No, Christopher, actually I did.I don't think you realize what a profound insult I consider that to be.I had a feeling you'd dismiss bicameralism out of hand. *shrug*
No, Christopher, actually I did.I don't think you realize what a profound insult I consider that to be.I had a feeling you'd dismiss bicameralism out of hand. *shrug*
I've been aware of Velikovsky since I read Sagan's Broca's Brain, where he devotes a whole chapter to Velikovsky's theories.Of course. Shame on you Allyn for not being well versed in the teachings and thought processes of Immanuel Velikovsky. Come on Allyn! Total bushleagueAnd the attempt to justify the contents of ancient myths in terms of an overarching scientific theory smacks of Velikovskian thinking.![]()
It's still a lot better than just dying, which is what we have to look forward to otherwise.
But even if you have a reasonable facsimile of your mind in a computer somewhere, your consciousness still remains inside your skull, and is still just as mortal as ever. So it won't make any difference to you as far as your personal perceptions are concerned. In fact, you might come to resent the fact that some lousy computer program that only thinks it's you is going to live on after the real you dies.
Recent findings in anatomy seem to indicate the fact that our brain/intelligence have grown as much as they can by using the methods evolution applied to make us smarter.It's fallacious to treat consciousness as something separate from physicality. The brain is like any other part of the body -- an evolved organ adapted to suit a particular set of needs. And like any other organ, it's subject to physical needs and physical limitations. There's a reason we don't have 10 arms or 20 eyes or 5 hearts -- because it would simply be overkill, placing too much demand on the system for too little gain.As for the potential power of consciousnesses, I personally don't think there are hard constraints on how powerful a mind could be, outside of the obvious physical ones like the speed of light or the Bekenstein bound.
Evolution isn't some upward ladder toward godhood -- that's a total fantasy. Evolution is adaptation to the needs of one's environment. The optimal state for any organism is the one that's best adapted to its needs. And that means having too much of something is just as bad as having too little. Now, our consciousness evolved to suit the needs of our environment -- to process our perceptions of and interactions with the universe we live in. So it stands to reason that the amount of processing power we have is well-adapted to the needs of an entity that exists in and interacts with the physical universe. A brain that's too complex or powerful might "overshoot" the needs of existence within the universe and thus be just as unable to function as a person weighed down by dozens of extra limbs would be. The inner complexity of its thoughts might overwhelm its perception of the much less complex exterior universe and leave it incurably schizophrenic, say.
I had a feeling you'd dismiss bicameralism out of hand. *shrug*
No, Christopher, actually I did.I don't think you realize what a profound insult I consider that to be.I had a feeling you'd dismiss bicameralism out of hand. *shrug*
For what it's worth, Christopher, according to the theory it didn't. The Native American populations didn't transition from bicameralism to consciousness until exposed to the Europeans, which is one of the factors in why their civilizations fell to the Spaniards and the English.Why would this transition have happened everywhere in the world at the same time? A lot of parts of the world were isolated from each other 3000 years ago, the Americas in particular remaining almost totally isolated until just 500 years ago.
Not that I particularly care one way or the other, but how is that trolling? And while I sent you a PM, I'd rather discuss this in the open, as I want to know if you've picked on this because of the open season on Christopher in the "Authors you've been turned off on" thread.Comment to PM, please.
Did I expect Christopher to dismiss bicameralism out of hand? Yes, because it's so bonkers, and Christopher is the living personification of rationcination. Is that the reason why I introduced the idea of bicameralism, to get a rise out of Christopher? Absolutely not.
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