Dear Edwin

Your essay is a surprise to me - a nice one - because you dare to say many things that can be "dangerous" within the scientific environment; furthermore, you say it in a way that deserves my admiration - and I am more prone to be critical then eulogistic.

I started studying the mind half a century ago; never experienced the LSD but you are quite right when you refer the importance of loosing mental connections to be able to have good ideas. I use other techniques to obtain such a result.

Your essay is focused on consciousness; mine, on the contrary, intends to explain the evolution from first particles to the human society, exclusively from matter properties. But, while including human intelligence in the process, I exclude consciousness from it - I state that it does not arise from properties of matter. As you will suspect if you read my essay, I do not state this lightly.

Above all, my feeling is that our essays complement each other - as far as two 9 pages essays can cover such a magnum quest. Together, they provide a rather complete answer to this contest. I would very much like to know whether you feel the same (my essay "Decoding the "Intelligence" of the Universe - http://fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/2865 ).

Thank you for your essay and congratulations for it!

All the best

Alfredo Oliveira

    Dear Dr. Klingman,

    Thank you very much for your helpful and encouraging comments. Your knowledge and experience is appreciated and in the future I hope to read and study more of your research efforts and results. I look forward to possible corroboration on mutually interesting problems.

    Thanks again,

    Ronald Racicot

    Hi Edwin,

    Yes physics is changing....pity the peer reviewer who knows not what to do.

    Your conclusion: Math maps projected on the physical territory form the substance of physics. Is the answer to the question FQXi intended.

    For the answer to: "How can mindless mathematical laws give rise to choice" ....see the definitive answer in my essay :)

    Great to be in a contest with you again. And your essay and explanations are clear and insightful. I rate this the highest.

    Don Limuti

      Dear Alfredo Oliveira,

      Thank you for your gracious remarks. Your first paragraph is exquisitely worded.

      The danger you note is of course due to the fact that physicists work awfully hard to acquire their skills and social positions and funding. For the most part, physics works, and it works well enough in various fields to solve problems, publish, and perform experiments, in spite of the interpretational errors and general confusion about the "nature of reality". So in general only older individuals can afford the rejection that comes from rocking the boat that is being enjoyed in full by the first-class passengers.

      You note that our essays complement each other, and I agree that each overlaps in ways that expand the topic. You discern 'intelligence' in the universe, and begin by clarifying the concept of intelligence. Whereas I define intelligence as consciousness plus logic, you exclude consciousness and define intelligence as "the ability to solve a new problem".

      First you do assume 'mind' and note that the easiest way to find a solution is 'table lookup': you already possess the answer - find it. The problem arises when no previous solution exists; the problem is new. You then formalize 'wandering to a goal' in terms of 'generating hypotheses' and 'selection processes'. The intelligence involved in solving new problems then consists of generating hypotheses (potential solutions) and applying a selection process (does it solve the problem?) Generators of hypotheses can be random or algorithmic. "Physical" intelligence favors random variation or mutation, while "physical" selection is Darwinian survival. Thus at the basic level of matter you defined "intelligence" and demonstrate its presence. Interestingly you do not claim that this leads to consciousness, merely that it exhibits intelligence as an inherent aspect of the universe.

      Of course a very large part of your solution is keyed to the fact that as the systems of particles grow larger and acquire more degrees of freedom, they expand the repertoire of potential 'hypotheses', while at the same time acquiring a greater susceptibility to temperature. You weave these threads together exceedingly well.

      My definition of intelligence related more to mental aspects as indicated by the definition: consciousness plus logic. The consciousness represents awareness of the problem. The logic enables algorithmic constructions, counting, and comparison. The consciousness must be aware of the 'match' of solution to problem. And the awareness of 'match' of solution to problem in mental space is analogous to 'survival' as solution to the problem in physical space.

      So I agree with you that our essays complement each other in a significant way. I enjoyed the many details in your essay, linked to the concept of expanding space [I didn't realize the moon had been shown to have an expanding orbit. I guess those laser reflectors we left there have paid off.] In other words I enjoyed your entire essay, but I most enjoyed your working definition of intelligence without invoking consciousness.

      My very best regards,

      Edwin Eugene Klingman

      Dear Don Limuti,

      It's always a pleasure to read your entries. And, in the Karl Popper sense, no one can prove you wrong! You combine subtlety and humor in a way few can match. I'll bet you're a lot of fun to be with. But, having read your essay three times, I'm more impressed each time and most impressed that you do it all in a page and a half.

      It's definitely good to see you back!

      Edwin Eugene Klingman

      Dear Edwin,

      It is nice re-meeting you here the FQXi Essay Contest.

      I have just read your beautiful Essay. I see that you have currently the highest community rating. This is well deserved, because, despite I find this Essay a bit speculative, it is also intriguing. Thus, I will give you the highest score. Good luck in the Contest!

