Hi Gregg,



OK, that makes a lot of sense.  Those examples help.  I now understand
better how information processing relates to and is also contained in the
life level of the ToK.  Thanks for the help.



Also, I’m now better understanding what you mean by full body function and
all that.  I’m accustomed to people talking about “function” when defining
qualia, as being more fundamental and qualia arising from such function.
This is the case in the most popular camps on theories of consciousness.
Now I understand better that you use function a bit differently.  Now I see
for you (and me), matter is fundamental, and function is achieved by
architecting and building function out of matter that has physical
qualities.



I also think this gets to the base of your engineering problem: “How do you
build something that experiences the world?”



This comes down to what is required to have conscious situational awareness
of us in the world.  Maybe this will help.  A self-driving Tesla car must
be aware of everything around it, for it to be able to drive and avoid all
those things.  Here is an example image showing a representation of an
automobile’s 3D knowledge of itself as it drives down the road.



https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.dropbox.com_s_87acw6e7irr59mq_car-5Fknowledge.gif-3Fdl-3D0&d=DwIFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=Bw2CBNIF7KJrlBI1Fxx5LhE-Mr_-pKaiIbTkPTlUpWg&s=EBXd2G7pW3Ha3hb3wdewGwYooTSVdiu59WdBZhvoJMg&e=



This 3D model is built from the 2D image from a camera shown in the inset.



Notice that this car has no awareness of the trees on the side of the
road.  There is knowledge of the trees in what could be considered the
retina of the camera.  But this would be considered sub conscious
knowledge, since there is nothing representing it computationally bound
into its abstract awareness.



If the car knows about something, there must be something in this 3D model,
that is its knowledge.  Each of the white points in space representing each
of the pixel elements that make up the lines on the road are not just
isolated white pixel elements, like in the 2D image.  In the 3D model, they
are spatially bound together with all the other elements in 3D space,
giving them computationally bound awareness of their location and meaning,
defining the lanes on the road, and the car’s position as it travels in one
of those lanes.



This 3D model is the red car’s awareness of itself, in that particular
lane, driving on that road.  Each of the other objects on the road are
classified with information about what they are.  This 3D model is the
car’s computationally bound situational awareness of its surroundings.  For
every relational element of knowledge and meaning, there must be something
physical that is that representational and spatial knowledge
computationally bound in with all the rest of the knowledge.



So, the definition of this car’s self-awareness, is a bunch of abstract 3D
voxel elements organized and computationally bound into a 3D model of
spatial awareness.  There is no way you can make a car successfully drive,
without having computationally bound knowledge of itself, and everything
around it, along with everything’s relative location in 3D space,
predictions of where things will go and all that.



Notice that the car is self-aware that it is red.  Each of the voxel
elements representing knowledge of each pixel element on the surface of
itself are probably represented with abstract RGB numbers like 0xFF0000.
Or maybe just the abstract word “red”.  An interpretation mechanism is
required to interpret this abstract 0xFF0000 representation of itself onto
the screen, so it will emit physically red light, when drawing the picture
of itself for this gif.



The only difference between this constructed abstract self-awareness of
this automobile, and our phenomenal knowledge of the same set of data, is
our knowledge of the car is not an abstract number like “0xFF0000”.  Our
knowledge of each pixel element is simply made of something in our brain
that has a redness quality.  No interpretation mechanism is required for
us, because redness just is a causal physical quality.



So, to create an abstract computer awareness so a car can self drive.  You
construct a set of 3D voxel elements, representing colors, and other
spatial information, which is the car’s situational awareness of itself
within 3D space.  In other words, the car “experiences” the world, it just
experiences it as abstract knowledge.  It’s physical knowledge isn’t
qualitatively like anything.



For us, you do the same thing, only instead of abstract pixel elements of
color, you use pixel elements made of actual physical qualities that can be
computationally bound together, with lots of other phenomenal relational
knowledge.  This is what makes our conscious situational awareness of the
car, along with everything else on the road, as it drives.



Does that help explain what is meant by consciousness can be built with
“Elemental physical qualities computationally bound into a composite
qualitative situational awareness?”



