How did you get that book, anyway?
I had to pre-order from Amazon -- they say it's not
even published yet!
Henry van Eyken wrote:
>
> Eric:
>
> Just a few quick notes.
>
> In the process of paying due regard to the larger purpose of Doug's
> technical work, i.e. the solving of large-scale societal conundrums, I
> feel
> a need to hastely travel along various byways. Currently that is
> reading a
> 1999 book by John McCrone called "Going Iside" and which provides an
> insight
> in neuroscience. I haven't quite gotten halfway yet, but I recognize
> a
> pattern in your argument that corresponds to some of the stuff in the
> book.
>
> The neural system, it appears, has a way of ducking the crucial
> element of
> time. I am just in a part where the author discusses athletic
> achievements.
> By their training athletes have unconsciously come to rely on clues
> that
> beat the "critical dimension of time" mentioned in your Conclusion.
> (Ref.
> the chapter, "A moment of anticipation.".) I haven't sunk deep enough
> into
> the subject yet to provide a decent summary, but it looks to me that
> Minsky's "Society of Mind" (1985) and Dennett's "Consciousness
> Explained"
> (1991) are rather dated sources in the fast-moving world neuroscience
> with
> its ongoing upheaval of ideas.
>
> I kind of suspect that Dennis Hamilton is informed about some of this
> stuff.
> And referring to his post "Collective Intelligence," I was going to
> contact
> you to find out from what post of yours he quoted. At any rate, I can
> see
> now where you are coming from.
>
> My guess is that you may find quite a bit of inspiration in McCrone's
> book
> for a fruitful review of your article. Hope I am not leading you down
> the
> garden path.
>
> Henry
>
> Eric Armstrong wrote:
>
> > I had planned to work on the KRNL library this
> > weekend, to clean it up some. I didn't get to that.
> > But as a consolation prize, I have a solution to
> > the A/I "frame" problem.
> >
> > Write up at:
> > http://www.treelight.com/essays/darwinframe.html
> >
> > I'm thinking this might be appropriate for Scientific
> > American, or Discovery, or some such layman's guide
> > to science. Anyone have any editorial contacts?
> >
> >
> > Community email addresses:
> > Post message: unrev-II@onelist.com
> > Subscribe: unrev-II-subscribe@onelist.com
> > Unsubscribe: unrev-II-unsubscribe@onelist.com
> > List owner: unrev-II-owner@onelist.com
> >
> > Shortcut URL to this page:
> > http://www.onelist.com/community/unrev-II
>
> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
>
>
> www. .com
>
>
>
> Community email addresses:
> Post message: unrev-II@onelist.com
> Subscribe: unrev-II-subscribe@onelist.com
> Unsubscribe: unrev-II-unsubscribe@onelist.com
> List owner: unrev-II-owner@onelist.com
>
> Shortcut URL to this page:
> http://www.onelist.com/community/unrev-II
------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-~>
eGroups is now Yahoo! Groups
Click here for more details
http://click.egroups.com/1/11231/0/_/444287/_/981587104/
---------------------------------------------------------------------_->
Community email addresses:
Post message: unrev-II@onelist.com
Subscribe: unrev-II-subscribe@onelist.com
Unsubscribe: unrev-II-unsubscribe@onelist.com
List owner: unrev-II-owner@onelist.com
Shortcut URL to this page:
http://www.onelist.com/community/unrev-II
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Feb 07 2001 - 15:16:11 PST