Blog | Events | Multimedia | About | Purpose | Programs | Publications | Staff | Contact | Join   
     Login      Register    

Support the IEET




The IEET is a 501(c)3 non-profit, tax-exempt organization registered in the State of Connecticut in the United States. Please give as you are able, and help support our work for a brighter future.

Via PayPal




Technoprogressive? BioConservative? Huh?
Quick overview of biopolitical points of view









Personhood Beyond the Human Conference whats new at ieet
Why is the IQ of Ashkenazi Jews so High? - twenty possible explanations

5 ways Augmented Reality will make us Transhuman

Backing into Eden: Chapters 3, 4, and 5

7 Videos from the Starship Century Symposium Part 2

9 Videos from the Starship Century Symposium Part 1

7 Totally Unexpected Outcomes That Could Follow the Singularity

Environmentalism, Innovation & Economics

Meet the smi2ling New Believers

See-through brains

#OpPrism, #AntiSec, #Anonymous | Anonymous Reacts to NSA


ieet books

eGods: Faith versus Fantasy in Computer Gaming
Author
by William Sims Bainbridge


comments

Giulio Prisco on 'Meet the smi2ling New Believers' (Jun 20, 2013)

Peter Wicks on 'The Hubris of Neo-Luddism' (Jun 20, 2013)

Intomorrow on 'The Hubris of Neo-Luddism' (Jun 19, 2013)

Franco Cortese on 'The Hubris of Neo-Luddism' (Jun 19, 2013)

SHaGGGz on 'Meet the smi2ling New Believers' (Jun 19, 2013)







Subscribe to IEET News Lists

Daily News Feed

Longevity Dividend List

Catastrophic Risks List

Biopolitics of Popular Culture List

Technoprogressive List

Trans-Spirit List



Also check out technoprogressive multimedia on Thoughtware.tv

Hottest Articles of the Last Month

The Hubris of Neo-Luddism
by Franco Cortese
May 26, 2013
(3565) Hits
(15) Comments

End of Eating Food
by Dick Pelletier
May 25, 2013
(3014) Hits
(13) Comments

Abolition is Imperative in Kurzweil’s Sixth Epoch Scenario
by Jønathan Lyons
May 25, 2013
(2450) Hits
(38) Comments

Call for Papers for Special Issue of JET on “Technological Unemployment and Universal Basic Income”

Jun 4, 2013
(2374) Hits
(0) Comments

How the Singularity Makes us Dumber
by David Eubanks
May 29, 2013
(2304) Hits
(2) Comments

The singularity: merging human/machine to achieve immortality
by Dick Pelletier
May 21, 2013
(2129) Hits
(4) Comments



IEET > Rights > FreeThought > Personhood > Life > Health > Contributors > Piero Scaruffi

Print Email permalink (1) Comments (3478) Hits •  subscribe Share on facebook Stumble This submit to reddit submit to digg submit to Twitter


The Nonlinear Origins of Free Will


piero scaruffi
piero scaruffi
piero scaruffi

Posted: May 16, 2012

paolo scaruffi is the author of The Nature of Consciousness: The Structure of Life and the Meaning of Matter, and A Brief History of Knowledge.

* Creativity is a property of life. No insect nor worm moves in a predictable manner, and no insect nor worm follows the same trajectory again if moved to the exact same starting position.

* Memory is reconstructive: you never remember anything as it was. If you tell the same story over and over again, you will use different words all the time (it comes as an unnatural effort to memorize one particular sequence of words). Gestures and sentences are always improvised. If you perform the same action a thousand times, in exactly the same position under the exact same conditions, you will always perform a different sequence of movements.

* The reason (or at least one reason) that we cannot repeat ourselves is not that the initial conditions change but that “we” change all the time: we are never the same again.

* It is impossible to put “you” in the exact same initial conditions because “you” are the one element that is different even if everything else in the universe remains the same. Ditto for the ant, ditto for the worm. Anything that is alive changes all the time, therefore will never repeat itself.

* If i knew the equations that govern your brain, i might indeed be able to calculate the trajectory that you will follow to go from here to there; but your brain will change the moment you start moving (in fact, every time you breathe and every time you absorb sunlight), which means that the equations change as you go.

* You are creative and unpredictable because your brain is governed by a nonlinear equation.

* Whether this can be called “free will” or not depends on definitions: it is unpredictable what “you” will do next.

* The reason why the movement of insects seems to be so erratic (and therefore driven by free will) is that a tiny change makes a big difference on their nervous system, and, just like us, these organisms change with every particle of oxygen they breathe, with every photon that hits their eyes, with every food they digest.