On Wed, May 15, 2019 at 5:32 AM Henriques, Gregg - henriqgx <
[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Hi Brent,
>
>
>
> You said:
>
>
>
> Would I be right in thinking information processing doesn't occur till you
> get to the "mind" cone?
>
>
>
> No. I am persuaded and now I think most biologists agree that the concept
> of information processing (or communication network systems or
> semiotics—all similar). Here is a snippet on the Life Dimension of
> Existence from an “in progress” article I am writing with Joe, Waldemar and
> Steve:
>
>
>
> *In contrast to the inanimate world, life exists as a collection of
> information processing systems that have stored information across the
> generations and are shifting in response to ongoing experiences. As Dave
> Christian (2018, p. 79) put it, living organisms are “informavores” in that
> “they all consume information, the mechanisms they use for reading and
> responding” to their environments. This fact is present in the “language
> games” of biologists. At the cellular level, biologists speak of “the
> language of genetics”; there are genetic messages, genetic software, and so
> forth. The famed DNA molecule is an information storage system, and the
> various RNA types (messenger, transfer, regulatory etc.) as
> transformational entities that take the information encoded in the DNA and
> translate them to allow for the formation of proteins. All of this is a
> form of “genetic/epigenetic information processing” that gives rise to
> self-organizing cellular structures, as described in this straightforward
> WIKI entry for RNA, cited here only to demonstrate how commonplace this
> formulation is (CITATION*): *
>
>
>
> *Cellular organisms use messenger RNA (mRNA) to convey genetic information
> (using the letters G, U, A, and C to denote the nitrogenous bases guanine,
> uracil, adenine, and cytosine) that directs synthesis of specific proteins.
> Many viruses encode their genetic information using an RNA genome.*
>
>
>
> *Many biologists have articulated in detail the utility of thinking about
> life in terms of information processing. In Wetware: A Computer in Every
> Living Cell, Bray (2009) articulated how the DNA and RNA complexes function
> as computational systems that give life its complexity. Farnsworth, Nelson
> and Gershenson (2012) go farther and argue that the defining feature of
> life is information processing, and that it not only resides in the DNA and
> RNA molecular structure, but functional information processing is woven
> together at all levels of life, from the genetic to the cellular to the
> ecological. They argue it is the central concept that allows biologist to
> understand the unique organized features and properties of living entities.
> The key point here is that living matter behaves qualitatively different
> from inanimate matter, and the language of and properties associated with
> information processing are the root of this qualitative difference. *
>
> *Genes are the fundamental unit of information in Life. The fundamental
> unit of organization that provides the basic structure that allows the
> component parts to engage in information processing, along with metabolism,
> growth and reproduction, is the cell. The cell is to Life what the atom is
> to Matter. And just as material behavior begins to change significantly
> when atoms link up to form molecules, so too when single cells merged to
> become multi-celled creatures. For over a billion years, cellular life
> maintained a relatively basic structure (Lane, 2015). Then, at about 2.7
> billion years ago, a massively important structural change happened when
> there was a remarkable jump in cellular complexity. That jump was the
> emergence of eukaryotic cells, meaning cells that had a nucleus contained
> in a membrane.*
>
>
>
> You said:
>
> But that doesn’t change the fact that any such knowledge can’t exist,
> unless something is instantiating it, both of which are required for
> semiotics to be an abstract label for, right?  No matter how “tricky”
> information is, there must be something, physical, which is representing
> all of it.
>
>  Yes, all information requires a substance to be instantiated on. See
> attached article for a good analysis of information in relationship to the
> physical world.
>
>
>
> You said:
>
> It seems you are implying that it must be very different, if pain is a
> “whole body” thing.  The pain isn't in the toe, it is in my knowledge of
> the toe, both of which are in my brain, right?
>
>
>
> My point was not that pain exists in the toe. The point I was making was a
> functional behavioral point about what sentience might do. It might be a
> way for the efficient coordination and communication of whole body
> behavior. BTW, this gets into Behavioral Investment Theory and how to link
