On Saturday, July 13, 2019 at 3:41:00 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>
>
> On 12 Jul 2019, at 20:38, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Friday, July 12, 2019 at 9:52:30 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 12 Jul 2019, at 12:24, Philip Thrift <cloud...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, July 12, 2019 at 4:56:31 AM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I have been mocked for twenty years on this, by dogmatic materialist 
>>> believers, until I proved the point (which has transformed the funny 
>>> mockery in violent hate and defamation).
>>>
>>> Everyone would benefit of making the discussion emotionally neutral. Ask 
>>> specific question on what you don’t understand, or what you find false. If 
>>> you know a better (meta)definition of consciousness, maybe try to explain 
>>> it here.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> I was thinking we* (real) materialists* are mocked today. :)
>>
>>
>> Where? Maybe the naïve one, who still believe that the observable are 
>> boolean, or something like that. But the paradigm today in metaphysics is 
>> implicitly or explicitly physicalist/materialist.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Physicists (and even philosophers) have gone over to "It's all just* 
>> information [number] processing*, including consciousness" [SeanCarroll, 
>> Max Tegmark, etc.], thus becoming  today's *anti-materialists*.
>>
>>
>>
>> They have to, if Digital Mechanism is assumed, that has been proven. 
>> Without Mechanism, it is unclear to me if we can really make sense of that 
>> primitive matter concept.
>>
>> It is worst than in the Napoleon-Laplace dialog. I cannot say that I 
>> don’t need the hypothesis of Matter, I have to say that any notion of 
>> Matter which would be related to my consciousness leads to a contradiction 
>> (using very small amount of Occam razor).
>>
>> Let us pursue the testing. To assume Matter (and what would that be?) is 
>> far more premature. To invoke it in our explanation of Nature and 
>> Consciousness seems to me quite premature. Ontological commitment are 
>> better to avoid when doing science, especially so in metaphysics-theology.
>>
>> IF the three of S4Grz1, Z1* and X1*, described in my papers, depart from 
>> nature, well, some oracle or matter might be at play, but that has not yet 
>> been shown. An hard computationalist will only deduce that we are in a 
>> malevolent simulation, like when seeing the pixels in a video game.
>>
>> Bruno
>>
>>
>>
>
> There are 3 things:
>
> Logica
> Qualia
> Matter
>
>
> With Mechanism, those are explained in the phenomenology, so we do not 
> need to assume them, except the minimal amont to define what is a digital 
> machine, and that minimal amount is elementary combinator theory, or 
> elementary arithmetic, etc. 
>
>
>
> The first 2 are not real without the 3rd. 
>
>
> That sentence is too vague. I can agree and disagree, depending of the 
> theory used.
>
>
> Without the 1st, the 3rd would be without order and would disintegrate. 
> Without the 2nd, there would be no conscious beings made of the 3rd. 
>
> One can't untie the *Trinity Knot of Being*.
>
>
> I need a formula, and means to test it experimentally. Just to make some 
> sense, and compare with the consequence of Mechanism.
>
> If you disagree with the proof of the incompatibility of Mechanism and 
> (weak) Materialism, it would be nice to explain why.
>
> Bruno
>
>
>
>

There are all kinds of machines, including biomachines*. All machines are 
all made of matter. If someone has an immaterial machine, then they should 
show it.

*I think the original sin of philosophy occurred when numbers, counting, 
arithmetic, logic, mathematics were abstracted away from their material 
home.*



* Cornell Scientists Create Lifelike Biomachines That Eat, Grow, And Race 
Competitively
April 22, 201 (via @HotHardware)
https://hothardware.com/news/cornell-scientists-create-lifelike-biomachines-evolve

Dan Luo [professor of biological and environmental engineering at Cornell]  
and his team developed a biomaterial that was placed into a nanoscale 
scaffolding. The material then autonomously emerged to "arrange itself – 
first into polymers and eventually mesoscale shapes. Acting much like slime 
molds, the biomaterial was able to move under its own power, moving forward 
against a liquid flow of energy.

Not surprisingly, the researchers pitted these new bio machines against one 
another in competitive races – because, why not? Given the self-locomotive 
properties of each and the total randomness of the environments (and of the 
machines themselves), the team says that the race outcomes and eventual 
winners were always dynamic.

Besides their racing antics and ability to sustain themselves, the Cornell 
researchers also witnessed their new machines grow, decay and eventual die 
(after two cycles of synthesis) like true living organisms.

“The designs are still primitive, but they showed a new route to create 
dynamic machines from biomolecules," added Shogo Hamada, a research 
associate from the Luo lab. "We are at a first step of building lifelike 
robots by artificial metabolism.

“Ultimately, the system may lead to lifelike self-reproducing machines."

Luo and his team are just getting started with these machines, and hope to 
eventually advance their research to the point where this biomaterial can 
be used as biosensors in the medical field.

@philipthrift
     
 

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