It was an interesting article, and I was not aware of Aeon, which seems like well worth reading more broadly.blackmissionary wrote:I'm not sure if it's come up before, but this piece challenging the mainstream idea that the brain is like a computer is worth a look.
https://aeon.co/essays/your-brain-does- ... a-computer
I thought it was genuinely useful, though I am still not sure if it is saying anything really new :
- that humans have emotions and an individualised reality, and that influences the way we process the world in a way that machine cannot ;
- that heuristics (eg the angle of trajectory of the ball vs the horizon) are not the same as the algorithms required by computers ;
- that there are two kinds of processing - the intuitive, impression-based type which is often very integrated with the human body, and the calculating type (what Daniel Kahnemann calls System 1 and System 2 in his great book "Thinking fast and Slow").... etc
If nothing else, it was a useful reminder that the machine model of the human mind is really just a metaphor, and machines and humans hold and manage information quite differently. "Turing test" machines may sound and like humans under many conditions, but it is nearly impossible to conceive (let alone inspect) machine "consciousness".
I suspect many people want to depersonalise the world and take away the concept of individual will and responsibility, as doing so renders human beings either more susceptible to control, and/or completely liberated from ordinary duty and morality. Reminding ourselves that we are not the same as machines is a good defence against those unpleasant philosophies.