* Robots do not exhibit “free will” because their actions can be predicted, and they simply repeat the same action if the conditions are the same. The reason they behave in a repetitive manner is that they don’t change while they exist. They are designed to remain the same, except for updating their knowledge of the state of the world. Their “nervous system” (their “self”) does not change with every electrical impulse that they receive and with every photon that hits their sensors. They do not change most of the cells of their body during a year: they only change the components that fail, and even those get replaced with identical copies. Given the same conditions (the same state of the world) a robot’s arm will indeed follow the exact same trajectory to grab an object and a robot’s “mouth” will utter the exact same words to tell a story.

* The problem of free will is framed incorrectly. The “I” that is supposed to have free will does not exist: it is something that changes all the time, because at every instant countless cells of the body change including countless cells of the brain.

* Hence the “I” that is supposed to have free will is actually defined by that “free will”: it is the sequence of unpredictable actions generated by a nonlinear system.

* You yourself cannot predict what your free will will make you do and think in a few seconds, let alone a few years from now.

* Free will exists, but the “I” does not exist.


piero scaruffi is an author, cultural historian and blogger who has written extensively about a wealth of topics, ranging from cognitive science to music.
Print Email permalink (1) Comments (3479) Hits •  subscribe Share on facebook Stumble This submit to reddit submit to digg submit to Twitter


COMMENTS


The statements are interesting, and somehow stimulating - but, what a mess! So many amphibologies packed together!

“Creativity is a property of life. No insect nor worm moves in a predictable manner…” Does this mean that any unpredictable system must also be creative? Nonsense. The weather is highly unpredictable, especially after a week or two. Does this mean that the weather is also creative? Are clouds and winds somehow alive? The author seems to argue that life is creative by definition, and therefore unpredictable. Bergson considered life as an inherently creative phenomenon, for example. But, hey, he needed to build a whole arbitrary metaphysical, religious castle to justify this. Is the author really trying to say that living organisms create something (what? movements? structures?) out of thin air, ex nihilo? I hope not.

“You are creative and unpredictable because your brain is governed by a nonlinear equation.” So a double pendulum is also creative and unpredictable. I might agree on the unpredictability. But - do pendula have free will? Please.

“Hence the “I” that is supposed to have free will is actually defined by that “free will”: it is the sequence of unpredictable actions generated by a nonlinear system.” Wrong again. A low-friction pool table with enough balls is a nonlinear system. We, literally, cannot predict the position of those balls after enough time. I am not talking about quantum mechanics. Just trivial, old Newtonian physics. So, let us see who dares to say that a pool table behaves as an individual because WE cannot predict how the balls will move after two minutes.

The author seems to mix too many concepts - creativity, unpredictability, non-linearity. They are not synonyms. And - which is even worse - he does not even bother to identify the structural features of living beings. Why are they so unpredictable? Only because they are nonlinear? Or is it because they are alive?
He does not even pay attention to the gigantic, pink elephant in the room - the living man, the observer. In other words, the fundamental concept of “predictability” requires, to make sense, at least one (rational) subject who can (or cannot) predict the phenomena around him. Someone alive. A prediction in not merely a calculation, it is not the mere product of an algorithm. Algorithms are tools that organisms use to make better predictions, to fulfill their desires. Machines cannot predict a thing. They can give us the result of their calculations. And we can interpret these results as predictions. Some, strange, seemingly illusory, individual identity must already be there, to spot nonlinearity and indulge in the sophisticated pleasure of de-constructing itself.





YOUR COMMENT (IEET's comment policy)

Login or Register to post a comment.

Next entry: Free Will?

Previous entry: “The Self” in the Future: Will it be Extinguished, by Neuroscience?

HOME | ABOUT | FELLOWS | STAFF | EVENTS | SUPPORT  | CONTACT US
SECURING THE FUTURE | LONGER HEALTHIER LIFE | RIGHTS OF THE PERSON | ENVISIONING THE FUTURE
CYBORG BUDDHA PROJECT | AFRICAN FUTURES PROJECT | JOURNAL OF EVOLUTION AND TECHNOLOGY

RSSIEET Blog | email list | newsletter | Podcast
The IEET is a 501(c)3 non-profit, tax-exempt organization registered in the State of Connecticut in the United States.

Contact: Executive Director, Dr. James J. Hughes,
Williams 119, Trinity College, 300 Summit St., Hartford CT 06106 USA 
Email: director @ ieet.org     phone: 860-297-2376