I struggled to find the proper branch of the thread-tree to place this post.  But I decided to do it, here, because 
your invocation of "organism" confirms my bias.  The inclusion of "consciousness" is a red herring, 
I think. And the expansion to "relations between entities", including "triads" is nice-to-have 
icing, but unnecessary[†].

The important part is, as Marcus pointed out with self-driving cars, and I tried to 
affirm, the glove *knows* hands just like a pattern recognizing AI knows the patterns 
it's been programmed to recognize. We've demonstrated that knowledge can be instantiated 
into objects/machines/animals/people. The term we use for that is "specific 
intelligence" these days, in order to distinguish those tasks/jobs that are 
straightforward to automate. Those difficult to automate jobs require general 
intelligence (GI).

The attribute of our current examples of GIs (animals and maybe even plants) that we long settled on is 
"alive" and the common term for the machines that exhibit GI is "organism". So I struggle 
to find a unique question in this thread that does NOT boil down to "what is life?"

What am I missing? Why are we talking about all these abstract things like "monism", "mind", 
"knowledge", "experience", "consciousness", and all that malarkey instead of the more biologically 
established things? How is this thread NOT about biology?


[†] The common term "ecology" and the pairwise, triadic, ..., N-ary, relations 
it implies seems sufficient without diving into semiotic hermeneutics.

On 4/27/19 11:10 AM, Nick Thompson wrote:
As we talk, here, I am beginning to wonder if the minimal conditions for a 
‘knowing” require co=ordination between two organisms.

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

Reply via email to