robinbloke: (Default)
robinbloke ([personal profile] robinbloke) wrote2004-09-30 01:27 am

Musings from a synaptic breakpoint

Free will is one of the given basic assumptions that most1 people assume is part of this great thing we have call life, existence and everything. This often encompasses a quasi spiritual and usually immeasurable thing called a 'soul'.
But it's not an uncommon argument that eventually computing power will reach the stage where the individual synapses, neurons and suchlike of the brain will be able to be mapped into electronic ones and zeros in silicon (or diamond or whatever we happen to be using by that stage) and lo and behold we'll have the equivalent of the human brain in machine form. At this stage the apocalypse is usually a common projection for what is likely to follow. This could beg the question then, "Why do we bother making things that in all likelihood will rise up and kill us.". Common argument against this is that of all technological items humans excel the best at finding ways of killing each other.
So where and I going this time? As a code monkey programmed responses are something I work with a lot, when I write programs I expect input A process B output C for given values of A and C. Process B determines output C based on A, at least if the program is working.
We work like this too, we are after all a multi-complex of responses, decisions and computations all working at levels we don't really understand yet but every now and then I catch one of these and realise my current line of code, like an interrupt watching the main thread of code as it pauses.
This morning I had a pause as I was buying my daily pint o' milk (semi skimmed, lactose fans). The price was 30p, I handed over 30p. They took my coins and thanked me. I waited. She woke me up with "Did you want a receipt?" because I was waiting for change. I'm too used to receiving chance for everything to carry on automatically after handing over the exact amount.

Just one cycle in my code sequences. Next week I map my brain into class diagrams and find out every thought process inherits from the superclass "sugar".


1 Lets not get too sidetracked here...
zotz: (Default)

[personal profile] zotz 2004-09-30 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
But it's not an uncommon argument that eventually computing power will reach the stage where the individual synapses, neurons and suchlike of the brain will be able to be mapped into electronic ones and zeros in silicon (or diamond or whatever we happen to be using by that stage) and lo and behold we'll have the equivalent of the human brain in machine form.

Not one that everyone agrees with, though. Penrose argues that even that wouldn't work (although he's almost certainly wrong).

Have you read anything by Charlie Stross? He's quite into the possible implications of this.

[identity profile] mobbsy.livejournal.com 2004-09-30 08:41 am (UTC)(link)
An interesting read on this is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elbow_Room

(I must get around to reading the book at some point).
(deleted comment) (Show 3 comments)

[identity profile] senji.livejournal.com 2004-09-30 09:17 am (UTC)(link)
Mmm, sugar...

Feeling better?

[identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com 2004-09-30 10:14 am (UTC)(link)
You're posting incomprehensible witterings again. ;o)

[identity profile] mazzarc.livejournal.com 2004-09-30 01:35 pm (UTC)(link)
"Just one cycle in my code sequences. Next week I map my brain into class diagrams and find out every thought process inherits from the superclass "sugar"."

There speaks a true geek.... JUST map your brain..... make it sound like half an hour and a can of Dew later. :P