> cognitive functionalism, perceptual control theory, and
> subjective/sentience into a coherent functional model.
>
>
>
> The last points require more analysis. I don’t know that I understand what
> it means to say “Intentionality, free will, higher order knowledge
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__en.wikipedia.org_wiki_Higher-2Dorder-5Ftheories-5Fof-5Fconsciousness&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_OeqLY0vBEsW1QouYnY0zCnA-EnwOWbzNF9T6drs-Xs&s=cqV0s8TA7UuSVyVRIvmnspjqVVvQHJXcnoDdLH0wxxA&e=>
> , intersubjective knowledge
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__en.wikipedia.org_wiki_Intersubjectivity&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_OeqLY0vBEsW1QouYnY0zCnA-EnwOWbzNF9T6drs-Xs&s=H2PKEz18YS3gYfCuh5-A_Ww4jxfUsPL4lUOa6olDFRA&e=>,
> self-awareness, desire, love, spirits, and all other similar concepts,
> including consciousness itself, as computationally bound composite
> qualitative knowledge.
>
>
>
> The engineering problem I am referring to can be put as follows: How do
> you build something that experiences the world? That is another way of
> putting the hard problem or experiential gap problem.
>
>
> Best,
>
> Gregg
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* tree of knowledge system discussion <
> [log in to unmask]> *On Behalf Of *Brent Allsop
> *Sent:* Sunday, May 12, 2019 9:28 PM
> *To:* [log in to unmask]
> *Subject:* Re: The "Epistemic Cut", Semiotics, and relationship between
> Matter and Information
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi Gregg,
>
>
>
> Thanks for all the help and your patience with me.  When you say:
>
>
>
> “semiotic/information processing systems in the universe at large”
>
>
>
> is there any of this below the “Bio-Semiotics” joint point (in the matter)
> cone in the ToK?  Even at the “life” level, am I correct in thinking there
> is very little of this?  For example, does a plant do any kind of
> information processing?
>
>
>
> Maybe I should ask the question from the other direction.  You talk about
> “tricky issues between knower(observer) and known(observed)”  I found an
> old Video Cassette tape at my Dad’s house he made of Christmas when I was 8
> years old.  Could or should I consider that tape as a “knower” of me, and
> my 8th Christmas?
>
>
>
> When you say:
>
>
>
> “What might contribute to some confusion here is that we need concepts to
> even begin talking/thinking/knowing, and so in that sense, semiotics is
> “prior” or already part of the equation as soon as we make any claim.”
>
>
>
> It seems to me you are talking about something completely different.  I
> agree that semiotics is “prior” to us making any claim of knowledge s, in
> an abstract definitional way.  But that doesn’t change the fact that any
> such knowledge can’t exist, unless something is instantiating it, both of
> which are required for semiotics to be an abstract label for, right?  No
> matter how “tricky” information is, there must be something, physical,
> which is representing all of it.
>
>
>
> When you say:
>
>
>
> “ qualia/sentient experience allow for “whole brain-animal” communication
> and interface”
>
>
>
>
>
> When I stub my toe, where is that pain?  Would “pain” in a brain, without
> a toe or a body, or any muscles at all, in a vat, which is identically
> stimulated to the way it would be if it DID have a body, be any different
> to pain in a brain, not in a vat, being stimulated identically from a real
> body?  It seems you are implying that it must be very different, if pain is
> a “whole body” thing.  The pain isn't in the toe, it is in my knowledge of
> the toe, both of which are in my brain, right?
>
>
>
> You talked about “Integrated Information Theory” and “Neuronal Workspace
> Theory” being consistent with this model.  Both of these were recently
> accepted as being consistent with “Representational Qualia Theory
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__canonizer.com_topic_88-2DRepresentational-2DQualia_6&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_OeqLY0vBEsW1QouYnY0zCnA-EnwOWbzNF9T6drs-Xs&s=rdTEySxH2jYmWgv83a5SdnB6HpQpmBXe_jgAxtkm2YI&e=>”
> along with this definition of consciousness:
>
>
>
> Intentionality, free will, higher order knowledge
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__en.wikipedia.org_wiki_Higher-2Dorder-5Ftheories-5Fof-5Fconsciousness&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_OeqLY0vBEsW1QouYnY0zCnA-EnwOWbzNF9T6drs-Xs&s=cqV0s8TA7UuSVyVRIvmnspjqVVvQHJXcnoDdLH0wxxA&e=>
> , intersubjective knowledge
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__en.wikipedia.org_wiki_Intersubjectivity&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_OeqLY0vBEsW1QouYnY0zCnA-EnwOWbzNF9T6drs-Xs&s=H2PKEz18YS3gYfCuh5-A_Ww4jxfUsPL4lUOa6olDFRA&e=>,
