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- From: rowe@pender.ee.upenn.edu (Mickey Rowe)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: Emergence again...
- Message-ID: <98551@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Date: 20 Nov 92 18:56:31 GMT
- References: <98024@netnews.upenn.edu> <1992Nov17.174027.10071@hemlock.cray.com>
- Sender: news@netnews.upenn.edu
- Organization: University of Pennsylvania
- Lines: 70
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pender.ee.upenn.edu
-
- In article <1992Nov17.174027.10071@hemlock.cray.com>
- robd@cherry09.cray.com (Robert Derrick) writes:
-
- >Mickey Rowe (rowe@pender.ee.upenn.edu) wrote:
- >
- >[re: the use of the term "emergent property"]
- >
- >: Wherever the potential for this confusion remains, I'm against using
- >: the word. Anybody else?
- >
- >How do you feel about substituting the term epiphenomenon? This is more
- >concise in that it means that the property in question is caused by the
- >primary phenomenon, although it is not necessary that the cause/effect
- >relationship be one that is intuitive, predictable, or reducible.
-
- Sorry that it took me so long to respond. I wanted to recall more
- about the term as it's been used in the past. I knew that hard core
- reductionists don't like the term, but I couldn't remember why. Well,
- it seems to be that "epiphenomenon" (at least as it's been applied to
- consciousness) doesn't entail causation at all (corrections welcome as
- my still cursory search wasn't terribly fruitful). In fact it seems
- that when people use the term they mean quite the opposite--that the
- epiphenomena sort of ride along side the actual phenomena, but do not
- effect nor are they effected by the primary phenomena. I still can't
- say as that I understand exactly what the significance of the term is,
- but it still seems to be a claim staked by those who would claim (as
- Kalki might) that knowing brain states won't elucidate anything about
- mind states. As such I don't like it because it runs counter to much
- of the evidence obtained from neuropsychology.
-
- As for emergence, I flipped through the Patricia Churchland book that
- I previously recommended to Kalki, and she describes emergence in a
- way that Kalki would have agreed with. I think that she also
- acknowledged the way the A-life people want to use it, but still she
- described emergence as a property that cannot in principle be reduced
- to lower level descriptions of constituent parts (specifically she
- stated the case (not her own belief) that consciousness as an emergent
- phenomenon meant that consciousness could never be understood in terms
- of neuronal function).
-
- >This idea of K's that all destinations must somehow be reducible to
- >a roadmap that details how you got there is jejune.
- >
- >In the simplest of examples:
- >
- >A cake that exists now is not reducible to a recipe of how to make the
- >cake. That information is not inherent in the cake itself. What can
- >be done is to deduce a way to reproduce the cake, creating a new
- >recipe. But there is no way of ever deducing the original recipe with
- >absolute certainty. That information is gone.
-
- This sounds a bit more like functional psychology, and could represent
- a different sort of barrier to the reductionist approach. In order
- for reduction to be possible in this instance, it must be correct that
- mind states are the cause and/or effect of brain states. However, if
- the same mind state can be achieved via many distinct brain states,
- (like the same cake being made from many different recipes) then it
- may not be possible for you to understand brain states in terms of
- mind states (even though the other way around could still be feasible
- with enough information about what constitutes a brain state. On the
- other hand, it might be that knowing the "state" of a human brain is
- possible only in the sense that you could in theory know the positions
- and momenta of all of the water molecules in Kurt's cup of tea.)
-
- [Other stuff (e.g. the natural nuclear reactor) deleted, not because
- it was uninteresting, but only because I had nothing to add... MR]
-
- >rob derrick robd@cherry.cray.com
-
- Mickey Rowe (rowe@pender.ee.upenn.edu)
-