Ok, so we need to get our metaphor’s straight, here. 

 

The sledge hammer is meant to be an experience-randomizer.  To the extent that 
sledge hammers do predictable things to clocks, it fails for me as a metaphor.  
Once my Sledge Hammer has struck my clock, there should be no relation between 
the positions of the pieces of the clock before the blow and after.  But even 
granting its limitations, I don’t think my Sledge Hammer is an appropriate 
metaphor for your complaint about ordinary software.  I think you are talking 
about a bull-dozer.  Like a Sledge Hammer, a Bulldozer does not care for the 
structure of whatever it encounters; but unlike my Sledge Hammer, it imposes a 
highly predictable order of its own. Neither the Sledge Hammer nor the 
Bulldozer are like the Taoist Butcher, who clearly cares for .the structure of 
what he cuts.  

 

So, what we are arguing about can be construed as an argument about which 
metaphor is most aptly applied to taking drugs.  I am arguing for the Sledge 
Hammer.  Sledge Hammers have their uses.  I have always imagined that 
electroshock therapy is a kind of sledge hammer, although perhaps it is more 
like a bulldozer, returning the brain to factory settings. Bulldozers are very 
useful in that they create a structure on which other things can easily be 
built.  You might be arguing that drug-taking is a bull dozer.  Or you might be 
arguing that drug-taking is more like the Taoist butcher, in that it reveals 
the structure of what is already there.  It is like a microscopist’s stain.  
But to make that metaphor work, you have to grant to the drug, or to the person 
who administers it, the wisdom and experience of the butcher who has become so 
familiar with meat that he can, without thinking about it, see where the meat 
isn’t.   Now you are in Castenada territory, the territory of faith.  

 

Thanks, as always, Dave, for your generosity of spirit.  By the way, some 
keen-eyed observer may detect something seriously awry in my metaphorical 
proceeding above.  Presumably we both agree that the brain is a device that 
tells us something about something else, not about itself.  Dubious as I am 
that a sledge hammer can tell us anything about the structure of clocks, I am 
even MORE dubious that it can tell us anything about the structure of time. The 
Taoist Butcher metaphor seems to work in a different way.  To make it 
consistent, we would have to have the Taoist Butcher dissect HIMSELF in order 
to discover the structure of meat.  

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> thompnicks...@gmail.com

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Prof David West
Sent: Saturday, March 7, 2020 3:37 AM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Acid epistemology - restarting a previous conversation

 

Oooh fun ...

 

I also stipulate that hitting an alarm clock with a sledge hammer MIGHT reveal 
robust and enduring information about alarm clocks.

 

Let me twist this example a bit to make what I think might be a valid way to 
assert a "benefit" of drug-epistemology over sledge-hammer.

 

I must start a bit afield with a quote from Plato and a Taoist koan:

 

[First,] perceiving and bringing together under one Idea the scattered 
particulars, so that one makes clear the thing which he wishes to do... 
[Second,] the separation of the Idea into classes, by dividing it where the 
natural joints are, and not trying to break any part, after the manner of as a 
bad carver... I love these processes of division and bringing together, and if 
I think any other man is able to see things that can naturally be collected 
into one and divided into many, him I will follow as if he were as a god.

- Plato

 

"A Taoist butcher used but one knife his entire career without the need to 
sharpen it. At his retirement party the Emperor asked him about this 
extraordinary feat, The butcher stated, "Oh, I simply cut where the meat 
wasn't."

 

Now this leads to a problem of decomposition - breaking up a large and complex 
problem into tractable sub-problems. Software engineering uses a sledgehammer 
epistemology of data structures and algorithms to accomplish this decomposition 
with results that are horrific. In contrast, a "vision" induced, daydreaming 
about biological cells and cellular organisms led to the insight that cells are 
differentiated from each other by what they do, not what they are. So software 
modularity might be based on behavior. Far superior results in myriad ways.

 

If we take C.D.Broad and Huxley seriously, mescaline reveals "more of reality" 
than typically available to our conscious minds. I would assert and be willing 
to defend that at least that sort of drug-epistemology could enhance our 
ability to actually see "where the meat wasn't" and therefore enhance our 
ability to decompose large complicated systems (maybe even complex systems) in 
tractable sub-problems.

 

* * * * * * * 

 

My vision was not based on a stain, nor was it of cells dividing - it was an 
inter-cellular dissolving and recombining of inter-cellular elements, proteins 
etc., into other inter-cellular elements such that when the cell did eventually 
divide its internals were radically different. What I "saw" would more likely 
inform a genetic engineer than someone investigating cell division stuff.

 

* * * * * *

 

Sorry for making you ill, but it is your interpretation that is at fault.

 

You might remember the early days of Cinerama movies. They would start the 
movie showing a scene, like flying through the Grand canyon, then suddenly 
expand the displayed rectangle, the size of a traditional movie screen, into 
the full height and width of the Cinerama screen.

 

It was still just a movie, but the experience of the movie was enhanced? with 
sensations of vertigo, movement, detail, etc.