> self-awareness, desire, love, spirits, and all other similar concepts,
> including consciousness itself, as computationally bound composite
> qualitative knowledge.
>
>
>
> Which in my mind explains, at least theoretically, how one would build
> consciousness, and things like why some things in the brain are not
> conscious….
>
>
>
> When you say:
>
>
>
> But we have no idea how that kind of wave would ignite perceptual
> experience
>
>
>
> In my opinion, you are thinking of it wrong.  All you know about these
> waves, and everything else in the brain, is abstract information.  You know
> how they behave, but how does that behavior "feel"?  What is all that
> qualitatively like?  All you are missing is how to interpret all
> that.  There is nothing, additional, that is “ignited”.  In other words,
> redness doesn’t “ignite” from glutamate reacting in a synapse, we should
> just realize that we must qualitatively interpret both the word glutamate,
> and the word redness, as abstract labels for the same set of causal
> physical qualities, out of which you build/bind qualitative consciousness.
>
>
>
> Brent
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, May 12, 2019 at 11:36 AM Henriques, Gregg - henriqgx <
> [log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Hi Brent,
>
>
>
>    A number of issues here to sort things out. First, there is the Howard
> Pattee “line of thought,” which is considering the concept of “epistemic
> cuts” and the role of semiotic/information processing systems in the
> universe at large and its implications for understanding things like life,
> consciousness, language, knowledge and the quantum world.  The second line
> of thought is my interpretation of Pattee’s concept of semiotics and the
> epistemic cut via the ToK map, shared again here:
>
>
>
> My point was that when you do that, you see that issues pertaining to
> quantum mechanics are indeed quite different than issues pertaining to
> life/cells (or mind/neuro or culture/language). Bottom line: to the extent
> to which you are saying they are different, I don’t think you get much
> disagreement from me or likely Pattee, for that matter---however, both do
> involve some tricky issues between knower(observer) and known(observed).
> Also, although the relationship between information and the physical world
> is complicated, I generally agree with you. Energy is the first substance
> in the ToK language system, and it is the “ultimate common denominator,”
> from which everything emerges, starting at T = I Planck time and the
> subsequent unfolding of the Big Bang. What might contribute to some
> confusion here is that we need concepts to even begin
> talking/thinking/knowing, and so in that sense, semiotics is “prior” or
> already part of the equation as soon as we make any claim. That is to know
> anything at all (including knowing about energy), requires information. I
> have grown in my understanding on this issue via the distinction between
> ontology and ontic reality. The former refers to our ideas about reality
> and how we make sense of it (i.e., the scientific semiotics), the latter
> refers more directly to the “thing-itself” (the actual thing on the ToK
> represented by Big Bang). For me, the ontic reality at T = 1 Planck time is
> Energy, not information. That said, information is a powerful and tricky
> concept. For example, the deep relationship between information states and 2
> nd Law is such that information is a fascinating and foundational
> concept.
>
>
>
> Switching to your point about Dennett, I was never a big fan of Dennett’s
> work on qualia or his book *Consciousness Explained* (I MUCH prefer his
> other works, especially Darwin’s Dangerous Idea), and I agree with the
> critics that a better title would have been *Consciousness Explained Away*.
> As I have noted, I am in complete agreement with the basic Representational
> Qualia Theory set of claims.
>
>
>
> I find it much easier to understand qualia via a naturalistic functional
> representations of animal-environment relationships. This fits directly
> into what I would call the neuro-cognitive functionalist view of the mind,
> which I support. This is the idea that the nervous system is an information
> processing/communication system that coordinates the action of the animal
> as a whole. In this model, qualia special kinds of representation, namely
> they the “experienced parts” of a functional representational-guidance
> system. Integrated information theory and global neuronal workspace theory
> are consistent with this model.
>
>
>
> There are, of course, many and important unanswered questions that come
> with this view. First, we know that much neuro-cognitive functional
> representation can take place without qualia, so one functional question
