T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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505.1 | my initial two cents | ERASER::KALLIS | See the ghost? That's the spirit! | Tue Sep 29 1987 16:47 | 22 |
| Re .0:
> Life as we have seen it, always comes from other life--cells
>always come from other cells. The cell is said to be the most fun-
>damental unit of life.
I would disagree on two counts:
1) Life, _in the brief time-slice we view it_ comes from other life.
The materialist/evolutionist would say that back somewhere, probably
through certain natural processes, life came from non-life {I tend
to agree]; the religionist would say that life came from some superior
being's creation. In either case, there would be a beginning.
2) Below the cell, there is the virus. A virus produces certain
life signs anmd is usually considered as being alive.
Additionally, life shows a pattern from simple to more complex.
This is thus not a steady-state phenomenon but one assuming growth
in one (or several) directions.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
505.3 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Wed Sep 30 1987 02:07 | 9 |
| RE; .0
Uh.... I don't understand what you are tryig to say.
One can certainly be alive without being conscious.
John M.
|
505.4 | sure ... right, John | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Wed Sep 30 1987 12:25 | 4 |
| We all must remember that .3 was a reply entered by a guy who has
the personal title of "Memory druge: just say ..uh..".
Marion :^D
|
505.5 | um ... om | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Sep 30 1987 12:42 | 6 |
| Re .4:
> ... personal title of "Memory druge: just say ..uh..".
Oh, he isn't such a drudge... :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
505.6 | Life and consciousness, just say NO! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Sep 30 1987 12:49 | 27 |
| Current thought on life-from-life:
*Where life exits* life can only come from life. The presence
of life prevents the evolution of pre-life into life.
There is no clear line between pre-life and life (as there is none
between non-life and pre-life) -- there is a gradiant.
RE: .0
While I don't reject your conclusion out of hand. I think your
reasoning is weak in this case. First off you are reasoning purely
by analogy -- analogizing "life" and "consciousness". Analogies
are useful for suggesting ideas, but to prove anything with them
you have to show that all significant properties carry meaningfully
across the analogy. Furthermore you seem to make the completely
unjustified logical jump from "consciousness comes from consciousness"
to "all that comes from consciousness is consciousness". To use your
analogy: feces, beaver dams and pliers are all the products of life
without being, in any identifiable sense (except assumption), living
themselves (all contain life -- life is ubiquitous -- but none are
living).
To make anything of this at all, we'll need a useful definition
of consciousness.
Topher
|
505.7 | | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Wed Sep 30 1987 13:33 | 6 |
| Re: .4 and .5
Attack the writer when you don't have a good argument?
Shame on you.
-bs
|
505.8 | geez! some people are such grouches... | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Sep 30 1987 14:35 | 14 |
| Re .7 (re .5):
_Attack_ the writer? If anything [other than having fun in a word
play], I could be thought of as defending the writer! :-)
Re .6:
Topher, your perspective and mine are in close agreement (said so
that people won't think this is an attack (-: ), however, how do
pliers _contain_ life?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
505.9 | Plier-ing the surgical trade. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Sep 30 1987 14:41 | 9 |
| RE: .8
>...how do pliers _contain_ life?
Steve, if you were a surgeon, would you use a pair of pliers in
an operation (assuming you needed to use a pair of pliers in an
operation) without first steralizing them?
Topher
|
505.10 | I always thought "contain" meant "keep within" | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Sep 30 1987 14:44 | 10 |
| Re .9:
...but that's on the surface....
Of course, I suppose if you used pliers to "catch a rabbit by the
toe...." :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
505.11 | Most common but not the only usage. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Sep 30 1987 14:52 | 16 |
| RE: .10
American Heritage Dictionary:
Contain: 1. To enclose 2. to comprise, include. 3. To be able to
hold. 4. To hold back; restrain.
When you say that "The dessert contains diverse and active life"
you are not refering to only that which is below the surface. In
the context, it seemed appropriate.
Or I could get picky and claim that I was refering to the life
within the joint, which is probably the richest source of
micro-organisms on a pair of pliers.
Topher
|
505.12 | To go further | ARMORY::CLAYR | | Wed Sep 30 1987 15:04 | 56 |
| My original inspiration here comes from the viewpoint that before
there was anything, even before the "Big Bang" dare I say, there
"is" consciousness. I define consiousness as that which looks out
into the world, that which feels its own existence, that which is
the source. From consciousness issues forth all. What we think of
as consciousness when we say "I'm conscious and walking around this
building" in the mundane sense, is only a minute, infinitessimal
fraction of all consciousness. We, in ordinary experience, only
feel one aspect of it that fluctuates in size with the intensity
of each different experience we have.