 

What Broad and Huxley suggest is that experience is "filtered" by the organism 
and that filtering reduces experience to the dimensions of a pre-Cinerama 
movie. Huxley then asserts that mescaline turns experience into Experience.

 

We are all experience monists here, but some of us are making the claim that 
there can be, at minimum, quantitative differences among experiences (something 
akin to the increase in pixel density and 8 versus 64 bit representation of the 
color of each pixel) and, at least the possibility of qualitative differences, 
e.g. the vertigo of Cinerama.

 

And, those differences are attainable via various means. Not just drugs.

 

So my assertion of "Apollonian-er than thou" is a claim that I experience 
"life" in "Cinerama" and you in "cinema multiplex standard screen."

 

davew

 

On Sat, Mar 7, 2020, at 5:53 AM, thompnicks...@gmail.com 
<mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com>  wrote:

See Larding below.

 

By the way:  my mail interface is taken to tucking some of my mail into a 
folder called "important" where, of course, I cannot see it.  So, if I appear 
to go missing, don't hesitate to write me an unimportant message telling me 
that there are important ones awaiting me. 

 

Of course I have  n o   I d e a  what distinguishes an important message from 
an unimportant one. 

 

As I said, see below:  Oh, and dave, what I wrote below is TESTY.  I don’t 
realty feel testy,  I don’t really feel qualified to be testy.  I think the 
rhetoric just got away with me.  It has happened before and you have promised 
it doesn’t’ bother you, so I am counting on your grace-under-fire again. 

 

Your friend ,

Nick

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

thompnicks...@gmail.com <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> 

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> > On 
Behalf Of Prof David West

Sent: Friday, March 6, 2020 2:00 AM

To: friam@redfish.com <mailto:friam@redfish.com> 

Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Acid epistemology - restarting a previous conversation

 

thanks Glen,

 

I totally agree with you about dead white guys. [Except I have had face-to-face 
conversations with a couple of them :) ] I reference them not as a source of 
answers but in an attempt to find some kind of conceptual bridge for a 
conversation. But that might be totally counterproductive as it tends to 
introduce a propensity for forking the conversation.

 

Engaging with contemporary scientists is hard when it comes to drug-induced 
data sets / experiences. I hope to make some connections with contemporary 
researchers at the ICPR conference I mentioned but the focus there seems to be 
psycho-medical and related to the oxytocin article you posted, and my direct 
interests tend to diverge from that.

 

Perhaps something more direct might be useful. Two things, the second is mostly 
to tease Nick.

 

 

1) I am fascinated by the field of scientific visualization, using imagery to 
present complex data sets. Recently I "observed" the precise moment of 
sperm-egg fertilization. A whole lot was going on inside the egg cell boundary 
immediately upon contact (not penetration) with the sperm. The visualization 
was of thousands (millions?) of discrete inter-cellular elements breaking free 
from existing structures, like DNA strands, proteins, molecules and moving 
about independently. I could see several "fields" that were a kind of 
"probability field." These fields constrained both the movement of the various 
elements and, most importantly, what structures would emerge from their 
recombination.  "Watching" the DNA strand 'dissolve" and "reform" was 
particularly interesting because it was totally unlike the "unzip into two 
strands, the zip-up a strand-half from each donor" visualization I have seen 
presented in animations explaining the process.  Instead I saw all kinds of 
"clumps" form and merge into larger/longer "clumps" then engage in an 
interesting hula/belly/undulation dance to rearrange the structure into a final 
form.  All of this "guided" by the very visible "probability fields;" more than 
one and color coded.

 

Now, if I were a cellular biologist could I make use of this vision?

[NST===>] I love this example.  Every stain produces a new image and some 
stains are more revealing than others, in that the models they facilitate are 
more robust and enduring in their predictions.  I stipulate that.  I also 
stipulate that hitting an alarm clock with a sledge hammer MIGHT reveal robust 
and enduring information about alarm clocks.  I just don’t think it’s likely.  
And there is the possibility that the clock wont be very accurate thereafter.  
That is the whole of my argument against drug -epistemology.  So if you are NOT 
arguing that drug-epistemology is somehow superior to sledge-hammer 
epistemology, then we agree and we don’t have to argue any more.  

 

Since I am not a cellular biologist and have no understanding of inter-cellular 
structures/dynamics/chemistry, nor any DNA knowledge, where did the imagery 
come from and why did it hang together so well?

 

Was this experience just an amusing bit of entertainment" Or, is there an 
insight of some sort lurking there?

[NST===>] I like the metaphor with stains.  But just remember, if my memory 
serves me correctly, you don’t see jack shit when cells divide without the 
right stain.  All such observations are of the Peircean type/; “If I do this, 
then I will get that.” 

 

2) En garde Nick.

[NST===>] je me garde

 

Quoting Huxley, paraphrasing C.D. Broad — "The function of the brain,  nervous 
system, and sense organs is, in the main, eliminative and not productive. Each 
person is at each moment capable of remembering all that has ever happened to 
him and of perceiving everything that is happening everywhere in the universe. 
This is Mind-At-Large.

