Intelligence & Evolution (Evolution)

by dhw, Saturday, October 12, 2013, 15:09 (3847 days ago)

Dhw: (under "Emergence") [...] which of your two statements do you now adhere to? 1) "Consciousness involves self-awareness at the human level", or 2) "Animals are conscious but generally not self-aware and therefore do not have the type of consciousness that we have." -DAVID: Both. For me they are consistent.-My clever daughter pointed out the ambiguity in Statement 1), and you are right ... taken out of context the statements are consistent. The context, however, is that you 'still stick to "aware that you are aware"', plus your insistence that consciousness involves the ability to analyse concepts, formulate new theories, and think abstractly like Higgs. This shows that you do not accept that an organism is conscious unless it has a human level of self-awareness. -However, "Human consciousness involves self-awareness", or "consciousness at the human level involves self-awareness" would certainly be consistent with Statement 2, and this negates your previous definition of consciousness. Since you regard the statements as consistent, I can only assume you now acknowledge that there are different types of consciousness. Presumably, then, you will accept that an organism which is capable of absorbing, processing, assessing and exchanging information, communicating with other organisms, making decisions and solving problems is conscious, though its consciousness is different from ours and does not involve self-awareness, formulating new theories, or abstract thinking like that of Higgs. -David (under "Cell Memories"): Your complaint about my approach to this problem comes from the fact that I look at what science tells us about the biochemistry of the cell and how they communicate. Then for me Full Stop...But I can't fathom your insistence that individual cells can sit and plan things together. -It is not an insistence. I offer it as an alternative hypothesis to the (equally?) dubious hypotheses of random mutations and divine preprogramming.
 
DAVID: If they carry (unknown to us) a smidgen of the universal consciousness, then it is that overall entity which is really doing the planning... You can't have it both ways: independent 'intelligent cells' only show biochemical communication at our level of reality. -You continue to focus on HOW they communicate instead of considering WHAT they communicate. Evolutionary innovation can only come about if the cells cooperate to combine in new ways. This involves processing and exchanging information, taking decisions, solving problems. There is no way round this, and it is what happens even in your divinely preplanned scenario ... the cells assemble in new combinations, and that means they cooperate etc. The issue is the extent to which they themselves are able to use the information in order to create something new ... much as the first ant colonies were able to create their amazing feats of engineering and architecture. According to your own hypothesis, God preprogrammed every innovation, every decision, into the very first organisms, and perhaps even every environmental change (apart from the occasional dabble), and magically the cells automatically logged onto precisely the right programme (out of billions) at the right time to create legs, lungs and livers. How credible is this?
 
DAVID: To do what you want they must be operating at a quantum level carrying the consciousness that the article shows might be present. But if quantum consciousness is what is going on at their level, then they are joined by a universal consciousness which is what I propose. What underlies our perceived reality is the quantum world. To me it is obvious that a "concealed God" is hidden there and creates the reality we have.-What do you mean by "quantum consciousness", and being "joined by" a universal consciousness? We humans are conscious and are also conscious of being conscious. What is the difference between that and our "quantum consciousness"? If you really think consciousness is not possible without being "joined by" a universal consciousness (= your God), and a concealed God "creates the reality we have" (as well as "pervading everything"), you might as well say that our own consciousness is actually God's consciousness, and we are automatons capable only of thinking his thoughts. And you might also say that your God is present in every cell, taking all the necessary decisions, and therefore the cell is intelligent because, just like our own, its intelligence IS God.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, October 12, 2013, 16:16 (3847 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: The context, however, is that you 'still stick to "aware that you are aware"', plus your insistence that consciousness involves the ability to analyse concepts, formulate new theories, and think abstractly like Higgs. This shows that you do not accept that an organism is conscious unless it has a human level of self-awareness. -You persist in confusing levels of the concept of being 'conscious'. Animals and perhaps plants have a conscious state. They are aware of reality and how to respond to it at basic levels. But they are not aware of being aware, they are not deeply philosophic or analytic or abstract. Once you enter that level now you are discussing consciousness. 
> 
> dhw: I can only assume you now acknowledge that there are different types of consciousness. Presumably, then, you will accept that an organism which is capable of absorbing, processing, assessing and exchanging information, communicating with other organisms, making decisions and solving problems is conscious, though its consciousness is different from ours and does not involve self-awareness, formulating new theories, or abstract thinking like that of Higgs. -This statement shows your confusion. I have described distinct levels of difference. The word consciousness can only be applied to the state of abstract reasoning I have referred to. Look at the definitions which are generally accepted. This is why the source of the state of consciousness is so hard to handle scientifically. We are at a mental level animals don't achieve, no matter how clever the chimp or the corvid appears to be.
> 
> dhw: It is not an insistence. I offer it as an alternative hypothesis to the (equally?) dubious hypotheses of random mutations and divine preprogramming.-I view it as grasping at straws. The best view is: if it looks designed, it might well be.
> 
> dhw: You continue to focus on HOW they communicate instead of considering WHAT they communicate. Evolutionary innovation can only come about if the cells cooperate to combine in new ways. This involves processing and exchanging information, taking decisions, solving problems. There is no way round this, and it is what happens even in your divinely preplanned scenario ... the cells assemble in new combinations, and that means they cooperate etc. The issue is the extent to which they themselves are able to use the information in order to create something new ... much as the first ant colonies were able to create their amazing feats of engineering and architecture. According to your own hypothesis, God preprogrammed every innovation, every decision, into the very first organisms, and perhaps even every environmental change (apart from the occasional dabble), and magically the cells automatically logged onto precisely the right programme (out of billions) at the right time to create legs, lungs and livers. How credible is this?-Responded to above. Cells can't plan their own developmental future.-> 
> dhw: What do you mean by "quantum consciousness", and being "joined by" a universal consciousness? We humans are conscious and are also conscious of being conscious. .... If you really think consciousness is not possible without being "joined by" a universal consciousness (= your God), and a concealed God "creates the reality we have" (as well as "pervading everything"), you might as well say that our own consciousness is actually God's consciousness, and we are automatons capable only of thinking his thoughts. And you might also say that your God is present in every cell, taking all the necessary decisions, and therefore the cell is intelligent because, just like our own, its intelligence IS God.-You supposition for my theory above is quite reasonable, except God has obviously given us free will as the presence of human evil shows. We are not automatons.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, October 13, 2013, 17:14 (3846 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: The context, however, is that you 'still stick to "aware that you are aware"', plus your insistence that consciousness involves the ability to analyse concepts, formulate new theories, and think abstractly like Higgs. This shows that you do not accept that an organism is conscious unless it has a human level of self-awareness.
 
