Dennis Hackethal’s Blog
My blog about philosophy, coding, and anything else that interests me.
Tweets
An archive of my tweets and retweets through . They may be formatted slightly differently than on Twitter. API access has since gotten prohibitively expensive – I don't know whether or when I'll be able to update this archive.
But in case I will, you can subscribe via RSS – without a Twitter account. Rationale
Dogs don't have human language, so what?
When did I say error correction or consciousness have to do with language?
How does the inability to resolve errors in a particular way imply zero ability to experience suffering?
Because it points at the dog blindly executing an algorithm. Blindly, like an automaton.
That same gap isn't just the difference between skyscrapers and beaver dams but also between sentient and non-sentient.
@direstdiarist @RichardDawkins
And who's to say a dog can't overcome this instinct, either of its own accord or with training?
Of its own accord would be interesting. With training, not so much.
@direstdiarist @RichardDawkins
And then there's the same bug in humans (at least me, albeit expressed differently)... There's something there.
[There's no] reason to overcome a behaviour that is only maladaptive in a completely contrived scenario.
Would you still say this if a person did the same thing?
@direstdiarist @RichardDawkins
A handful of 30 second YouTube snippets [...]
Well, it's 14 clips of dogs 'swimming'. That's not nothing. Also, I hear cats do it, too. If it's cross-species that may point at something deeper.
@direstdiarist @RichardDawkins
Yeah, could be that plus moving slowly or not at all. Or maybe bracing for impact inhibits the algorithm. Btw there's no need for quotes around 'algorithm', it's literally one, not metaphorically.
Stay tuned for lambda plus and lambda pro. twitter.com/ClimateWarrior…
"It doesn't work unless everybody pitches in!"
RT @firstofequals:
Can we end homelessness? Yes, comrade - we can do just that, with my Generous Universal Living Arrangement Grant program…
.@AOC hugging a guy, not wearing a mask, eagerly touching her face. twitter.com/SenSchumer/sta…
RT @ComicDaveSmith:
There in not one government policy under the covid regime that has helped mitigate the virus and most have caused enorm…
Delta Plus is how you get Covid without the ads.
Delta plus? What's next? Delta Deluxe? Delta Pro?
And it's not just that humans have a bigger repertoire: they have an unpredictably expanding one. That's how we account for the huge gap between our achievements and those of all other species. No other species builds spacecraft or skyscrapers. How else do you explain that?
[S]imply having a smaller repertoire says nothing about whether they have consciousness [...]
Agreed, hence my focus on error correction. Which, again, seems to be lacking entirely in 'swimming' dogs.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Cultural evolution in humans has dramatically expanded our behavioral repertoire [...]
Not just our behavior, but also our knowledge. And individuals are creative. (If they weren't, cultural evolution wouldn't be where it is today.)
@direstdiarist @RichardDawkins
Applied to the example of thrashing around in the water, a person can know not to do that and calmly lie on his back – as you yourself suggested and as a dog couldn't suggest or understand.
@direstdiarist @RichardDawkins
[...] not sure unnecessary deployment of a survival mechanism precludes consciousness.
If that were all, I would agree, since humans do this too. The crucial difference, as I explain in the post, is that humans detect and correct such errors.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
David Deutsch recently said in an interview (paraphrasing from memory) that there are books about dogs and dog breeds and you can go to page 72 and it will say 'in situation x the dog will do y'. Not only is there no such book for humans, but there can be no such book for humans.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
What humans do is not pre-programmable even in principle. Everything dogs do is entirely pre-programmable (and pre-programmed).
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Why is that relevant?
If dogs robotically follow their genes' programming then dogs are robots, ie, not conscious.
Yes, a robot could do what a dog does [...]
yes
[..] or it could do what you do.
No – only with some very special programming, and maybe not even then.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Unconsciously following genetic hunting algorithms in robot fashion.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Yes yes, we have established now that those questioning animal consciousness are terribly arrogant.
Self-awareness is not required for consciousness [...]
I said it the other way round.
New blog post: Evidence Is Ambiguous
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
That is not considered a test for consciousness.
By whom?
It is meant to test self-awareness [...]
Is consciousness not required for self-awareness?
It's also an incredibly self-centered view on the part of human researchers [...]
Those pesky arrogant humans...
Strange, I thought my quote tweet would also appear as a comment. Here it is for thread continuity:
"[Winking] suggests a very well developed sense of consciousness for self and others in dogs."
