Why can't you model the thing your building in a computer?  Why can't you
model the fields of the mind?  Do you believe there is something
necessarily material about minds?  Isn't this disproved by cybernetic
implants which have provided people with restored cognitive functionality
despite being of different material?

On Wed, May 13, 2015 at 7:00 PM, Colin Hales <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Rob,
>
> I had this realisation in 2001/2. At that point I put my ear to the ground
> and I looked. Hard. In 2004 in frustration I joined academia and had
> unlimited access to the entire world's publications. Doing a PhD, I kept up
> with folk at the bleeding edge in lectures, seminars and workshops and
> conferences.....I soaked through all sorts of 'tech announcement' analysis
> and 'breaking' stories.
>
> My ear is still on the ground. I wait. Today I still wait.
>
> Sometimes in some weird materials lab someplace an announcement is made
> that has keywords that might be construed as along the lines of my
> proposition. I then look and have, so far, found nothing.
>
> You know what usually happens? *"Breakthrough X happens in materials or
> quantum mechanics. Woohoo!*" Headline. Then everyone gets excited and
> says wow! "*We may be able to solve the AI problem when we build a new
> computer with it"*
>
> ...... and thus they throw a potential solution at failure. Time and time
> and time again. Vanadium Dioxide is my favourite exemplar. Recent materials
> for memristors another. There was yet another of these literally this week!
>
>
> http://www1.rmit.edu.au/browse/RMIT%20News%2FNewsroom%2FNews%2FMedia%20Releases%2Fby%20date%2FSep%2FTue%2030/
>
> Go and look, excited...and yet again...no cigar.
>
> Science has begun to make materials that can solve the AGI problem. What
> they are not applying it to is that right *solution*. There are materials
> that can do what I want to do. Vast nonlinear control systems. But nobody
> ever chooses to solve the problem with it. Instead everyone thinks "lets
> build a computer" Fine. Computing is great. It's just *not* the solution
> to AGI!
>
> >60 years of trained-in habit entails a systemic blindness to the way
> science was traditionally operating: by building it to understand it By
> knowing that unless you could build it you don't understand it. And by
> 'building it' I do not mean use a computer! Instead of letting nature do
> computation computers and computing model it. Not the same thing. As I
> write this I can hear the reader's brain grind on my words. How can they be
> different, you think? Well *in exactly the way I have described in
> all these posts. and nonstop for over 10 years*.
>
> So ironically now we are overprepared for real AGI  and the only thing
> stopping this happening is us. We keep choosing not to solve the problem.
> Instead it's *if only we had a computer powerful enough" and "Moore's law
> blah blah...." *receding rainbow of failure.
>
> I intend to write a book on this issue! It's bizarre.
>
> Maybe someplace there is a lab that does my proposition and it's all
> tucked away. I doubt it. You know why? Because bodies like DARPA keep
> throwing $gazillions at doing it with computers (this includes all existing
> neuromorphic chips of any kind.....where *models of reality *stand in for
> reality). Unless this is a massive smokescreen or unless left hands and
> right hands are not talking at a breathtaking level (conspiracy theory
> bollocks).... then this indicates that  out here in the real world of
> people and a world overdue and in desperate need of it, we have literally
> programmed ourselves (in tacit culture) to fail in AGI and appear to have
> actually locked ourselves in a failure loop....
>
> Then I turn up, after decades of thinking about robots and doing control
> systems in business.... and because I am old enough to have seen how it
> used to be....and.... because I was not in science, I had none of the
> programming.
>
> And I say "*hey guys why don't we try this?! *(how it was done for 350
> years before computers)."
>
> And guess what? Here I am in 2015 saying the same damned thing. And all it
> is is what the original cybernetics folk *would have done* had computers
> never been built. And by now AGI would be real had they continued (the
> likes of Ashby et. al.) without computers and with the neuroscience we have
> now. Indeed today, neuroscience itself would look entirely different had
> this happened. So the damage is not just confined to AGI. People have been
> hurt because of the lack of knowledge. The failure to look at solving AGI
> without computers *has actually hurt people*. Sick people.