      Here is our Essay.

      Cheers, Ch.

        • [deleted]

        As I read your essay, one of my questions came up with your statement:

        "So physical mechanisms exhibit a purpose, i.e., continued existence, which, in case the physical mechan- ism does continue to exist, simply defines a sufficiently efficient survival mechanism."

        My thought was that 'purpose' appears to start with the quality of life, rather than with self-conscious beings. This goes to Erik's point in this thread (hence why I am responding to this thread).

        I like your response, as there is definitely 'something' that is different between living organisms and 'dead' matter. Calling it a consciousness field at least starts the ball rolling from a physics standpoint. To Erik's statement about 'bringing a nuke to a gun fight' - I think you answered your question by noting we may "need to radically reconsider what is or isn't conscious".

        Don

        Dear Edwin,

        I sincerely appreciate both your essay and, even more, your responses to comments on your essay (which I admit I have not completed reading).

        Being trained as a Mathematician, I see a similar situation in mathematics as your discuss in physics. In physics it might be 'math maps projected onto physical territory', in mathematics it is numerical maps projected onto mathematical territory. How we represent numbers has ingrained certain ways of thinking into mathematical concepts and theory. We feel that the decimal numeric system (with its cousins) is the 'Standard Model' for numbers, and the continuum can only consist of Real numbers - a well tred path.

        More in line with your essay, I do not understand Platonism as being about reality emerging from mathematics, as it has more to do with those shadows on the wall of the cave, where we cannot directly perceive what is real (either physical or mathematical). So it seems your Platonic Credo definition comes more from a Physics perspective than a mathematical perspective.

        A question for you: If, as you quote Rovelli: "... evidence is strong that nature is unitary and coherent." then shouldn't all levels of reality be an interconnected whole? Why do we treat levels of scale separately rather than as a whole?

        Suggestion: Our current system of numeric representations is unable to handle significantly different levels of scale, thus limiting what we can measure and connect mathematically across levels of scale and then also limits the mathematical maps we are able to make against the physical territory to one level of scale or another.

        Thank you for an interesting essay (and links to other papers).

        Don

          Hi Don,

          I will respond to your latest comment below...

          Edwin Eugene Klingman

          Dear Don Palmer,

          Thanks for your comments and for your essay.

          First, let me agree that the 'version' of Platonism I refer to is primarily one that some physicists subscribe to.

          I also appreciate your point about a mathematical continuum being modeled by 'real' numbers. I'm working with a general relativist, whose model of the universe as a 'perfect fluid' is called the 'dust ball' model. My conception of the consciousness field is as a universal continuum, not a set of points.

          You begin your essay by noting the physical concepts and how they interact is at the center of the theory, not the mathematical laws.

          You also note that the mathematics of the physical theory is an attempt to model physical concepts using mathematical structure. This seems in complete agreement with my contention that mathematical structure is projected onto reality. In early days the structure was intuitive, probably because our neural nets were 'tuned' by survival to identify mass, force, momentum, speed, etc. Once Planck's constant entered, we began projecting matrix structures and other non-intuitive structures, and the 'conceptions' couldn't keep up.

          Your example of a pendulum as a specific physical model that shares 'harmonic motion' with many very different models is excellent.

          Your perspective fits well with my model. I conceive of the consciousness field as a real physical field that possesses the properties awareness plus volition. I do not try to model these mathematically. I'm not sure it makes any sense to model subjective self-awareness, which is non-linear and non-measurable. On the other hand, if the field is to interact physically with the material world, which it obviously does, then it should be capable of being modeled in that sense. So I do have equations that describe the input/output interactions; what the field physically senses and how the field can act on matter. I do not model the 'aims and intentions' mathematically.

          Thus, as you so clearly state, the field cannot be reduced to a mathematical model, yet it's physical interaction behavior is modeled mathematically. The theory is mathematically modeled in physical interaction, but only conceptually modeled in the 'mental' properties. It certainly matches your key point that the conceptual model is primary, rather than the mathematical structures.

          You note that it would be a mistake to think that the mathematical models are either the reality, or, by themselves, can define reality. This is congruent with my discussion of quantum theory, so buried under complex structures that reality vanishes at times.

          To summarize, you observe that if we only consider the mathematical structures, we will not see any 'what', 'who', or 'why' involved. These relate to conscious awareness and volition. We see 'how' the fields interact with matter, sensing or directing change.

          So thanks again, your essay has helped me elaborate on my own theory.

          Best regards,

          Edwin Eugene Klingman

          Dear Christian Corda,

          Thanks very much for your gracious comments.

          When I first read your essay, I too thought that you had missed the point of the essay. But after reading your comments I now understand that you simply placed another interpretation on the question and you actually answered extremely well from that perspective. After all, the mindless math did make predictions for over a century, and gave rise to considerable aims and intentions necessary to evaluate the model.