> is: What does qualia/perceptual experience accomplish? (i.e., Couldn’t
> animals have just been robots or zombies with no experience of the world?)
> Like many, I believe that the functional answer will have to do with a
> central processing and integration function. Namely that qualia/sentient
> experience allow for “whole brain-animal” communication and interface.
> Consider, for example, the claim, which I think is reasonable, that the
> most basic qualia may well be pleasure and pain. (i.e., the first felt
> experience of being may well have been a “withdrawal and felt-pain
> association process”). This is interesting because pleasure and pain can be
> thought of as “whole animal” signals to approach and avoid. Functionally,
> the experience of them may have been nature’s way of generating a
> centralized and global communication/coordination (or reaction) system.
>
>
>
> The evolved functional analysis view does not do much with the hard
> problem of sentience, which is the “how to build it” or “the engineering
> problem”. This is problem of exactly “how and why” the neurophysiological
> behavioral processes result in the first person experience of being. What
> are the specifiable mechanics that cause my first person view of the world
> to come on line? As far as I can tell, we only have “neuro-correlational”
> knowledge about this question, and not much in the way of neuro-causation
> knowledge. We know that some parts of the brain are involved in some
> aspects of consciousness. For example, Dahaene and colleagues developed a
> strong line of research that showed that self-report of a perceptual
> experience is correlated with a particular kind of 300 millisecond ignition
> wave of neurological impulses. That is, when someone flashed something very
> fast, and they can’t see it half the time, but can see it another half,
> when they see it, there is a clear signature of a back and forth
> neuro-informational waves between various parts of the parietal and frontal
> lobe that happens at around 1/3 of a second post image flash. That is super
> cool. But we have no idea how that kind of wave would ignite perceptual
> experience, as opposed to other waves (e.g., why does the 300 ms wave do
> it?). In short, we just don’t know what it is about the
> neuro-electro-chemical wave activity of brains that could produce a
> subjective experience. But we have made much progress and boxed lots of
> things in.
>
>
>
> Best,
> Gregg
>
>
>
> *From:* tree of knowledge system discussion <
> [log in to unmask]> *On Behalf Of *Brent Allsop
> *Sent:* Sunday, May 12, 2019 12:09 PM
> *To:* [log in to unmask]
> *Subject:* Re: The "Epistemic Cut", Semiotics, and relationship between
> Matter and Information
>
>
>
> Yes, very interesting.  A few questions, though.  I understand stuff like
> this:
>
>
>
> ‘”This refers to the “unavoidable conceptual separation of the knower and
> the known” or the difference between “the symbolic record of an event and
> the event itself””
>
>
>
> But then you include what seems contradictory to me:
>
>
>
> “observer/observed entanglement”?
>
>
>
> Doesn’t “entanglement” imply non separation?  Why even bring up quantum
> entanglement, at all in any of this?
>
>
>
> I understand:
>
>
>
> “the symbolic record of an event and the event itself”
>
>
>
> But this is very different:
>
>
>
> “[the] relationship between Matter and Information”
>
>
>
> It seems to be a very popular idea that information could be more primal
> than matter.  But to me this seems to be a very mistaken and naive bleating
> of the heard.  You can’t have information of any kind, unless there is
> something, physical, that instantiates that information, right?
>
>
>
> This same bleating seems to be repeating in the consciousness consensus
> project
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__staging.canonizer.com_topic_88-2DAgreement_1&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_KM1PIi-7YySQYFrt6hW1EqaiE6KFA3p6b3TvTXzqRg&s=TGzbmfq4kh0vsyuJ-Pgi5Ws50_QHNAHs_mbf5LLRfxQ&e=>.
> There are far more participants in the “qualia emerge from function”  or
> that function / information is more fundamental than matter or qualia.
> Even IF matter or qualia emerged from some kind of function or information,
> would this, itself, be a fundamental property of physical matter?  And how
> can qualia, information, or anything like that, exist, without there being
> some kind of matter that is that?
>
>
>
> What is the ToK view on this?  Would supporters of the ToK be in anything
> other than the “no” camp on this “It from Bit
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__staging.canonizer.com_topic_138-2DIt-2Dfrom-2DBit-2D_1&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_KM1PIi-7YySQYFrt6hW1EqaiE6KFA3p6b3TvTXzqRg&s=VEZe0ot2aXrOFFFEZN1kG_deZbEeu_mN8VYIb7ddGuM&e=>”
