will have L_x = +1/2 and a 50% probability that it will have L_x = -1/2. QM says this is because L_x and L_z don't commute - that is, they obey an uncertainty relationship - and that therefore a measurement of L_z will make the value of L_x completely indefinite. Your point is presumably that something else could influence the result of the L_x measurement - a hidden variable that would be window for free will or whatever to get in. Trouble is, the L_x/L_z uncertainty principle maps 1:1 onto the x/p uncertainty principle, and the latter is not merely a theorem of measurement; it accounts for the very structure of matter. The second problem is no hidden variable has ever been found, and not for want of looking. Finally, entangement experiments, where one measures L_z of one particle and it scrambles the L_x of a second entangled one, place some very severe restrictions on your hidden variable. It shows it's not merely a matter that we haven't figured out to measure the L_x of the second particle; the first measurement puts the L_x of the second particle in a completely undefined state.

Most physicists as I understand it simply reject that such a variable exists. It's not glossing over the problem; it's realizing that the uncertainty principle is a central component of the physics, and not merely an inadequacy of measurement.

Gerry, writing from Copenhagen.

316 posted on 07/09/2003 9:31:09 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: Right Wing Professor
This is rather specious.

No it is not, RWP, appeals to authority notwithstanding.

317 posted on 07/09/2003 9:41:07 AM PDT by Phaedrus
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To: js1138
Hypothesizing analog computing solves some sticky problems about the brain: the fact that it can do pattern matching very quickly despite having a slow clock rate, the fact that it is generally bad at formal logic, and the fact that it jumps to conclusions and sees patterns in ambiguous data, and the fact that it manages to "instantly" integrate zillions of simultaneous processes.

"Analog computing" doesn't really mean much in theory. Computation is computation, though different computers are optimized for different kinds of information transforms. "Analog" is actually an information encoding format, and can be converted into equivalent digital forms.

The general properties, relative capabilities, and structure of the brain map very closely to a theoretical model of computation that most people are not familiar with but which has been having much gray matter thrown at it lately. There is a difficult problem in computer science related to this computational model that, once solved, will allow us to build software systems that exhibit the same basic computational properties and capabilities of the human brain. The math has been solved (it is an interesting area of algorithmic information theory) but the implementation and architecture of a tractable design is something else entirely.

For those interested, it was proven a couple years ago that solving this problem is equivalent to solving the general problem of AI. I won't go into the how or why of it since that requires much grokking, but most mathematicians and computer scientists who don't take a mystical view of AI acknowledge that it is a very sound formulation of the fundamental problem -- it has survived a couple years of rigorous criticism.

318 posted on 07/09/2003 10:30:56 AM PDT by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: Phaedrus
At least recently, QM has generally been shown to be implementable as a simple finite state process. The problems largely stem from our inability to inductively infer state at that level. A very good analogy would be attempting to reverse engineering the internal state of the RC4 psuedo-random number generator by sampling its output. Even though the best we can do is statistically analyze the output of the RC4 PRNG for patterns and not even come close to guessing the internal state, the actual internal state only amounts to a couple hundred bytes.

The problem is that this is a fundamental limitation of finite systems; there are many classes of function, even simple ones, that cannot be practically reverse engineered with effectively finite systems. QM falls under that umbrella even though we can prove that simple finite state functions can generate what we see as QM.

319 posted on 07/09/2003 10:48:53 AM PDT by tortoise (All these moments lost in time, like tears in the rain.)
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To: betty boop; Alamo-Girl; Diamond; Heartlander; Phaedrus; Right Wing Professor; js1138; tortoise; ...
Another brief contribution of the librarian kind:
http://christianity.about.com/cs/godandscience/index.htm
320 posted on 07/09/2003 10:54:17 AM PDT by unspun ("Do everything in love." - No I don't look anything like her but I do like to hear "Unspun w/ AnnaZ")
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