          I think it's also relevant to focus as you do on development of the 'mindless math', with logical mistakes made along the way and consequent changes in predictions and interpretations.

          So congratulations on finding a unique but relevant perspective when handling it well!

          My best regards,

          Edwin Eugene Klingman

          Edwin,

          Thank you for reading my essay and your congruent thoughts regarding it.

          Having read yours, I think we have a good bit in common - as you note your 'math maps projected onto physical territory' is the same as mine (using different words).

          A number of physicists have commented on the need for new mathematics in order to progress physics. I will suggest that the direction of these new mathematical tools is the need to 'upgrade' our 500 year old system of numeric representation (decimals and positional numeric cousins) in a way that expands numeric representation to complex numbers. There is a price for this change, which involves some re-routing of current paths - however the gains are many entirely new paths.

          If we could put a numeric value to sqrt(-1) (or 'i'), then the 2-part character of complex values (x iy, which is not a complex number, but the representation of a complex number) simplifies to a single value. We would not need to 'throw out' the 'imaginary' part in order to produce 'real' observable results (what does this part represent is where some new paths emerge). This could radically change how and even what we can calculate.

          Note that Donald Knuth already did this more than 50 years ago, so this is not a fantasy.

          Some ideas that could assist physics and mathematics expansion...

          Don

          Dear Don,

          I agree that we have a good bit in common in the way that we view mathematical structure as being projected onto physical reality, and then claiming space in the physicist's head. Although Tegmark thinks any interpretation is 'baggage', it is only the 'faulty' interpretations that I view as baggage.

          You are correct that a number of physicists have commented on the need for new mathematics in order to progress physics. I am one of them. However 'new' is in the eyes of the observer. Circa 1964 David Hestenes developed Geometric Algebra, with which you may or may not be familiar. In either 3+1 or 4D he formulates 'Space-time Algebra', which fits special relativity like a glove. The exciting part of it is that every entity in the algebra has both a geometric definition and an algebraic definition, as do all products of terms. I believe this is unique, and amazingly well adapted to physics. One of the terms, the pseudoscalar, has value equal to the square root of -1. In this instance it serves algebraically as the complex i, but a much better way to look at it is as the Hodge duality operator.

          If you're already familiar with this, and it's not what you're looking for, oh well. If you're not familiar with it, anything written by Hestenes is excellent, or Doran, Lasenby, and Gull, or Alan MacDonald. You might want to start with Hestenes 'Oersted Medal Lecture'. Googling "Hestenes geometric algebra" should take you to his home page at Arizona State University. I suggest starting with the Oersted Medal Lecture. I also highly recommend 'Geometric Algebra for Physicists" by Doran and Lasenby, although there are tons of pdfs online for free. I think Alan MacDonald's books are written more for a mathematician.

          If nothing else you'll gain an appreciation of just how hard it is to get new math off the ground. I love the system, and everyone I know who has bothered to learn it feels the same. But it's taken over 50 years! And the tremendous power does not come easy; there's a learning curve.

          Anyway this may or may not help you along the way. It's helped me.

          Best regards,

          Edwin Eugene Klingman

          Dear Edwing Eugene Klingman

          I invite you and every physicist to read my work "TIME ORIGIN,DEFINITION AND EMPIRICAL MEANING FOR PHYSICISTS, Héctor Daniel Gianni ,I'm not a physicist.

          How people interested in "Time" could feel about related things to the subject.

          1) Intellectuals interested in Time issues usually have a nice and creative wander for the unknown.

          2) They usually enjoy this wander of their searches around it.

          3) For millenniums this wander has been shared by a lot of creative people around the world.

          4) What if suddenly, something considered quasi impossible to be found or discovered such as "Time" definition and experimental meaning confronts them?

          5) Their reaction would be like, something unbelievable,... a kind of disappointment, probably interpreted as a loss of wander.....

          6) ....worst than that, if we say that what was found or discovered wasn't a viable theory, but a proved fact.

          7) Then it would become offensive to be part of the millenary problem solution, instead of being a reason for happiness and satisfaction.

          8) The reader approach to the news would be paradoxically adverse.

          9) Instead, I think it should be a nice welcome to discovery, to be received with opened arms and considered to be read with full attention.

          11)Time "existence" is exclusive as a "measuring system", its physical existence can't be proved by science, as the "time system" is. Experimentally "time" is "movement", we can prove that, showing that with clocks we measure "constant and uniform" movement and not "the so called Time".

          12)The original "time manuscript" has 23 pages, my manuscript in this contest has only 9 pages.

          I share this brief with people interested in "time" and with physicists who have been in sore need of this issue for the last 50 or 60 years.

