My apologies for reposting this, but I buggered the subject line the first time and I really am hoping for an answer from SOMEBODY.
Dear all, All the time I was out there I never thought to ask you the following question. As a behaviorist psychologist, I have always had doubts about the notion of self knowledge, in the sense that we know the true causes of our own actions (which we would have to do if "we" were the causes of our own action, eh? ) One of the reasons I went out to SFE was to get the answer to the question, what is it that a computer gives you when you ask a computer to tell you about itself. On my understanding, what you learn about is in fact the state of a specialisted subsystem designed to monitor the whole which gets you an answer on the basis of reports from specialized sub-sub systems...."cues" if you will. So in my gloom, I am sitting here looking at my CP monitor in my task bar varying from 10 percent to 17 percent. So, that is not my CPU telling me about my CPU, right. If not, who is it and on the basis of what incomplete knowledge is it telling me what the CPU is doing. Nick Nicholas Thompson nickthompson at earthlink.net http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson Nicholas Thompson nickthompson at earthlink.net http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20051127/f25807ab/attachment.htm |
Perhaps nobody really understood your question. AFAIK, computers be it
Windoze, Mac or Linux are not self-aware. Therefore question as you've posed it has no meaning. Perhaps you mean a formal system capable of introspection? You could look at some of the stuff Bruno Marchal does, as it is all about questioning a Loebian machine. I'm sure you could ask a Loebian machine about itself, and it will be able to tell you something! Cheers On Sun, Nov 27, 2005 at 11:52:11PM -0500, Nicholas Thompson wrote: > My apologies for reposting this, but I buggered the subject line the first time and I really am hoping for an answer from SOMEBODY. > > Dear all, > > All the time I was out there I never thought to ask you the following > question. As a behaviorist psychologist, I have always had doubts about > the notion of self knowledge, in the sense that we know the true causes of > our own actions (which we would have to do if "we" were the causes of our > own action, eh? ) One of the reasons I went out to SFE was to get the > answer to the question, what is it that a computer gives you when you ask a > computer to tell you about itself. On my understanding, what you learn > about is in fact the state of a specialisted subsystem designed to monitor > the whole which gets you an answer on the basis of reports from specialized > sub-sub systems...."cues" if you will. So in my gloom, I am sitting here > looking at my CP monitor in my task bar varying from 10 percent to 17 > percent. So, that is not my CPU telling me about my CPU, right. If not, > who is it and on the basis of what incomplete knowledge is it telling me > what the CPU is doing. > > > Nick > > Nicholas Thompson > nickthompson at earthlink.net > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson > > > Nicholas Thompson > nickthompson at earthlink.net > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > Wed Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, maps, etc. at http://www.friam.org -- *PS: A number of people ask me about the attachment to my email, which is of type "application/pgp-signature". Don't worry, it is not a virus. It is an electronic signature, that may be used to verify this email came from me if you have PGP or GPG installed. Otherwise, you may safely ignore this attachment. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- A/Prof Russell Standish Phone 8308 3119 (mobile) Mathematics 0425 253119 (") UNSW SYDNEY 2052 R.Standish at unsw.edu.au Australia http://parallel.hpc.unsw.edu.au/rks International prefix +612, Interstate prefix 02 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
I am not sure what your question is. There are different meanings of the term "Self". Sometimes it refers to your consciousness of your own identity, sometimes to the idea of a unified being which is the source of your own actions. In some contexts we talk of the "self" as if it would be a unified entity or single thing, although it is often only a (psychological) construct. Is there such a thing as a unified being which is the source of your own actions? Modern neuroscience tells us there is a constant neural storm with millions of tiny electric discharges going on in each head, but there is no mental analog to the physcial body, at least no central entity or authority. Basically I think Buddha was right in thinking that there is no "mental self" at all. It is a construct or an illusion, partially created by the knowledge of yourself as part of the environment. I guess self knowledge is necessary for self consciousness, but not sufficient. A computer which shows your information about the CPU performance has neither self knowledge nor self consciousness. If you ask a computer to tell you about itself, the computer will not understand you. If you command him to do it, i.e. if you write a program, this is of course something different. It is quite a bit paradox: - a computer has a central "self" in form of a central processing unit (CPU), but no self knowledge at all, - a human has no central self and no central processing unit, but nevertheless extensive "self" knowledge. -J. ________________________________ Dear all, All the time I was out there I never thought to ask you the following question. As a behaviorist psychologist, I have always had doubts about the notion of self knowledge, in the sense that we know the true causes of our own actions (which we would have to do if "we" were the causes of our own action, eh? ) One of the reasons I went out to SFE was to get the answer to the question, what is it that a computer gives you when you ask a computer to tell you about itself. On my understanding, what you learn about is in fact the state of a specialisted subsystem designed to monitor the whole which gets you an answer on the basis of reports from specialized sub-sub systems...."cues" if you will. So in my gloom, I am sitting here looking at my CP monitor in my task bar varying from 10 percent to 17 percent. So, that is not my CPU telling me about my CPU, right. If not, who is it and on the basis of what incomplete knowledge is it telling me what the CPU is doing. Nick |
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
> One of the reasons I went out to SFE was to get the
> answer to the question, what is it that a computer gives you when you ask a > computer to tell you about itself. On my understanding, what you learn > about is in fact the state of a specialisted subsystem designed to monitor > the whole which gets you an answer on the basis of reports from specialized > sub-sub systems...."cues" if you will. I think that's pretty much what happens when you ask a human being to tell you about themselves, too. Except under unusual situations, you don't get the subconscious mind handing over every single relevant memory the person has ever had; you get a context-sensitive report summarizing relevant data. If I ask a casual acquaintance what's going on their lives, they'll probably tell me something trivial; if you ask somebody close, you get more data, some of it potentially quite deep. If a doctor asks you how you're feeling, he doesn't mean "how's your relationship?" he means "has your arm fallen off?" On 11/27/05, Nicholas Thompson <nickthompson at earthlink.net> wrote: > > > > > My apologies for reposting this, but I buggered the subject line the first > time and I really am hoping for an answer from SOMEBODY. > > Dear all, > > > All the time I was out there I never thought to ask you the following > question. As a behaviorist psychologist, I have always had doubts about > the notion of self knowledge, in the sense that we know the true causes of > our own actions (which we would have to do if "we" were the causes of our > own action, eh? ) One of the reasons I went out to SFE was to get the > answer to the question, what is it that a computer gives you when you ask a > computer to tell you about itself. On my understanding, what you learn > about is in fact the state of a specialisted subsystem designed to monitor > the whole which gets you an answer on the basis of reports from specialized > sub-sub systems...."cues" if you will. So in my gloom, I am sitting here > looking at my CP monitor in my task bar varying from 10 percent to 17 > percent. So, that is not my CPU telling me about my CPU, right. If not, > who is it and on the basis of what incomplete knowledge is it telling me > what the CPU is doing. > > > Nick > > Nicholas Thompson > nickthompson at earthlink.net > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson > > > Nicholas Thompson > nickthompson at earthlink.net > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson > > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > Wed Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, maps, etc. at > http://www.friam.org > > -- Giles Bowkett = Giles Goat Boy http://www.gilesgoatboy.org/ |
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