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

@markcannon5

But knowledge does exist in the brain in the form of the structure of cortical columns; plus mechanisms of how to associate them given certain sense data, etc.

Knowledge - of any kind - is created by evolution: variation alternating with criticism.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

Indeed. So biological evolution creates the genetic knowledge of how to do the wiring in such a way.

If biological evolution explains the origin of genetic knowledge, why should an evolutionary algorithm running on the brain not explain the origin of human knowledge?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

Where does that wiring come from?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

In principle, but I agreed that it would be unlikely to happen.

Anyway, okay, so let's say those components are stored in cortical columns. Where does the knowledge of how to store stimuli in cortical columns come from?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

I didn’t say blind people can see color.

Okay, so let’s say those components come to us through the senses. How?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

Faith has nothing to do with it.

I had already granted that it would be extremely unlikely to think of dogs in that situation, but that's incidental.

You seem to claim that knowledge comes to us through the senses. Yes?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

  1. For example, that it has legs, a nose, etc.
  2. Because in the sense you mean, red is a quale. We don't understand qualia, so I don't know.
@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

I'm familiar with the argument you're making. Brain in a vat. I could think all kinds of things about dogs I want. Anything thinkable I can think.

If you were to say that I cannot predict the quale of seeing a dog, then I'm with you.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

I'm in principle capable to have any thoughts about cars and dogs I like. I would be extraordinarily unlikely to have them, though.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

Do tell.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@HeuristicWorld

As a preprogrammed emotional response, sure, but no associated quale of suffering.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@HeuristicWorld

I think there is no animal behavior that cannot be explained in terms of genetically given algorithms that just need to be executed; that leaves no room for creativity.

If consciousness, suffering etc arise out of creativity and animals are not creative, they are not conscious.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

As if the bastardization of the term "AI" had not gone far enough, folks are now starting to bastardize the term "AGI".

If this spreads, we will soon need to find a new term to talk about the real thing again. twitter.com/markcannon5/st…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

You're building a shape recognition algorithm. That's not AGI, even if it can recognize all kinds of shapes.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@SarahTheHaider

"Lame"?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ks445599 @markcannon5

Well, we have a good explanations of why it would be a bad idea to unilaterally disarm.

Using justificationism against justificationists is an interesting approach, however. But does that not change your yardstick for what you consider real? I.e. a good explanation vs "proof"?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ks445599 @markcannon5

Burden of proof is justificationist. My link refutes Mark's points. He now needs to either explain why it does not, or refute the link.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5

I just gave one.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@sciencemagazine @ScienceCareers

This isn't science. This is social justice nonsense.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@HumanProgress

Article is broken. Content not showing.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

"Knowledge of how to use the senses is neither encoded genetically, nor can it possibly come from the senses. So where does it come from?"

About the folly of empiricism and the recovery from blindness:

medium.com/@hcd/recoverin…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

RT @NASA:
Today, we’re announcing five new companies who are joining our #Artemis program & will be eligible to bid on deliveries to the su…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ernsterlanson @ToKTeacher

E.g. stoning a woman to death because she dared take off her hijab makes me cringe; not because the perpetrators are ignorant - we are all infinitely (though unequally) ignorant - but because the ideas behind it are deeply false (and in this case, deadly).

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ernsterlanson @ToKTeacher

Ah, it's not the ignorance per se that's cringeworthy (by some criterion): it's the badly mistaken idea. Some ideas are worse than others in terms of the damage they cause.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ernsterlanson @ToKTeacher

Some ideas are cringeworthy, but we may all have different thresholds.

People like Feynman, so they rush to his defense. Ad hominem. And unnecessary: he would have liked to know he was wrong so that he may improve.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@BretWeinstein

Compromise

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ks445599 @ToKTeacher

Hehe, "CRJW" :)

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher

Wheeler (both Feynman's thesis advisor and David's boss) knew Popperian epistemology well and may have introduced Feynman to Popper, but it isn't clear.

I know that you know who Wheeler was, but including it here in case others read it and aren't aware of the connections.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher

Yeah. Quote from David:

[...] I happened to mention Popper in the one conversation I had with Feynman, sometime in the 80s, and he did not say "who's that?" but replied meaningfully to the point.

Feynman seemed to show good understanding of Popperian concepts.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher

Yeah, he had an aversion to philosophy generally. But he read Popper, or at least he was familiar with his philosophy.

I enjoy Feynman, too, btw. It’s not a personal thing. He made a couple of simple but important mistakes. Inductivist mistakes, no less.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher

Though I should add that I don't know what he means by "definite" theory. One that isn't vague? Or perhaps one that doesn't require endless computation, as he explains later? Not sure.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher

Alas, even he made mistakes in his understanding of the creation of knowledge: "[W]e always try to guess the most likely explanation." cringe

youtu.be/EYPapE-3FRw?t=…

Or, less obviously, a bit later: "You can always prove any definite theory wrong."