          Héctor

          Dear Evgeny,

          I have already read some of your papers. Basically, I agree with you in most cases. Of course, there is an aspect where it is possible to discuss, but not now of course. As for your essay, I already wrote to you that it is really worthy of prize and I see now that I was not mistaken in my assessment (see my previous post). Thus, I can now specifically confirm my high opinion on your essay!

          I wish you further success

            Edwin Eugene Klingman,

            Your essay pesupposes mental concepts alien to matter.

            If anything is not in matter, can it come in man?

            If matter has no mind, then can it emerge in man?

            Consciousness is property of matter.

              Hi Edwin Klingman,

              I appreciate your efforts to delve deeply into the question at hand. I have some pretty serious quibbles with your conclusions but I will put off quibbling for a bit here.

              I have an essay which takes a look at some under-appreciated behavioral phenomena, the unfolding heritability problem, and together the challenges they pose for the scientific vision that is the foundation for that same question. That material might be of interest to you.

              //fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/2783

              If nothing else I hope the get more people to realize that it is not hard to fundamentally question the scientific vision of life. And with that you can push further questing in new directions.

              My quibbling peaks with the LSD discussions. Briefly, I have somewhat of a complementary perspective on that subject. I am a technically-oriented person who has also spent a lot of energy on Buddhist-related meditational efforts. Somewhat in tandem with those efforts I have encountered a number of people who have used LSD (and other psycho-dyanmic drugs). If there was a net benefit to those drug efforts it was not apparent to me.

              I hope things are going well for you.

              Ted Christopher

              Rochester, NY

                • [deleted]

                Dear Ted Christopher,,

                Thanks for reading and commenting. Your essay is full of case studies that seem to have significance for materialist-based understanding of consciousness. I too have written of those cases where large percentages of the brain are missing but consciousness is not missing. And the Caenorhabditis elegan's 302 neurons (without the consciousness field) have not answered any questions of note.

                Numbers you quote are interesting: 3 million out of 3 billion genetic variances account for about 1% of innate variation in intelligence. You say:

                "Such investigations [might] give pause to those trying to pursue more detailed understanding of consciousness based on materialist assumptions."

                A key focus of your essay is that, while the general belief is that neurons shape thinking, genetics also seems to play a large role. While I only peripherally focused on this in my essay, many of my comments above point out that biological cells are chock-full of 'moving parts' and that it is momentum density than interacts with the consciousness field in my theory. It is certainly not limited to, or even specifically related to, 'microtubules'.

                In short, if a universal consciousness field exists that interacts with momentum density, it will certainly interact with components of cells and with blood flowing in the body. It still seems likely to me that neurons are implicated in logic, but consciousness of self is a "whole body" experience, probably going to the cellular level.

                In my essay I emphasize the fact that even our theories of fundamental particles are confused and the Standard Model is known to be incomplete. Aspects of quantum mechanics, according to Feynman, Susskind, and others, are incomprehensible. So I point out that "theories" from particles-to-human beings are narratives, underlying credos. They are not 'scientific' as is usually understood by the term, and LHC-type vast brain scanners will not change this. If the "Higgs" required an LHC, human consciousness will require a galaxy-wide effort!

                Finally, I read again last week that upwards of 20% of people either have or will have mental disorders. It is obvious that many of these will not benefit from psychodynamic substances, and some may be pushed over the edge. As I clearly stated at the top of page 8, a 9 page essay on 'mindless math' is not the place to discuss social problems arising from widespread use of such. This does not, I believe, detract from my main points.

                Personally, life is good, aside from the well known fact that "growing old is not for sissies."

                Thanks again for your very interesting and well-written essay, and for your expression of concern.

                My best regards,

                Edwin Eugene Klingman

                Dear George,

                Thank you for returning to my page to confirm your interest. I appreciate that very much.

                Best regards,

                Edwin Eugene Klingman

                Dear Shaikh Raisuddin,

                Thanks for commenting on my essay. Yours is a very interesting essay. In it you say:

                "It is not physics that gives behavior to matter instead it is behavior of matter that gives physics. That means matter has its own mind and intelligence. Mind is that which decides a response and not that emerges from brain alone."

                It's not clear to me how you define matter, so I'm unsure exactly what you mean. Is an electron matter? Are quarks matter? Is the electromagnetic field of matter? Is the gravitomagnetic field matter? Since Einstein's paradigm-shifting equation E=mc**2, such fields have been considered material. They have mass energy, and are generally considered substantial. The field I propose is physical, therefore I consider it material.

                In short, it is not clear to me that you and I are in disagreement about consciousness and matter. I am perhaps a little more uncertain about the material status of a computer virus.

                I have not heard the saying "what is not inborn is artificial." You apply this by noting "the conventionally meant human mind is artificial."

                In short it seems to me that our essays agree more than they disagree.

                My best regards,

                Edwin Eugene Klingman