[NST===>] Dave, even without my characteristic ill ease with dispositions (like 
gravity, for instance), this last sentence gives me the heebs.  And the Heaves. 
 It is either a definition of memory (=all that I experience as past at a 
moment) or it is non-sense.  Or some kind of balmy article of faith.  

 

But in so far as we are animals, our business is at all costs to survive.

[NST===>] No.  No animal has ever survived.  No animal has ever tried to 
survive. No species has ever tried to survive.  This is all foolishness pressed 
on us by Spencer.  Even Darwin was leery of it.  (and no I cannot cite text)

To make biological survival possible, Mind-At-Large,  has to be funneled 
through the reducing valve of the brain and nervous system. What comes out at 
the other end is a measly trickle of the kind of consciousness which will help 
us to stay alive on the surface of this particular planet."

[NST===>] I suppose one can make sense of this sort of talk by postulating a 
world outside of experience, but unless you postulate that this world beyond 
experience can in principle never affect experience, you end up with a 
contradiction because anything that effects experience in any way, however 
indirect,  is, by definition, experienced.  

 

Two personal experiences: 1) I tend to not notice when my glasses get cloudy 
from accumulation of dust and moisture until it is quite bad. I clean my 
glasses, put them on, and am amazed at how clear and detailed my perceptions 
are post-cleaning. A very dramatic difference.

[NST===>] Well of course.  Cleaning glasses is a method that increases the 
predictive potential of your current visual experiences.  If your argument is 
only that there are experiences I have not had which will surprise me if I have 
them, I agree, so we don’t have to argue about that any more, right?

And, 2) the proper dose of a hallucinogen (and/or the right kind of meditation) 
and my perceptions of the world around me, using all my senses, are amazingly 
clear and detailed in the same way as my visual perception was changed by 
cleaning grime from my glasses.

[NST===>] The innate school marm gives us little jolts of pleasure from time to 
time, usually in response to activities that please her.  One of those jolts is 
a “sense of clarity.”  If you break into her storeroom and steal her clarity 
candies, you will get the clarity-pleasure even while seeing muddily. 

 

Now I grant you it’s possible you will see something more clearly.  See above 
the sledgehammered clock argument. 

 

I would contend that the drug (meditation) removed the muddying filter of my 
brain/nervous system/ sense organs just as the isopropyl alcohol removed the 
muddying filter of moisture-dust on my glasses.

 

I see the world as it "really" is.[NST===>]Well, that remains to be seen, 
right.  It might be that the dust filters the light in such a way as to reveal 
structures that you cannot see through the cleaned glass.  The proof is in the 
pudding … i.e., the proving out.   

 

Now the tease: I would contend that I am more Apollonian than thou because I 
value Life, and more of Life, more directly, than you do. It is not varied 
experience I seek, but a direct, clear, complete, apprehension and appreciation 
of Life Itself.

[NST===>] Similarly, let it be the case that I had a dozen clocks and you told 
me you had hit them all with a sledge hammer;  now, if you told me you had 
lied, and gave me back the 12th clock in perfect working order, I would value 
it a lot more for having thought I had lost it.  

 

davew

 

 

On Thu, Mar 5, 2020, at 4:58 PM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:

> It's not pesky for me in the slightest. I'm *very* interested. I

> haven't contributed because it's not clear I have anything to

> contribute.

> 

> Maybe I can start with a criticism, though. It's unclear to me why you

> (or anyone) would delicately flip through crumbling pages of

> philosophy when there are fresh and juicy results from

> (interventionist) methods right in front of us? The oxytocin post

> really *was* inspired by this thread. But because you guys are talking

> about dead white men like Peirce and James, it's unclear how the science 
> relates.

> 

> My skepticism goes even deeper (beyond dead white men) to why one

> would think *anyone* (alive, dead, white or brown) might be able to

> *think* up an explanation for how knowledge grows. I would like to,

> but cannot, avoid the inference that this belief anyone (or any

> "school" of people) can think up explanations stems from a bias toward

> *individualism*. My snarky poke at "super intelligent god-people" in a

> post awhile back was

> (misguidedly) intended to express this same skepticism. I worry that

> poking around in old philosophy is simply an artifact of the mythology

> surrounding the "mind" and Great Men

> < <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_man_theory> 
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_man_theory>.

> 

> It seems to me like science works in *spite* of our biases to

> individualism. So, if I want to understand knowledge, I have to stop

> identifying ways of knowing through dead individuals and focus on the

> flowing *field* of the collective scientists.

> 

> Of course, that doesn't mean we ignore the writings of the dead people.

> But it means liberally slashing away anything that even smells obsolete.

> 

> Regardless of what you do post, don't interpret *my* lack of response

> as disinterest or irritation, because it's not.

> 

> On 3/5/20 6:14 AM, Prof David West wrote:

> > And the key to my being a pest — is anyone else curious about these things?

> 

> 

> --

> ☣ uǝlƃ

> 

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