>
> Some days I wish I had never seen anything, and taken the blue pill and
> re-joined everyone in the matrix. So here I am, some kind of Morpheus with
> a red pill and ... yeah metaphor overdose. You get the picture.
>
> cheers
>
> Colin.
> (This email or something like this will appear in the new book)
>
>
>
> On Wed, May 13, 2015 at 5:36 PM, Nanograte Knowledge Technologies <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Colin
>>
>> Fascinating thread and subject matter. Just a general question please.
>>
>> How certain are you that some governmental scientists somewhere have not
>> already done this research and constructed such bio-machines? You may be
>> surprised, or disappointed even, to find that you're not the only person on
>> this list who thinks along these lines.
>>
>> Publications, as indicators of technological progress, usually are a few
>> years behind the actual times and hardly-ever reflect the true
>> state-of-the-art research, e.g., the GRAPE system.
>>
>> I'm asking specifically, because I noticed quantum-detailed publications
>> in this field around 2009/2010, which trends well with field-test-ready
>> prototypes for 2014/2015.
>>
>> The other reason I'm asking is because I've been studying a particular
>> phenomenon, which systemic behaviour you might actually be describing to
>> me. Unfortunately, details are subject to a commercial NDA, etc.
>>
>> Looking forward to your reply.
>>
>> Rob
>>
>> ------------------------------
>> Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 09:11:33 +1000
>> Subject: Re: [agi] Re: Starting to Define Algorithms that are More
>> Powerfulthan Narrow AI
>> From: [email protected]
>> To: [email protected]
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 7:24 PM, Steve Richfield <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Colin,
>>
>> Two quick thoughts:
>>
>> 1. Your description of ion channels sounds a LOT like a Hall-effect
>> device. I suspect that ion channels may be **VERY** sensitive to magnetic
>> fields!!! Aside from implementing natural compasses, Hall-effect may be a
>> part of their computational functionality. Note in passing that Hall-effect
>> devices are FAST, so it may not be beyond reason that there might be some
>> really high-speed analog computation going on in ion channels!!!.
>>
>>
>> Individual channels have a (relatively) slow stochastic nature. You need
>> about 10 tightly bunched. All 'computation' then sits atop that overall
>> average regularity, resulting in both types of signalling that then do all
>> relevant computations. See the book HILLE  Ion Channels of Excitable Cells.
>> I don't have to bother with the stochasticity. I can build filamentary
>> currents that get straight to work fast. Currents that then produce the
>> same 2 signalling types.
>>
>>
>>
>> 2.  You might be able to model some of the things your are thinking about
>> with a fish tank full of salty water and structures made of Play Dough. You
>> will also need a battery, a voltmeter, and some insulated wire with exposed
>> ends. Electrolytic tanks have been used to model many complex EM things.
>>
>> Fishtank full of Gatorade and playdoh and radioshack toy instruments....
>> bliss!!!! Yay!!! I knew this had to become fun eventually!! Can I use a 3D
>> printer too? :-)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Steve
>>
>> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 2:04 AM, Colin Hales <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi again,
>> Yes the *potential* drops off as 1/r and the dipole as 1/r^2 as you say.
>> Not the field intensity. That is 1/r^2 and 1/r^3 resp. But this is
>> irrelevant.  Don't confuse potentials with the fields. I wrote an article
>> on this
>>
>>  Hales, C. G. and S. Pockett (2014). "The relationship between local
>> field potentials (LFPs) and the electromagnetic fields that give rise to
>> them." *Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience* *8*: 233.
>> http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00233/full
>>
>> The line source you mention doesn't actually contribute to the field
>> system in any functional sense for subtle reasons. This is another broken
>> aspect of the thinking.
>>
>> You have to deal with the actual physics of ions in water and in ion
>> channel pores in space and the details of the charge transport as applied
>> through Maxwell's equations,,..NOT the physics of a model. Just because a
>> resistor is in a model and predicts voltages correctly does not mean  that
>> the fields in nature are the fields  of a resistor. In general: the
>> physics of the field system is not the field system of the circuit element
>> models.
