diff --git a/src/experiments/speedreading.pdc b/src/experiments/speedreading.pdc index 19d50dc..bac256c 100644 --- a/src/experiments/speedreading.pdc +++ b/src/experiments/speedreading.pdc @@ -391,23 +391,23 @@ aggressive pattern prediction. It's time to throw away the chains of ~~oppressio comrade!~~ intended text flow that the author gave us and to read in any order and any direction that gets to the meaning faster. -Reading nonlinearly means you read text just like you normal look around. You +Reading nonlinearly just means you read text the same way you look around. You jump to the points that look most interesting, figure out the context around them, then jump to the next spot. But if you read everything sequentially, you can't do that! At least, you'd have to go back and start reading the current sentence you're in. -Imagine you looked around like you read. You go into a room and move your eyes -to the upper left, start moving them to the right, line by line, until you have -scanned the whole room. Sure, you would *see* everything eventually, but it -would be *way* stupid and inefficient. Instead, you first have a quick look -around, maybe 2 or 3 unconscious eye movements, to figure out if anyone is in -the room and where the interesting stuff is. Nothing unusual on the floor or -ceiling, so you skip those areas altogether. But you saw something like a face -over there, so you concentrate more on this point until you recognize who it is -(and in what mood they are). This takes maybe a second or so in total, and you -may have only actually looked at 5% of the scene, but you sure know everything -that matters. So why not read that way? +Imagine your vision would work sequentially - like normal reading. You go into a +room and move your eyes to the upper left, start moving them to the right, line +by line, until you have scanned the whole room. Sure, you would *see* everything +eventually, but it would be *way* stupid and inefficient. Instead, you first +have a quick look around, maybe 2 or 3 unconscious eye movements, to figure out +if anyone is in the room and where the interesting stuff is. Nothing unusual on +the floor or ceiling, so you skip those areas altogether. But you saw something +like a face over there, so you concentrate more on this point until you +recognize who it is (and in what mood they are). This takes maybe a second or so +in total, and you may have only actually looked at 5% of the scene, but you sure +know everything that matters. So why not read that way? A good exercise I found was to enforce a time limit per page. I set up a timer[^pororo] to give me a little beep every 20 seconds, following which I diff --git a/src/reflections/con_exp.pdc b/src/reflections/con_exp.pdc index 2eb1a1b..4330f1f 100644 --- a/src/reflections/con_exp.pdc +++ b/src/reflections/con_exp.pdc @@ -70,21 +70,21 @@ is also quite flexible and will adapt to new senses, like magnetism, as long as we can input it. Some body hackers have achieved neat things in that regard. Even better, you can do this even after the person has experienced a "real" world, as long as you modify their memories as well. There are plenty of -documented cases of people losing parts of their brain and not noting it. Losing -a whole direction, like "left", is not that unusual for a stroke victim. They -don't notice at all that they don't see anything to their left, the very concept -is gone. Ask them to get dressed and they only put on one sock. So if vision is -too complex for you, just cut it all out. Once technology has improved, you can -add it back in again. To lie convincingly, we really only need to be consistent. -If movement and touch is only binary (I touch you or not; you push or not), then -the brain will think of it as normal. +documented cases of people losing parts of their brain and not realizing it. +Losing a whole direction, like "left", is not that unusual for a stroke victim. +They don't notice at all that they don't see anything to their left, the very +concept is gone. Ask them to get dressed and they only put on one sock. So if +vision is too complex for you, just cut it all out. Once technology has +improved, you can add it back in again. To lie convincingly, we really only need +to be consistent. If movement and touch is only binary (I touch you or not; you +push or not), then the brain will think of it as normal. Furthermore, we already have brains in vats! There are already complete simulations of neurons. Some primitive animal brains (worms, mostly) have already been simulated! As of 2010, the best we can do are small parts of a -rat's brain, but in less than 30 years, we will be able to do human brain's as -well. So his claim of this being "beyond human technology now and probably -forever" is utterly ridiculous. +rat's brain, but not that foor of, maybe this century even, we will be able to +do human brain's as well. So his claim of this being "beyond human technology +now and probably forever" is utterly ridiculous. Strong Hallucinations --------------------- @@ -417,12 +417,12 @@ Turing machine. *How can that be?!* It completely surprises me. Such ideas go clearly against my own experiences, clash with all of my introspections, have been widely and -thoroughly taking apart in all the traditions about consciousness *I* seem to +thoroughly taking apart in all the traditions about consciousness *I* seem to be aware of, like from Buddhism, Christian and Gnostic mysticism, the whole drug culture and so on. Really, most of the time the first things a mystic is gonna tell you is that reality is not fundamental, but can be taken apart, that your perceptions, emotions and thoughts are independent processes and not *you* and -that most common sense of self, the ego, can entirely disappear[^ego]. In fact, +that the sense of self, the ego, can entirely disappear[^ego]. In fact, the belief in the self is the very first thing on the way to nirvana a Buddhist has to overcome. It can take many forms, but the basic experience of selfless existence is one thing really *every* mystic or guru or saint has ever said or @@ -505,7 +505,7 @@ Beyond Belief conference, on which I can really only quote Scott Atran[^atran]: Evasion ======= -But enough of praise. The last might have given you the impression that I was +But enough praise. The last might have given you the impression that I was convinced by Dennett, that his approach seemed reasonable to me. And in fact, for a while, I was. Fortunately, along came another chapter, the one about "philosophical problems of consciousness", in which Dennett tries to answer some @@ -514,13 +514,13 @@ part, but the part on *seeming*... oh, *seeming*... Dennett reviews his progress so far and pretends to address one obvious criticism: that he still hasn't explained qualia. And he is very much aware of -it, but he just plain refuses to answer, just throwing a few smoke-bombs +it, but he just plainly refuses to answer, just throwing a few smoke-bombs instead, hoping the reader forgets all about it! It's like, "Why are there still qualia?" -> "To understand qualia, we must understand phenomenology." -> "To -understand phenomenology, we must understand selves." -> "Hey I got them really -cool stories about them multiple selves! Let me show you them!" -> "Any -questions?". Like, what?! I feel I just got mugged by that stupid... ALL GLORY -TO THE HYPNOTOAD. +understand phenomenology, we must understand selves." -> "Hey I got really cool +stories about them multiple selves! Let me show you them!" -> "Any questions?". +Like, what?! I feel I just got mugged by that stupid... ALL GLORY TO THE +HYPNOTOAD. Dennett still completely depends on a big leap of faith. He can not explain the *particular* features of consciousness. His draft, or functionalism in general, @@ -529,9 +529,9 @@ resulting subjective experience. Or in other words, functionalism may figure out what particular point in Design Space we inhibit and how we got there, but not *why* Design Space looks the way it does. To give an example, functionalism and evolution explains just fine why the difference between ripe and unripe apples -is reflected in their different perceived color, but not why *red* looks like -*red* and not like *green* instead. He can only explain the *differentiation*, -but not the absolute position! +is reflected in a different perceived color for each, but not why *red* looks +like *red* and not like *green* instead. He can only explain the +*differentiation*, but not the absolute position! I'm sure Dennett would answer that this is a meaningless question to ask and that's exactly what's infuriating me so much about the book. To me, that is a @@ -546,7 +546,7 @@ right. Afterwards, it moves one field straight ahead and then repeats itself. There, I just gave you a *full description* of the universe of Langton's Ant. I left nothing out, all the rules are in there. If you want, you can build your -own, genuine Ant from that, without anything missing. But then you observe the +own genuine Ant from that, without anything missing. But then you observe the ant and the following happens: ![Langton's Ant builds a highway](LangtonsAnt.png)