To allow the brain cells to play the game, the computer sent signals to them indicating where the bouncing ball was. At the same time, it began monitoring information coming from the cells in the form of electrical pulses.
"We took that information and we allowed it to influence this Pong game that they were playing," Kagan says. "So they could move the paddle around."
At first, the cells didn't understand the signals coming from the computer, or know what signals to send the other direction. They also had no reason to play the game.
So the scientists tried to motivate the cells using electrical stimulation: a nicely organized burst of electrical activity if they got it right. When they got it wrong, the result was a chaotic stream of white noise.
in some way I wonder if it'd been any different if the dishpan was hooked up to a series of lights and if the experimenter had just shocked the cells or anytime it guessed the wrong light — Moliere
uncertainty avoidance — Isaac
Most people avoid tense situations. Repo man spends his life getting into tense situations.
My point is that explanations in terms of intent do not apply to dishbrain. Talk of intent is part of a different language game. — Banno
My suspicion is that for some act to count as intentional, the organism might in some sense have done otherwise. — Banno
to my eye the question is, if we choose to say that the dishbrain intends to move the paddle to stop the ball, have we extended the use of "intend" too far? So far that we have lost some worthwhile distinctions. For instance, we commonly only attribute culpability in cases of acting intentional - is the dishbrain now culpable for any negative consequences of its intent?
Isn't the language around intent distinct to that around use, including, as Josh says, normative features — Banno
But what purpose does this coupling serve? Is it a striving to avoid the white noise as an aversive stimulus or negative reinforcer?
Where did such a preference come from? It can only be a relic from the genetic bauplan of what makes a neuron useful in an actual embodied relation with its world — apokrisis
Hence my preference for something along the lines of anomalous monism, in which our intentions are not reducible in any direct way to physical states. — Banno
We now have a testable theory of the modelling relation that accounts for ... — apokrisis
Is it "accounts for ..." or is it "may be able to account for ..."? — Srap Tasmaner
but am I wrong to think there's rather little in the way of observation to support all this theory? — Srap Tasmaner
You guys have preferences among theories, good for you; let us know when you have overwhelming evidence. — Srap Tasmaner
But how can you assess the evidence — apokrisis
But if, on my next day off, I wandered over to the Life Sciences building at the local state university, and asked everyone I met there about biosemiosis and Friston and Salthe and all the rest, they would all assure me that it is universally accepted — except perhaps for a handful of dinosaurs on the verge of retirement — and as well-supported as, say, evolution. — Srap Tasmaner
insofar as you or Joshs answer the sorts of questions philosophers talk about with "Shiny new theory says X" without assuring us that shiny new theory has much claim to truth, why should we listen to you? You guys have preferences among theories, good for you; let us know when you have overwhelming evidence — Srap Tasmaner
Is that what you're telling me? — Srap Tasmaner
That would be like asking house painters what they thought about abstract expressionism. — apokrisis
It is about a willingness to stand apart from the herd. — apokrisis
I think it worth recognising a difference between our language around cause and effect and our language around intent and responsibility.
Hence my preference for something along the lines of anomalous monism, in which our intentions are not reducible in any direct way to physical states. — Banno
if, on my next day off, I wandered over to the Life Sciences building at the local state university, and asked everyone I met there about biosemiosis and Friston and Salthe and all the rest, they would all assure me that it is universally accepted — except perhaps for a handful of dinosaurs on the verge of retirement — and as well-supported as, say, evolution. — Srap Tasmaner
Once the super-stardom of neurotransmitters fades, I think we'll see support more in line with the bigger theories — Isaac
there is also a big chunk of the theory that simply not disputable - not because of the weight of evidence, but because, like mathematics, it's just re-arranged the equations to say something interesting. You can dispute that it's interesting ... — Isaac
It's more a description of what it means to avoid entropy (remain organised) than a modelling assumption, in that sense. — Isaac
Friston's basic free energy gradient equations are just re-arrangements for Bayesian optimisation of entropy gradient climbing expressions. It's more a description of what it means to avoid entropy (remain organised) than a modelling assumption, in that sense. — Isaac
Mind science was tracking down this road since Helmholtz until the computer revolution derailed it in the 1950s. A new mechanistic paradigm was forced on to it. And now it has returned to that more naturalistic paradigm. — apokrisis
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