"...how do you think your ways of acting in the world would change if you adopted such a position?"
I would stop shooting piles of dirt with a .30-06. I haven't done that for 60+ years but it's intended as a* reductio ad absurdum* argument. --- Frank C. Wimberly 140 Calle Ojo Feliz, Santa Fe, NM 87505 505 670-9918 Santa Fe, NM On Thu, Feb 16, 2023, 7:05 PM Eric Charles <eric.phillip.char...@gmail.com> wrote: > "an account of the seemingly analogous position of panpsychism" > > What is that more than something people say? > > Do *you* experience the dirt at your feet as having a mental life? If so, > tell me about it: What is the dirt like when it seems to be doing mental > stuff? What kind of mental stuff is it doing? > > If not: Have you seen anyone who earnestly thinks the dirt is doing mental > stuff? If so, what were *they* like? How was that belief pervasive in their > adjustments to the world? Based on your experiences with that person, how > do you think your ways of acting in the world would change if you adopted > such a position? > > > <echar...@american.edu> > > > On Thu, Feb 16, 2023 at 1:27 PM glen <geprope...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> I don't grok the context well enough to equivocate on concepts like >> "have" and "category of being". But in response to Nick's question: "What >> is there that animals do that demands us to invent categories to explain >> their behavior?", my answer is "animals discretize the ambient muck". So if >> categorization is somehow fundamentally related to discretization, then >> animals clearly categorize in that sense. >> >> I mean, all you have to do is consider the frequencies of light the >> animals' eyeballs do or don't see. That's two categories right there, the >> light they do see and the light they don't. Unless there's some sophistry >> hidden behind the question, the answer seems clear. Reflection on what one >> does and does not categorize isn't necessary. I could even claim my truck >> discretizes fluids ... those that make it seize up versus lubricate it, >> those that it burns vs those that stop it cold. Etc. Maybe the question is >> better formulated as "What makes one impute categories on another?" Clearly >> my truck doesn't impute categories on squirrels. >> >> But Nick does follow that question with this "experience" nonsense. So my >> guess is there *is* some sophistry behind the question, similar to EricC's >> incredulous response to DaveW's question about phenomenological composition >> of experience(s). What I find missing in Nick's (and EricC's) distillation >> of experience monism is an account of the seemingly analogous position of >> panpsychism. Were I a scholar, I might take such work on myself. But I'm >> not and, hence, very much appreciate these distillations of dead white >> men's metaphysics and will take what I can get. 8^D >> >> On 2/16/23 09:22, Steve Smith wrote: >> > Might I offer some terminology reframing, or at least ask for some >> additional explication? >> > >> > 1. I think "behaviours" would be all Nick's Martians *could* observe? >> They would be inferring "experiences" from observed behaviours? >> > 2. When we talk about "categories" here, are we talking about >> "categories of being"? Ontologies, as it were? >> > >> > Regarding ErisS' reflections... I *do* think that animals behave *as >> if* they "have categories", though I don't know what it even means to say >> that they "have categories" in the way Aristotle and his legacy-followers >> (e.g. us) do... I would suggest/suspect that dogs and squirrels are in no >> way aware of these "categories" and that to say that they do is a >> projection by (us) humans who have fabricated the (useful in myriad >> contexts) of a category/Category/ontology. So in that sense they do NOT >> *have* categories... I think in this conception/thought-experiment we >> assume that Martians *would* and would be looking to map their own >> ontologies onto the behaviour (and inferred experiences and judgements?) >> of Terran animals? >> > >> > If I were to invert the subject/object relation, I would suggest that >> it is "affordances" not "experiences" (or animals' behaviours) we want to >> categorize into ontologies? It is what things are "good for" that make >> them interesting/similar/different to living beings. And "good for" is >> conditionally contextualized. My dog and cat both find squirrels "good >> for" chasing, but so too for baby rabbits and skunks (once). >> > >> > Or am I barking up the wrong set of reserved lexicons? >> > >> > To segue (as I am wont to do), it feels like this discussion parallels >> the one about LLMs where we train the hell out of variations on learning >> classifier systems until they are as good as (or better than) we (humans) >> are at predicting the next token in a string of human-generated tokens (or >> synthesizing a string of tokens which humans cannot distinguish from a >> string generated by another human, in particular one with the proverbial >> 10,000 hours of specialized training). The fact that or "ologies" tend to >> be recorded and organized as knowledge structures and in fact usually >> *propogated* (taught/learnt) by the same makes us want to believe (some of >> us) that hidden inside these LLMs are precisely the same "ologies" we >> encode in our myriad textbooks and professional journal articles? >> > >> > I think one of the questions that remains present within this group's >> continued 'gurgitations is whether the organizations we have conjured are >> particularly special, or just one of an infinitude of superposed >> alternative formulations? And whether some of those formulations are >> acutely occult and/or abstract and whether the existing (accepted) >> formulations (e.g. Western Philosophy and Science, etc) are uniquely (and >> exclusively or at least optimally) capable of capturing/describing what is >> "really real" (nod to George Berkeley). >> > >> > Some here (self included) may often suggest that such formulation is at >> best a coincidence of history and as well as it "covers" a description of >> "reality", it is by circumstance and probably by abstract conception ("all >> models are wrong...") incomplete and in error. But nevertheless still >> useful... >> > >> > Maybe another way of reframing Nick's question (on a tangent) is to ask >> whether the Barsoomians had their own Aristotle to conceive of >> Categories? Or did they train their telescopes on ancient Greece and >> learn Latin Lip Reading and adopt one or more the Greek's philosophical >> traditions? And then, did the gas-balloon creatures floating in the >> atmosphere-substance of Jupiter observe the Martians' who had observed the >> Greeks and thereby come up with their own Categories. Maybe it was those >> creatures who beamed these abstractions straight into the neural tissue of >> the Aristotelians and