Fabric of Reality Book Club

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, 9 days ago·#2031

How do you think of "problems" for genes?

Dirk Meulenbelt’s avatar
Dirk Meulenbelt, 6 days ago·#2149

I don't think a gene has problems. It does not have ideas.

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 6 days ago·#2151

A gene doesn’t have problems in any conscious sense, but it always faces the problem of how to spread through the population at the expense of its rivals.

Maybe that answers your question, Erik.

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Dirk Meulenbelt’s avatar
Dirk Meulenbelt, 6 days ago·#2152

How could we integrate that vision with Popper's definition (paraphrased): a tension, inconsistency, or unmet explanatory demand that arises when a theory clashes with observations, background assumptions, or rival theories, thereby calling for conjectural solutions and critical tests.

Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 6 days ago·#2153

The rival theories and clashes sound like competition between genes – or more precisely, between the theories those genes embody.

Basically, genes contain guesses (in a non-subjective sense) for how to spread through the population at the expense of their rivals. Those guesses are met with selection pressure and competition.

Dirk Meulenbelt’s avatar
Dirk Meulenbelt, 6 days ago·#2154

Dirk approves of your comment.

Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, 5 days ago·#2190

Yeah, thanks! Are ideas also guesses of how to survive in the mind and across substrates, or is there more to ideas?

Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 5 days ago·#2200

In the neo-Darwinian view, any replicator’s primary ‘concern’ is how to spread through the population at the expense of its rivals. This view is what Dawkins (IIRC) calls the gene’s eye view, and it applies to ideas as much as it does to genes. Any adaptation of any replicator is primarily in service of this concern.

So I think the answer to your question, “Are ideas also guesses of how to survive in the mind and across substrates …?”, is ‘yes’.

Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje revised 1 day ago·#2271

Most people (except in Alzheimer's, etc.) don't run out of memory in the brain. If there's no scarcity for the space of ideas, why do they have to compete?

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 4 days ago·#2224

Everyone has scarce memory. Everyone’s brain has limited storage space.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, 4 days ago·#2225

Of course, memory isn't infinite. But most people don't seem to run out of it in their lifetimes. Is it more accurate to say that ideas compete for working memory, which is scarcer?

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal revised 4 days ago·#2228

I have speculated in the past that ideas compete for attention, but they also compete for any kind of memory, be it something like RAM or hard-disk memory. The RAM-like memory in the brain is presumably closely related to working memory, if not the same.

The reason most people don’t (permanently) run out memory (of either kind) isn’t that memory isn’t scarce but that there’s a pruning mechanism in the mind. And again, there’s competition. That competition can involve predatory ideas which disassemble the source code of other ideas and use it for themselves because that’s cheaper than to construct source code from scratch.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, 4 days ago·#2233

Makes sense, thanks Dennis. Constant pruning is the explanation that retains scarcity and competition, while making the brain seem to have much more memory than it does.

Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, 4 days ago·#2235

That pruning mechanism is what constitutes natural selection in the mind.

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 4 days ago·#2247

The pruning mechanism is part of it, but there’s more. Again, there’s also competition between ideas and even predatory behavior that can result in the elimination of ideas. All such phenomena taken together constitute natural selection in the mind.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje revised 1 day ago·#2267

Wait, do you view the pruning as separate from the mere competition of ideas, or simply its hardware consequences?

Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 1 day ago·#2263

Wait, do you view the pruning as separate from the mere competition of ideas…?

Yes. When I say ‘pruning’, I’m referring to a specific mechanism of a meta algorithm in the mind. For more details, see my book A Window on Intelligence, I think chapter 5. There is no such meta algorithm in biological evolution.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, 1 day ago·#2269

Alright, I remember the meta algorithm from your book but can't recall if you adress this criticism: If there's no need for a meta algorithm in biological evolution, why must there be one for the evolution of ideas?

Criticism of #2263
Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, about 24 hours ago·#2275

I don’t think the meta algorithm is necessary for the evolution of ideas. After all, there is no meta algorithm across minds, yet ideas (memes) evolve across minds. Inside a single mind, the meta algorithm is inherited from our non-creative ancestors, where (among other things) it acted as a fail safe against erroneous behaviors.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje, about 10 hours ago·#2283

Wait, I've probably misunderstood but in #2228 it seemed like you thought pruning was needed for scarcity, which is needed for competition between ideas and their evolution.

And you equated pruning with the meta algorithm.

And now you say the meta algoritm/pruning is not needed for the evolution of ideas?

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Dennis Hackethal’s avatar
Dennis Hackethal, 4 days ago·#2230

Since you’re a doctor, Erik, let me ask: is there a possibility Alzheimer’s could be explained in terms of bad software? Correct me if I’m wrong, but it seems like the prevailing view is limited to bad hardware.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje revised 1 day ago·#2272

Hmm never thought of that, interesting! I think since the disease involves continuous loss of brain volume, hardware decay seems like the best explanation.

In general I think it makes sense to speak of diseases in neurology (e.g. Alzheimer's, Parkinsons, stroke) as bad hardware and psychiatric disease as bad software. But it could very well be that some of those diagnoses are miscategorised.

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Dirk Meulenbelt’s avatar
Dirk Meulenbelt, 4 days ago·#2241

Not a doctor. But it's not hard for me to imagine untainted memory but a script with an error such that it can't manage to look up the information.

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Erik Orrje’s avatar
Erik Orrje revised 1 day ago·#2270

Yeah that's definitely a possible medical condition, e.g. in psychosis or after having ECT. Don't think it's the best explanation for Alzheimer's though, where the loss of brain volume is so apparent.

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