>>
>> The *same total * *current *has 3 lives: 1) Intracellular 2)
>> Transmembrane and 3) extracellular.
>>
>> In terms of contribution to the actual functional field system (2)
>> Dominates both (1) and (3).
>>
>> To see this:
>>
>> The ion transit speed and transport dynamics in the extracellular space
>> and intracellular space is 10000-50000 times *slower *than transmembrane *and
>> radically diffuse and diluted*. Almost non existent as a charge *density*. It
>> is the electric field that matters and when you do the math the field due
>> to the axial current (line source) is negligible because the current does
>> not involve a functional charge density even though the total current  is
>> the same. ergo negligible E field contribution.
>>
>> In contrast, the transmembrane portion (of the exact same total current)
>> is radically confined to an Angstrom-level pore-width and along a path
>> length in a very particular direction 20-50 times longer than anywhere else
>> in tissue (through the thickness of the membrane). The transmembrane ions
>> are like bullets from hundreds of *parallel* machine guns in comparison
>> to traffic in the extracellular space and the intracellular space, where
>> ions are confined by water to almost zero path length and bounce in totally
>> randomised directions. None of this detail is in any circuit element model.
>>
>> It is charge *density and *current *density *(not current) that matter
>> for field generation. Charge density and current density are radically
>> different in each phase of ion transport (1), (2) and (3). Hence they
>> produce different fields.
>>
>> I am doing the full convective simulations of this over the next few
>> months. The failure, over decades, to look at the actual ion transport
>> mechanisms in the ECS and ICS and contrast them with the transmembrane ion
>> channel current has caused yet another stuff-up in understanding the field
>> system. The only people that actually know this are in *microfluidics*
>> and it is a modified form of microfluidics equations that I will solve
>> (with the water flow velocity set to zero).
>>
>> When you actually compute the magnitude of the real electric field
>> produced by the transmembrane ion traffic as totalled by tens of 1000s of
>> cells within in a 500um radius sphere they can easily add up to that needed
>> to effect each other even though the field drops off as 1/r^3. This is a
>> very short distance. It is the *gradient* of the potential, not the
>> potential that matters. The E field is a very complex vector sum that
>> dominates even though it drops off faster with distance. The E field in the
>> Lorentz force does the work.
>>
>> You can choose a million exotic circuit elements and find a part of a
>> neuron who's potentials may be modelled with it. That does not mean that
>> the neuron 'is' one of those things. Its not diodes yet there's lots of
>> diode like things going on. It's not a resistor yet there are lots of
>> behaviours that obey resistor-like laws. You can view neurons through a
>> model-lens made of SR or  bar fridges and hockey sticks and igneous rocks
>> that produces the same voltages and current. .... and on and on and
>> on.....and you are welcome to do that to suit what you are doing. In none
>> of it does it tell you what the actual natural material is doing in
>> relation to EM fields.
>>
>> That is why I build what I will build. I build what the brain does, not
>> what a model of the brain does. I can't help it if this is the way the
>> brain is. If I found anything different I'd be building that instead.
>>
>> When I compute (1), (2) and (3) I'll send the results to the list. It'll
>> be a while.
>>
>> Congrats! My work here of showing you the potholes on the road to
>> understanding EM field origins is done. :-) I think we are officially
>> grokked out.
>>
>> cheers
>> colin
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 3:23 PM, Steve Richfield <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Colin,
>>
>> You have described regenerative operation, which is a near-field sort of
>> thing and not capable of sensing small things at a distance where signals
>> drop off as r^2, HOWEVER, I just realized that the field from a line
>> (rather than a small dipole) source, like from an axon rather than an ion
>> channel, drops off LINEARLY with distance. Hence, at distances that are
>> short compared with axon length, regeneration might be enough to work.