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@CarlGreenwood12

Sorry? I agree with the first sentence, but lost you after that.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@tom_illusion @ToKTeacher

I don’t think so, some wrong answers may still contain truth. Eg Christianity’s commandment not to kill.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

30 Jahre Mauerfall :)

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@cognazor @OpenAI @DeepMindAI

From history we know all too well that some were enslaved even though they were much more obviously people than AGIs.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ks445599 @cognazor

Not to mince words here, but it's the universality of people that implies that everybody is qualitatively equal.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@cognazor @OpenAI @DeepMindAI

All our laws should apply, but I fear they won't because most won't realize that AGIs are people.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@cognazor

Yes; horribly, that's what companies like @OpenAI and @DeepMindAI seem to be after.

No such thing as "advanced" btw, they are all people just the same.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@RealTimeWWII

That's just a map of US airline routes over South America, no?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher

LOL this is great.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ReachChristofer @ToKTeacher @FallingIntoFilm @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Thank you, good point... not sure. Interestingly, whenever subconscious problem solving is successful, the solution does suddenly jump into consciousness (eg shower thoughts etc). So maybe it's something about the correction part of error correction...

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher @FallingIntoFilm @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

... until I ride the bike completely subconsciously. Perhaps consciousness is either strongly correlated with error correction, or it may even be error correction.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher @FallingIntoFilm @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Lately I have wondered if one is aware/conscious of wherever one is trying to detect errors. I learn to ride a bike: very conscious of it, I make mistakes all the time. Then gradually as I iron out the mistakes I grow less conscious of it...

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@jamessseattle @ToKTeacher @Crit_Rat

(error correction being the primary ingredient of intelligence)

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@jamessseattle @ToKTeacher @Crit_Rat

It can't be analog btw because error correction can only happen in digital systems.

And again, a single Turing machine can simulate multiple Turing machines, so parallelism is incidental at most.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@jamessseattle @ToKTeacher @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

In order:

Could be but unimportant - single Turing machine can simulate multiple Turing machines.
Processor and memory.
Doesn't matter/is incidental (if even true).
Yes (if you mean spoken language).

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@jamessseattle @ToKTeacher @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

No such thing as virtual computer (if by "virtual" you mean "abstract"). Computers need to be physically built.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher @jamessseattle @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Can you explain why its being analog or digital has any bearing on this?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@caerwy @MatjazLeonardis @DavidDeutschOxf @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

I don’t think the presence of understanding (ie knowledge) is indicative of consciousness.

It’s trivial to write a function that represents understanding of a prime number.

I guess that consciousness is related to error correction.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@zarzuelazen

This is the kind of vacuous nonsense that has earned philosophy its bad, navel-gazey reputation.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus

I agree that we start with conjecture and can then test against brain activity. Thank you; you have helped me realize something important about neuroscience.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus

Then how can we hope to reconstruct the software that caused these patterns? I think there are infinitely many pieces of software that would result in the same pattern.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Yes, we're in agreement here; though I had already agreed that architecture influences speed. But let me ask you this: can two different algorithms, when run, result in the exact same movement in hardware?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Do these performance characteristics not lie in the algorithm itself? Would X not also take 10 years to run on a desktop computer? (Assuming that computer would have the same memory and processing power as the brain you're comparing it to.)

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Or to clarify (something I should have clarified before): hardware architecture can and does influence speed and processing power. But it doesn't qualitatively change anything about which algorithms the universal system can run.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

"not all algorithms that solve a given computational problem are equally efficient or robust"

Indeed, because this concerns the architecture of software.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@recursus @RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

"Not all architectures are equally good for running a given algorithm"

A universal computer, no matter its architecture, can run any computable algorithm (within its memory constraints).

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@Malcolm_Ocean @RatCritical @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

When a computer breaks, shit can get weird, too: the fan keeps running, or the housing gets really hot, or it randomly flashes bright colors, some keys work while others do not, it keeps beeping for no apparent reason, it runs all programs fine except the calculator app... etc.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@Malcolm_Ocean @RatCritical @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

It does not. Evolution only optimizes the ability of the gene to spread through the population.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@Malcolm_Ocean @RatCritical @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Evolution does not optimize for efficient ways to organize any alleged modules.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

If we knew how to program consciousness and ran it on a computer made of chewing gum and vacuum tubes, those interested would start studying the properties of chewing gum in order to understand consciousness.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

Somewhere in the brain there is memory, and somewhere there is a processor. Like in all computers. So what?

In order to understand brain functionality, one needs to understand the software that's running on the brain.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@RatCritical @Malcolm_Ocean @DavidDeutschOxf @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat

I haven't read it, but the problem with learning about the brain's functionality from its architecture (hemispheres, regions, parts, etc) is this: the brain is a universal computer. Since it's universal, its architecture does not matter.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@bnielson01

I’ve only read one of his stories, and remember it being alright. But I love the video games by @frictionalgames which are Lovecraftian.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

RT @andrewdoyle_com:
Politicians should never be invoking the skin colour of their opponents.