LOL no it doesn't. I'll program a robot to wink at other robots, does that make it conscious? twitter.com/FluffyKittyA/s…
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
What about the things they ARE aware of?
It's at best unclear that they are.
Let's take an example somewhat related to what you've written: self-recognition in the mirror. Many are impressed when animals do that and consider it evidence they're conscious. Do you?
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Robots could be programmed to write and send your tweets. Your point?
My point is that robots aren't conscious. Do you agree?
You’re arguing from intimidation which is invalid: theobjectivestandard.com/2019/06/the-ar…
Federal government is making it harder to work for and with the government. Good. Maybe people will quit and the parasite will shrink a bit, if only temporarily. twitter.com/disclosetv/sta…
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
What about my dog’s uncanny ability to find the one beam of sunlight in a room […]
“Uncanny”? You don’t think robots could be programmed to do the same thing?
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
What does that mistake have to do with whether or not they are conscious and can feel?
It’s not that the dog makes a mistake – we all do – it’s how it deals with it and how it’s unaware of it.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
So humans can detect and correct errors and how they do this seems very different from animals (when animals do it at all). And somewhere in that difference lies the difference between sentient and non-sentient, I think.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
The reason I say they have no idea what they're doing is that they try to 'swim' when held above water, and even when they're held above an AC unit. They don't realize their mistake. I then give an example of something similar happening to me but realizing the mistake.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
So... sources should only be read when both parties suggest some?
Well okay, if you don't want to read it, in short it's that dogs have no idea what they're doing and if they were conscious they would notice grotesque errors in their behavior.
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Now give me some evidence that other animals are not conscious.
See my blog post?
Why should we assume that beings that can remember [...] and learn probably have no internal states?
Why should we assume that they do? This goes both ways.
@oldvillagesage @RichardDawkins
I understand some of my reactions a posteriori as composed of small reactions that seem very algorithmic to internal and external stimuli.
Can you give a specific example of a reaction and the external and internal stimuli that accompany it?
@oldvillagesage @RichardDawkins
I agree that people are sometimes predictable (eg many will find it strange if you shake their left hand) but on the whole they are deeply unpredictable in principle because they are knowledge-creating entities.
RT @ClimateWarrior7:
One of the most effective ways to reduce the covid death toll would have been for the white community to hand over a l…
Hesse hier und mir sagt keiner dieser Begriffe was. 😀
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
I'm not suggesting that and I agree that sophistication of behaviors is no indication of absence (or presence, for that matter) of awareness.
Answer my q pls?
RT @michaelmalice:
When you hear political leaders refer to entire groups of humans as "non-essential," you are hearing the groundwork bein…
RT @iamdevloper:
[lying awake at night, contemplating human existence]
🛸 🌎 ° 🌓 • .°• 🚀 ✯
★ * ° 🛰 °· …
In turn, I'd guess the vast majority of those who think animals cannot suffer don't go around torturing animals ("affliction of cruelty").
Thinking animals can't suffer is decidedly a minority view, so the vast, vast majority of animal 'abuse' is committed by people who do think animals can suffer and either enjoy making them suffer or don't care enough not to eat them.
Only halfway through but I have a thought on "Inevitably, the conviction that animals do not feel pain leads to [...] the affliction of cruelty and suffering [...]."
Beg to differ 👇
I haven't had a pet dog myself (though I've had other pets) but I've spent a fair bit of time around dogs. And yea they would wink at me sometimes.
@grain99806254 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
What's the best argument in favor of the existence of abstractions that you know?
@AstralKing7 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
Dogs do plenty of things that suggest consciousness that they were not "bred" to do.
OK, for example?
The hardware (nervous system etc) is similar indeed but I think the software is very different. And the ability to suffer seems to result from that difference.
RT @Captain_Concept:
@dchackethal @FluffyKittyA @RichardDawkins
Human narcissism truly knows no bounds
Can you point to something specific in my claims that's either illogical or unscientific?
This isn't meant as some sort of challenge to you, I'm genuinely curious if there are mistakes in my thinking.
RT @ThomasEWoods:
More rain dances should bring rain at last
@grain99806254 @Der_Prometheus @RichardDawkins
What’s the best refutation you know?
RT @liberty_deity:
Fifteen days to slow the spread?
Where have we heard that before?