Platonists? Do gas-balloon creatures even have >> solids to be conceived of as Platonic? And are they missing out if they >> don't? Do they have their own Edwin Abbot Abbot? And what would the >> Cheela <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon%27s_Egg> say? >> > >> > My dog and the rock squirrels he chases want to know... so do the >> cholla cactus fruits/segments they hoard in their nests! >> > >> > Mumble, >> > >> > - Steve >> > >> > On 2/16/23 5:37 AM, Santafe wrote: >> >> It’s the tiniest and most idiosyncratic take on this question, but >> FWIW, here: >> >> https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1520752113 >> >> >> >> I actually think that all of what Nick says below is a perfectly good >> draft of a POV. >> >> >> >> As to whether animals “have” categories: Spend time with a dog. >> Doesn’t take very much time. Their interest in conspecifics is (ahem) >> categorically different from their interest in people, different than to >> squirrels, different than to cats, different than to snakes. >> >> >> >> For me to even say that seems like cueing a narcissism of small >> differences, when overwhelmingly, their behavior is structured around >> categories, as is everyone else’s. Squirrels don’t mistake acorns for >> birds of prey. Or for the tree limbs and house roofs one can jump onto. >> Or for other squirrels. It’s all categories. Behavior is an operation on >> categories. >> >> >> >> I found it interesting that you invoked “nouns” as a framework that is >> helpful but sometimes obstructive. One might just have said “words”. This >> is interesting to me already, because my syntactician friends will tell you >> that a noun is not, as we were taught as children, a “word for a person, >> place, or thing”, but rather a “word in a language that transforms as nouns >> transform in that language”, which is a bit of an obfuscation, since they >> do have in common that they are in some way “object-words”. But from the >> polysemy and synonymy perspective, we see that “meanings” cross the >> noun-verb syntactic distinction quite frequently for some categories. >> Eye/see, ear/hear, moon/shine, and stuff like that. My typologist friends >> tell me that is common but particular to some meanings much more than >> others. >> >> >> >> Another fun thing I was told by Ted Chiang a few months ago, which I >> was amazed I had not heard from linguists, and still want to hold in >> reserve until I can check it further. He says that languages without >> written forms do not have a word for “word”. If true, that seems very >> interesting and important. If Chiang believes it to be true, it is >> probably already a strong enough regularity to be more-or-less true, and >> thus still interesting and important. >> >> >> >> Eric >> >> >> >>> On Feb 15, 2023, at 1:19 PM,<thompnicks...@gmail.com> < >> thompnicks...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> >> >>> FWiW, I willmake every effort to arrive fed to Thuam by 10.30 >> Mountain. I want to hear the experts among you hold forth on WTF a >> cateogory actually IS. I am thinking (duh) that a category is a more or >> less diffuse node in a network of associations (signs, if you must). Hence >> they constitute a vast table of what goes with what, what is predictable >> from what, etc. This accommodates “family resemblance” quite nicely. Do >> I think animals have categories, in this sense, ABSOLUTELY EFFING YES. Does >> this make me a (shudder) nominalist? I hope not. >> >>> Words…nouns in particular… confuse this category business. Words >> place constraints on how vague these nodes can be. They impose on the >> network constraints to which it is ill suited. True, the more my >> associations with “horse” line up with your associations with “horse”, the >> more true the horse seems. Following Peirce, I would say that where our >> nodes increasingly correspond with increasing shared experience, we have >> evidence ot the (ultimate) truth of the nodes, their “reality” in Peirce’s >> terms. Here is where I am striving to hang on to Peirce’s realism. >> >>> The reason I want the geeks to participate tomorrow is that I keep >> thinking of a semantic webby thing that Steve devised for the Institute >> about a decade ago. Now a semantic web would be a kind of metaphor for an >> associative web; don’t associate with other words in exactly the same >> manner in which experiences associate with other experiences. Still, I >> think the metaphor is interesting. Also, I am kind of re-interested in my >> “authorial voice”, how much it operates like cbt. >> >>> >> >>> Rushing, >> >>> >> >>> Nick >> >>> >> >>> From: Friam<friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Eric Charles >> >>> Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2023 10:29 AM >> >>> To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group< >> friam@redfish.com> >> >>> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Thuram still happening? >> >>> >> >>> Well shoot..... that would do it.... Thank you! >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2023 at 12:28 PM Frank Wimberly<wimber...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>>> Today is Wednesday, isn't it? >> >>>> >> >>>> --- >> >>>> Frank C. Wimberly >> >>>> 140 Calle Ojo Feliz, >> >>>> Santa Fe, NM 87505 >> >>>> >> >>>> 505 670-9918 >> >>>> Santa Fe, NM >> >>>> >> >>>> On Wed, Feb 15, 2023, 10:19 AM Eric Charles< >> eric.phillip.char...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>>>> Are the Thursday online meetings still happening? I missed a few >> weeks due to work piling up meetings on, but I'm trying to log in now, and >> it looks like the meeting hasn't started. >> >> -- >> ꙮ Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙ ꙮ >> >> -. --- - / ...- .- .-.. .. -.. / -- --- .-. ... . / -.-. --- -.. . >> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv >> Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe / Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom >> https://bit.ly/virtualfriam >> to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com >> FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ >> archives: 5/2017 thru present >> https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/ >> 1/2003 thru 6/2021 http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/ >> > -. --- - / ...- .- .-.. .. -.. / -- --- .-. ... . / -.-. --- -.. . > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe / Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom > https://bit.ly/virtualfriam > to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com > FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ > archives: 5/2017 thru present > https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/ > 1/2003 thru 6/2021 http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/ >
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