Yes, exactly the question. That's why if you factor in the relativistic nature of surprises to some agents, then quantifying the free energy becomes muddled. The formulation is problematic.Not sure what you mean. The free energy principle plays it's part, one must suppose, but the question is as to the extent of that part, no? — Banno
H&N neurotransmitters have more to do with focus. Dopamine literally makes you think about what you don't have. It takes your focus away from, well, H&N.
No, it doesn't wipe anything in clean. — frank
I think it's a question of the reliability of the evidence. One of the key features of miracles is that they're not reproducible. The Stern-Gerlach experiment is. They were both mysterious at some time, but the latter was reproducible, and therefore credible. — Kenosha Kid
A rather scientific bent of mind. Lawrence Krauss (physicist) remarks in an interview that scientist's go to their workplaces with one and only one aim - prove their colleagues wrong. This I read to mean that scientists are on the lookout for disproving counterexamples to existing, universally endorsed theories (scientific miracles) like Einstein's relativity for example. — TheMadFool
questions and saying a miracle is god's doing doesn't tell us anything at all as to how god did it? — TheMadFool
Do you see any metaphysical errors in the dark room problem? — TheMadFool
Point being, despite some protestations to the contrary, it is still not clear how this fits in with thermodynamics and information theory. — Banno
I’ve said that it is only a “problem” premised on a fundamental misunderstanding of Friston’s Bayesian approach.
Banno is trying to do his usual thing of causing mischief and standing innocently on the sidelines. — apokrisis
LK is rather narrow-minded. If reproducibility were the norm, a lot of science wouldn't exist. Stuff being reproducable is a methodological imperative narrowing scientific knowledge. Adhering strictly to it inhibits scientific progress. "But it has to be reproducable". The big bang would be a miracle. And it is a miracle! — Cartuna
God can interfere by means of hidden variables constituting the wavefunction. He could make wavefunctions in the atmosphere collapse in a controlled way to make a lighting flash strike you. I don't think he does though. He probably just leaves us alone.Turning water in wine is more complicated. The watery wavefunction is not fit. He just can't make winey atoms appear next to water ones. — Cartuna
I thought that was a open-and-shut case: the hidden variables question i.e. there are none and QM is complete in its probabilistic qualities. — TheMadFool
Alas, I'm too uneducated to compose a sensible reply. — TheMadFool
There is no sensible reply. How would that look like? Untill now, hidden variables are just an assumption. But more "satisfying" than the orthodoxy ruling — Cartuna
Keep what up? I haven't done anything that's worth...keeping up. :chin:
now — TheMadFool
dunno. Just a vague idea regarding that but it's probably nothing. Muddled-thinking at best. — TheMadFool
Organisms that succeed, the free-energy principle mandates, do so by minimizing their tendency to enter into this special kind of surprising (that is, non-anticipated) state. But at first sight this principle seems bizarre. Animals do not simply find a dark corner and stay there. Play and exploration are core features of many life-forms.
It is for the contrived definition of "living" that seems to be used here, almost entirely by definition. If life is nothing but avoiding non-anticipated stimuli, then minimising non-anticipated stimuli means living longer?But why is minimising surprise the very same as living longest? — Banno
I'm over here struggling to think of an example. Not of a biological system, but of an ecosystem that would even vaguely resemble this "dark room".Yes, a human is only one example of a biological system, but you only need one counterexample to falsify a law. — Kenosha Kid
:up:Our fear of lurking tigers _is_ quite different from our innate curiosity for the novel, and should be treated as such. — Kenosha Kid
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