>>
>> I just didn't see any need to stick with a purely regenerative model,
>> when SR completely sidesteps the limits of regeneration AND there is plenty
>> of evidence of SR in neurons.
>>
>> Regarding the past tense of grok - it becomes past tense when you can no
>> longer grok - like when you get Alzheimer's or die. Until then it is an
>> active sort of thing, like your fields, and so remains in the present.
>>
>> Steve
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 8:09 PM, colin hales <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Steve,
>> The fields originate in a dissipative evanescent dipole that exists as
>> long as the action potential transmembrane current exists. EM field
>> feedback is in modulation of distant network signal timing and propagation
>> phenomena. Positive, negative   whatever. It emerges at a higher
>> organizational level that has nothing to do with the physics originating
>> the fields.
>>
>> The magnetic field comes from a brief transmembrane current. The electric
>> field is a result of a battle between diffusion and electromigration in the
>> immediate vicinity of the ends of the very same transmembrane current. If
>> the transmembrane current is large and long enough (requiring lots of
>> collocated ion channels)... Then  this causes a depletion of ion charge on
>> one side and accretion on the other....dipole big enough to contribute to
>> signaling at distance. It exists as a dissipative cascade that is
>> momentary, stops and then equilibrium is chemically restored. Think of it
>> as a capacitor discharge, stop, recharge. In the EM field feedback the
>> moment of discharge is determined in part by impinging E field from
>> elsewhere in the tissue. That may constitute a positive feedback from
>> distances a long way away.
>>
>> Positive feedback also exists within the longitudinal propagation of the
>> action potential. That is  regenerative. Models usually depict this as
>> resulting from potentials and currents. I suspect that it's actually the
>> magnetic field that is very strong at distances of um. That magnetic field
>> tickles distant ion channels located in the same membrane (because the
>> magnetic field is strongest in the plane of the membrane) into the
>> conformation change that causes the next transmembrane current that
>> then..... But that magnetic field role something I'm speculating ...doing
>> simulation  over the coming months. Regardless of how you think is positive
>> feedback involved in action potentials.
>>
>> So there's 2 kinds of +ve feedback. One in action potential propagation
>> down the membrane, one impacting timing transversely through the tissue at
>> the speed of light.
>>
>> I hope one day to make hardware that does both in the same way the brain
>> does it.
>>
>> Lots of + feedback. Right there.
>>
>> I already have this in the design. So where does this lack of positive
>> feedback issue come from? I can't see it.
>>
>> There's pencils standing up and falling down in vast numbers in the
>> design already. So to speak. SR is just not telling me anything I need, at
>> least in early replication efforts.
>>
>> Are we grokked yet? And is that the past tense of grok?
>>
>> Cheers
>> Colin
>> ------------------------------
>> From: Steve Richfield <[email protected]>
>> Sent: ‎10/‎05/‎2015 6:34 AM
>> To: AGI <[email protected]>
>> Subject: Re: [agi] Re: Starting to Define Algorithms that are More
>> Powerfulthan Narrow AI
>>
>> Colin,
>>
>> Here you have made exactly the same point I was trying to convey in my
>> immediately-preceding posting on SR...
>>
>> On Sat, May 9, 2015 at 3:08 AM, colin hales <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> <snip>
>>
>>
>> Replicating voltages is _not_ replicating fields. Gauge invariance makes
>> the relationship degenerate. An infinity of different field systems can
>> produce the same voltages. That very degeneracy is the reason why electric
>> circuit theory exists!
>>
>>
>> This SAME gauge-invariance would doom your ion-channel theory UNLESS
>> there is some sort positive-feedback mechanism at work to extract the
>> INFORMATION from the EM field. If not SR, then WHAT?
>>
>>
>> I am rather excited by the recognition of something that is so obvious
>> and whose lack fits the failure etiology of half a century perfectly,
>> including the lack of the actual empirical test that is needed to justify
>> neglecting the fields as essential physics. Neglecting the fields is
>> entirely accidental.
>>
>>
>> I agree.
>>
>> Steve
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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