> topic?  Would supporters of the ToK be in anything other than the “no” camp
> on this “Softare = Qualia
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__canonizer.com_topic_83-2DSoftware-2D-2D-2DQualia-2D_1&d=DwMFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=_KM1PIi-7YySQYFrt6hW1EqaiE6KFA3p6b3TvTXzqRg&s=oVihTPlqTH2yztOyxx18HxUMZTlcuauGPRQm09Z3gdA&e=>”
> topic?
>
>
>
> I just don’t understand why so many people seem so compelled to try so
> hard to fit information, or substrate independent function at a more primal
> / fundamental level than physical matter, when what we objectively observe
> seems so obviously in opposition to that.  I see no difference between
> these views and the people that are so compelled to believe the earth is
> flat, or the earth is the center of the solar system…
>
>
>
> To think that there can be information or knowledge, without there being
> something physical that instantiates that information is terribly damaging
> heresy.  For example, this leads to absurd claims like Dennett makes: “We
> don’t have qualia, it only seems like we do.”.  If it wasn’t for this kind
> of heresy, people wouldn’t be so lost, trying to think consciousness is so
> crazy and “hard”….  And nonphysical / unapproachable via science.  How
> would the ToK stand on climes like: “We don’t have qualia, it just seems
> like we do?”
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, May 12, 2019 at 4:43 AM nysa71 <
> [log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>
>
> Gregg,
>
> Very interesting. When you describe biosemiotics, I can't help but think
> that it sounds similar to what Jung was trying to describe with his
> archetypes and collective unconscious. Is that a fair comparison?
>
> ~ Jason Bessey
>
> On Saturday, May 11, 2019, 10:11:24 AM EDT, Henriques, Gregg - henriqgx <
> [log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi TOK List,
>
>
>
>   I spent yesterday afternoon reading an interesting book, Michael
> Gazzaniga’s The Consciousness Instinct.
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.amazon.com_Consciousness-2DInstinct-2DUnraveling-2DMystery-2DBrain_dp_0374715505&d=DwMFAg&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=VeMLVdkhPMA3ecuVj1YB6QSUzzRPkTtZG9fr18ngoMU&s=ybVdrFWkxt5QwuWZa666QEENmPed6ftS5cSUDkeqfSA&e=>
> For those who don’t know, Michael Gazzaniga is a famous cognitive
> neuroscientist. He worked with Roger Sperry on split brain patients and is
> famous for his “interpreter function” of the left hemisphere. I discuss an
> early book of his here
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.psychologytoday.com_us_blog_theory-2Dknowledge_201701_the-2Danimal-2Dhuman-2Ddividing-2Dline&d=DwMFAg&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=VeMLVdkhPMA3ecuVj1YB6QSUzzRPkTtZG9fr18ngoMU&s=3GwuAQ-ZCxCwg_7mLVo-vmKAyoBHbGxzxRaCRjRRKEs&e=>
> .
>
>
>
>   I was finding his newest book interesting, but a bit tedious as the
> first half is essentially a review of ideas about consciousness, such that
> I did not learn much. But it took a fascinating turn in chapter 7, which
> was on the physics concept of complementarity (wave particle duality and
> observer/observed entanglement) and accelerated in an interesting way in
> the next chapter on “Nonliving to Living and Neurons to Mind”. He reviews
> the work of Howard Pattee
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__informatics.indiana.edu_rocha_publications_pattee_index.html&d=DwMFAg&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=VeMLVdkhPMA3ecuVj1YB6QSUzzRPkTtZG9fr18ngoMU&s=ZeapA-SAyFE7N0qJKCqVsp8JSghYlaBPSf7oRCp7GC0&e=>,
> who is a retired theoretical physicist turned biologist who pioneered work
> on biosemiotics and what he called the “epistemic cut.” This refers to the
> “unavoidable conceptual separation of the knower and the known” or the
> difference between “the symbolic record of an event and the event itself”.
> Attached is the page from Gazzaniga’s book that describes it. Here is
> another description of the epistemic cut, also called “the schnitt
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.edge.org_response-2Ddetail_27049&d=DwMFAg&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=VeMLVdkhPMA3ecuVj1YB6QSUzzRPkTtZG9fr18ngoMU&s=880Ubxt_p_NJ3XjG3KcDCy4PF-f2pP_IMU8Rz2rwxAw&e=>”.
> I had never heard of the term before, but I am very happy to learn of it.
>
>
>
>   Here is the basics of what Gazzaniga ends up offering, which I think we
> can make clear with the ToK: Via complementarity and diving into a basic
> understanding of quantum mechanics following the work of Pattee, Gazzaniga
> highlights that there is an object/subject duality everywhere. At the level
> of the quantum, there is the problem of entanglement and superposition. At