This is the cancer of wokeness: it convinces…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ks445599 @bnielson01 @ToKTeacher

AlphaGo is machine learning. Machine learning is “learning from experience”. It’s empiricism. It’s impossible. Whatever is happening there, it’s not learning. No explanatory or any other alleged kind of knowledge is created.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@SimonDeDeo @wileyprof

Me neither. Finished it yesterday. Was a pain to get through.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ToKTeacher @bnielson01

I should add that it gets worse, though. I know some decision makers in Silicon Valley who know damn well it has nothing to do with intelligence but choose to call it that anyway because it sells. That’s fraud.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@bnielson01 @ToKTeacher

Learning is the creation of knowledge. Narrow AI is the following of predefined steps; the same as all programming so far. Using the term "learning" for something that clearly isn't learning is utterly misleading and dishonest (I'm mad at the industry, not you.)

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ExmuslimsOrg

Hehehe @DeepakChopra is this you in disguise?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ChipkinLogan @scotthortonshow

Very well written. It really is denial of knowledge creation again: all the wealth is allegedly already present, just needs to be redistributed "fairly".

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@onnlucky @bnielson01 @ks445599 @mizroba

Well, then maybe you should read more Popper (something I have recommended to you before).

Or at least google "Popper/Bühler four functions of language".

You will then learn that most of the things you listed require explanations, not merely descriptions.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@onnlucky @bnielson01 @ks445599 @mizroba

They're not. The point is it doesn't matter if it's vocalized or only descriptive. Popper explained that the descriptive function of language is built on top of the signaling function.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@onnlucky @bnielson01 @ks445599 @mizroba

None of the things you just listed require spoken language. The only way I can make sense of this is that you thought we were talking about programming language or something. We weren't.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@markcannon5 @bnielson01 @mizroba

Yes. Whoever builds an AGI will be its parent. His obligation will be to help it learn.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@bnielson01 @ks445599 @mizroba

Yes. Language is not required to make a universal explainer. How could it be? You need to be one in order to learn language in the first place. Again, no instruction from without possible.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

Have the terms "eco-induction" or "green induction" been coined yet? Might be useful to refer to this sort of idea.

That's what this idea suggests: that there is knowledge somehow already present in the biosphere (not as adaptations!), and we just need to harvest/ingest it.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

"How much do species and ecosystems contribute to the size and growth of economies?"

They don't. Only people do. And only explanations guessed by people tell us which resources, species, and ecosystems are at all relevant to economic growth. twitter.com/NaturePortfoli…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@DeepakChopra

"But if [@DavidDeutschOxf] is right that evolution has led to humans as the ultimate knowers, where did this knowing arise?" from sfgate.com/opinion/chopra…

That is a problem the theory of evolution solves. David addresses it in "The Beginning of Infinity".

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@ks445599 @bnielson01 @mizroba

Indeed. It could start making all kinds of conjectures about reality and criticize them. It just won't be able to test them. For example, it will know that it exists, and that therefore things can exist. It can then guess that other things might exist, too, what they may be, etc.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@bnielson01 @ks445599 @mizroba

I think you're flirting with induction here. A child does not learn to be intelligent, especially not via instruction from without. He is born intelligent. What knowledge he creates using that intelligence and whether IO may help with that are different matters.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

RT @JeffBezos:
It’s time to go back to the Moon, this time to stay. @LockheedMartin @northropgrumman @DraperLab @blueorigin #gradatimferoci…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

"How can we build beneficial AGI?" is yet another "Who should rule?" question. It should be replaced with "How can we detect our errors in building AGI?" and then, once built, "How can we help AGI learn?"

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@FallingIntoFilm @ToKTeacher

Stopping doing one thing and starting doing another is easily programmed and doesn’t involve the halting problem.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@EvanOLeary @ReachChristofer

It wouldn’t need to be made of DNA. If it wants to study chemical reactions they can be exosomatic.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@EvanOLeary @ReachChristofer

Ah, yes. Though to be clear, an AGI running on a computer is a completely non-biological phenomenon. No genes required.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@EvanOLeary @ReachChristofer

That's fine, but then I still don't understand your original comment: twitter.com/EvanOLeary/sta…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@EvanOLeary @ReachChristofer

Sure. But in order to learn about music?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@EvanOLeary @ReachChristofer

Why would it have to be able to perform organic chemical reaction experiments in order to be able to learn anything?

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@EvanOLeary @ReachChristofer

Not sure I follow. Care to elaborate? I don’t think any biological substrate is needed.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@bnielson01

Hehe indeed.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

I’m... not even mad. The article should be titled “In Flagrant Disregard of Computational Universality”. Some real gems in there. twitter.com/CloserToTruth/…

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@reasonisfun @HeuristicWorld @dela3499 @ToKTeacher @Crit_Rat @RatCritical @BretWeinstein

Yet they can, and frequently do, lead to death. I suspect this is similar to how genes have to keep their hosts alive but often don’t.

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

@HeuristicWorld @ToKTeacher @reasonisfun @Crit_Rat @dela3499 @RatCritical @BretWeinstein

Thanks.

“But all we need to know is that for an expensive belief to travel through history with some population over a long period of time, it must be paying its way somehow.”

No. Static memes don’t survive by solving problems (“paying [their] way”).

@dchackethal · · Show · Open on Twitter

Search tweets

/
/mi
Accepts a case-insensitive POSIX regular expression. Most URLs won’t match. Tweets may contain raw markdown characters, which are not displayed.
Clear filters