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
Evidence can’t support theories anyway (Popper). We are free to make bold conjectures, and the bolder they are the easier it should be to refute them.
@Annascreativemo @LouiseH74531141 @RichardDawkins
Warning, graphic violence
Good luck pushing your ideology
That's an unfair assessment of what I'm doing. I'm just interested in discussing and seeing where I'm wrong.
Again a reductionist take.
What's reductionist about it? Computers instantiate abstractions on higher levels of emergence.
Brains and artificial computers differ fundamentally.
Why? I agree there are some differences but I've explained why brains are computers.
RT @amatueradult:
@dchackethal @RichardDawkins
I like that your name has "hack" in it
Brains were designed by biological evolution. And it’s not an analogy: anything that processes information is a computer.
Yeah, good intentions standing in the way of error correction.
Yes, and also the level of hostility with which they'll greet anyone who dares question that animals are conscious.
Hopefully one day we'll be effectively immortal and so everyone, no matter how old, will always be near the beginning of his life.
Not a "sentience gene", no. And I'm no reductionist. But I agree that sentience is an emergent property (though not of brains (hardware) but of certain software).
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
That said, 'citation needed' has its place and all, but when somebody comes up with a genuinely new idea, there can't be any citations for it, and that doesn't make the idea any worse.
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
David Deutsch's The Beginning of Infinity chapter 5 amazon.com/Beginning-Infi…
Not about bits specifically but explains the reasoning behind the reality of abstractions and emergence.
Even if you disagree the whole thing is still a fantastic read so I recommend it either way!
@ADocetist @lucid_crow @alistair_ware
Humans make errors too but they can correct them much more easily and through different and better means than dogs.
RT @JeriousK:
@dchackethal @RichardDawkins
Nobody click on that. No telling what viral malware is there. Given that the previous sentence a…
RT @BissetteHunter:
Being skeptical toward the existence of gratuitous animal suffering is even more bold than being skeptical toward the e…
Read the blog post I linked and maybe you'll find a reason? (depending on what you mean by "systems")
Humans are much more than language robots.
@AVoiceForField1 @RichardDawkins
Yes, I've commented on it here: blog.dennishackethal.com/posts/analyzin…
@pipcem @BallWw123f @RichardDawkins
I agree that brains (hardware) are very similar. But our minds (software) are very different from other animals'.
@pipcem @BallWw123f @RichardDawkins
I've spent time with dogs and other animals. I used to be vegan out of concern for animals so I get it. But eventually I changed my mind because I was exposed to new ideas and developed some of my own that I think work better.
@Annascreativemo @LouiseH74531141 @RichardDawkins
I watched 'Earthlings' a few years back. Does that count?
RT @diemauerthewall:
West Berlin in 1961. Thousands of citizens flocked to the Brandenburg Gate to see the division of their city first han…
“[…] if you do go out of your house, I will tell the police to return you to your home.” — The President of the Philippines twitter.com/toadmeister/st…
California trying to make error correction harder. Not surprising. Take note. twitter.com/KevinKileyCA/s…
Highly doubt this is true as I keep hearing deaths with COVID are counted as deaths from COVID. If that’s true, this ‘statistic’ just fuels fear and isn’t helping. twitter.com/AlecStapp/stat…
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
magnetically arranged atoms are not bits or bytes they're just atoms
Bits aren't just useful. That's instrumentalist. They really do exist objectively, but as more than atoms.
And I think atoms themselves are also emergent phenomena, btw.
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
I think many people would describe themselves as more than just atoms configured in interesting ways... and they'd be right. A car is also just atoms configured interestingly. There must be more.
In any case, what the dog does in your video doesn't show it knows about water or its dangers. Genes that happened to code for collaborative behavior like that may simply have spread through the gene pool because fewer of their organisms drowned. No understanding required.
Cool, I didn't know it was false. I take it they did experiments to refute the idea?
I don't think I said dogs don't understand what water is. Do you have a quote?
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
bits and bytes aren't matter btw
@Der_Prometheus @grain99806254 @RichardDawkins
So people are also just atoms bumping into each other?
"[...] the much derided idea that frogs don't jump out of boiling water." It may be derided but is it false?
I've seen it now. And?
I have, and I think we should be careful to label those things 'fun' for them. It's anthropomorphizing and then concluding they're conscious like us, which is circular.
What looks like fun to us may be them trying things out, updating parameters, 'learning' in ways we don't.