> the level of Life, it refers to how cells operate based on semiotics (i.e.,
> are information processing and communication systems). For some good quotes
> on how Pattee views the world, see here:
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.informationphilosopher.com_solutions_scientists_pattee_&d=DwIFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=Bw2CBNIF7KJrlBI1Fxx5LhE-Mr_-pKaiIbTkPTlUpWg&s=WZd5IJDssULw3gz3izvWsCk6B5OfpFJY_BUxjOWdo1A&e=
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.informationphilosopher.com_solutions_scientists_pattee_&d=DwMFAg&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=VeMLVdkhPMA3ecuVj1YB6QSUzzRPkTtZG9fr18ngoMU&s=KVY2PHJ_wFrAo2cycZeoOw6xju_1mSzYgX1CdsUQQSI&e=>.
> Here is a choice one:
>
>
>
> *It is my central idea that the essence of the matter-symbol problem and
> the measurement or recording problem must appear at the origin of living
> matter.* Symbols and records have existed since life existed. If this
> view is correct, then it is a more hopeful strategy to begin by asking what
> we mean by the *first* primitive record rather than question what we mean
> by our most sophisticated and abstract records. In effect, this strategy
> forces us to make an objective criterion for a recording process.
>
>
>
> Why am I excited about this? A couple of reasons. First, given the
> connections between Gazzaniga’s Interpreter and JUST, especially the JH, he
> is headed toward a conception of human self-consciousness that lines up
> directly with the ToK version. But what he is doing is going deep, through
> neuro-mental objective/subjective sentience, into the layer of the cell,
> and into quantum mechanics (much like John Torday does). By following
> Gazzaniga’s line of thought (following Pattee), I can see clearly that what
> he is advocating for connects deeply to two of the things the ToK System
> does, that other systems of knowledge do not.
>
>
>
>   First, unlike all other systems, the ToK INCLUDES the human knower-known
> epistemic cut. That is, it includes what I call the “H” Factor, which is
> the Human Knower. The most direct way it achieves this is because of the
> Justification Hypothesis and systems theory. (Please note here that a
> theory of knowledge, epistemology, and a theory of justification are almost
> identical. Via JUST placed on the ToK, I can place the evolution of social
> into formal into scientific epistemology in context of the universe—see
> slide two).
>
>
>
>   Second, the ToK also includes a very specifiable relationship between
> information/communication/semiotics and the natural, Newtonian, lawfully
> determined world. That is, it frames and describes the relationship between
> energy, matter, information, and scientific knowledge in a way that no
> other system does.
>
>
>
>   See the attached ToK diagram (slide 1), which places the word
> “semiotics” at the joint points, because that is another way of conceiving
> the joint point. That is, Life is Bio-semiotics, Mind is neuro-semiotics,
> Culture is Language-Semiotics. And then there is the semiotics of
> scientific knowledge. Enlightenment 1.0 was based in an inert, general,
> view-from-nowhere knower that could simply observe the fully, lawfully
> determined behavior that was completely reversable across time. However,
> this is NOT how the actual world works. The actual world of scientific
> knowledge embedded in the universe requires clarity about the nature and
> place of the epistemic cut. The ToK shows us how to do that. It shows us
> where the Science Human Knower is in the universe of behavior (the “H”
> factor), and it shows were the observer/observed relations are, from the
> quantum to the living to the mental to the cultural and to the
> meta-Cultural knower.  Indeed, the bottom lists “quantum semiotics” as a
> way to note that physicists had to develop a completely different language
> system to talk about the science of quantum mechanics (what Alexander calls
> quantum organics).
>
>
>
>   My pitch is that with the ToK (Unified Metaphysical Empirical Language)
> System we finally have a truly holistic picture of the knower/known
> relationship across the various levels and dimensions of complexity. Thus,
> we can bridge the epistemic cut and achieve greater clarity on the deepest
> conceptual problems that have plagued scientists and philosophers since
> formal epistemologies emerged on the scene in the Axial Age
> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__en.wikipedia.org_wiki_Axial-5FAge&d=DwMFAg&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=VeMLVdkhPMA3ecuVj1YB6QSUzzRPkTtZG9fr18ngoMU&s=6lR1oqoCwOZTn9y_4mD7XXBpjHOpVKiw2azNscXCSis&e=>.
>
>
>
> Best,
> Gregg
>
>
>
>
>
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