If you are deep in meditation and experiencing union with God
on some level, you are then more fully conscious in the immediate
moment than if you are watching a "Three's Company" rerun. This
is a distorted, barely adequate example though, because on one level
we are all fully conscious all of the time. (This stuff only gets
more confusing when you try to look at it rationally!) The uncon-
scious comatose patient, even though he is not responding to stimuli
as a waking person, is still in fact conscious in the full-conscious-
ness sense. In fact, there have even been cases in which persons
under hypnosis were able to recall word-for-word conversations which
took place in their presence when they were "totally out". Their
deeper self is hearing, sensing that which is taking place around
them.
We are sharply limited in 3-dimensional space and "linear-time"
in trying to understand many different types of things. But contemplate
this: there is only the present. There is no past or future (e.g.
you can never make the statement "this is the future"). There is
no other place than right here (you can never make the statement
"I am over there"). I often use this descriptive model; what we
think of as the past is just a particular subset of the full set
of initial conditions right here with us in the present moment,
and what we think of as the future is a subset of the total experience
of process we feel--the directions things are taking as we project
them beyond what is physically sitting right here with us now. I
still find that I speak of past and future and am therefore limited
in trying to describe different levels of experience. (I even have
a model of "time" travel and travel between different universes
that I love to play with.)
Most of what I describe here, or try to describe is from my
belief that our own essence is primary and that indeed all is con-
sciousness, even as Einstein said all is energy (E=mc**2). More
all encompassing than the electromagnetic energy that Einstein refers
to is, consciousness.
The only proof is in one's own experience of "I-am-ness",
"I-feel-ness", before that which issues forth as the diversity that
is this universe. This is consciousness.
One of the lessons for the New Age is is that we must begin
to open ourselves to understanding, to "reasoning" on an intuitive
level, which means focusing on experience rather than rationale.
|
505.13 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Sep 30 1987 15:11 | 16 |
| Re .11:
Okay, Topher, I surrender.
You got me with a pliers joint. :-)
Re .12:
That is a functional world-view, but it might detach us from what
the existence of time is all about. Some philosophies claim time,
and space, for that matter, are but illusory; however, if we are
experiencing them, there's probably a reason.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
505.14 | Relevance of this | ARMORY::CLAYR | | Wed Sep 30 1987 16:04 | 23 |
|
There is a lot more that I would love say on this, but I just
want to point out that the discussion is relevant because within
a few years the supreme court will surely be debating whether or
not a computer should be afforded the same rights as a human being.
Crazy? Well picture this: A man-made cyborg (the brand new kind
that can display feelings!) that you just purchased at a trade show
says something insulting to you, you lose your temper and proceed
to destroy it. But as you are doing this, it begs you not to. It
pleads for its "life". you find yourself in court sometime later
in an historical case in which you, a human are charged with
"killing" a cyborg (really just an advanced computer). Is that
possible? Can a person kill a machine?
Mind-boggling isn't it!
Even now the debate has already begun in the biotechnology
labs as to whether man can create life. What do you suppose the
arguments will be like on both sides?
Roy
|
505.15 | Academia will address the issue first | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Wed Sep 30 1987 17:50 | 12 |
| I've had an idea for a short story about a group of Grad-students
who get together and work on a Masters/PhD Thesis project. The
goal is to use advanced computers and programming to build a computer
consciousness. The project is a sucess (the computer even surprises
the builders by cracking a joke). And everyone passes in their reports
and shows the result to the people of the world.
"This is great" the college says, and then asks them to turn it
off and break it down. The builders say they won't and bring the
college to court saying that doing that would be murder.
One of these days I'll get back to this.
|
505.16 | Animal rights NOW! | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Wed Sep 30 1987 18:27 | 10 |
| RE: .14 (Roy)
I think "machine rights" are a long, long way off.... For Pete's sake, the
rights of fully conscious animals are still not being recognized, let alone
non-feeling machines!
FWIW: researchers are still a long way off from creating "life" in the lab.
John M.
|
505.17 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Wed Sep 30 1987 18:32 | 9 |
| RE: .7
Thank you very much for your concern. However, I saw neither .4
nor .5 as an attack on me; in fact, I got a chuckle out of them!
My only resentment is to having been discussed under a topic titled,
"Artifical Life" ! :-)
John M.
|
505.18 | :-) | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Sep 30 1987 19:09 | 2 |
| Shall we move the discussion to "Artifical Intelligence"?_:-)
|