DAVID: You persist in confusing levels of the concept of being 'conscious'. Animals and perhaps plants have a conscious state. They are aware of reality and how to respond to it at basic levels. But they are not aware of being aware, they are not deeply philosophic or analytic or abstract. Once you enter that level now you are discussing consciousness.
 
Having a conscious state to me means being conscious. I am the one who keeps emphasizing that there are different levels of consciousness, whereas you insist that there is only one ... the human level! That is why I prefer the word "intelligence", in order to avoid this confusion.-dhw: I can only assume you now acknowledge that there are different types of consciousness. Presumably, then, you will accept that an organism which is capable of absorbing, processing, assessing and exchanging information, communicating with other organisms, making decisions and solving problems is conscious, though its consciousness is different from ours and does not involve self-awareness, formulating new theories, or abstract thinking like that of Higgs. -DAVID: This statement shows your confusion. I have described distinct levels of difference. The word consciousness can only be applied to the state of abstract reasoning I have referred to. [...] We are at a mental level animals don't achieve, no matter how clever the chimp or the corvid appears to be.-I have no problem accepting that we operate on a different level. But if you insist that only humans are conscious, then of course by your definition not even animals and plants can qualify, let alone cells! And yet as recently as 8 October you explained how "intelligence in my dog or me or you nestles in a consciousness which is an emergent property from the brain". I reckon your dog can perceive the environment, process and exchange information, cooperate with other organisms, make decisions etc. but I doubt if he's aware of being aware, "deeply philosophic or analytic or abstract". So I'd say he has a lesser degree of consciousness/intelligence than ourselves ... but consciousness/ intelligence he has, and even though I haven't had the pleasure of meeting him, I doubt if I'd regard him as an automaton. Some scientists tell us that exactly the same abilities are present in cells. You are free of course to conclude that these abilities are automated, but that is an opinion, not a scientific fact, and the conclusion that they have been preprogrammed by a god takes you even further away from science.
 
dhw: It is not an insistence. I offer it as an alternative hypothesis to the (equally?) dubious hypotheses of random mutations and divine preprogramming.-DAVID: I view it as grasping at straws. The best view is: if it looks designed, it might well be.-Indeed it might. And it might even have been designed by intelligent mechanisms which your God created to take their own decisions in accordance with whatever conditions they might meet. Who knows?-dhw: According to your own hypothesis, God preprogrammed every innovation, every decision, into the very first organisms, and perhaps even every environmental change (apart from the occasional dabble), and magically the cells automatically logged onto precisely the right programme (out of billions) at the right time to create legs, lungs and livers. How credible is this?-DAVID: Responded to above. Cells can't plan their own developmental future.-That is a response to the "intelligent cell" hypothesis. It is not a response to my querying the credibility of your own astonishing scenario.-dhw:.... If you really think consciousness is not possible without being "joined by" a universal consciousness (= your God), and a concealed God "creates the reality we have" (as well as "pervading everything"), you might as well say that our own consciousness is actually God's consciousness, and we are automatons capable only of thinking his thoughts. And you might also say that your God is present in every cell, taking all the necessary decisions, and therefore the cell is intelligent because, just like our own, its intelligence IS God.-DAVID: You supposition for my theory above is quite reasonable, except God has obviously given us free will as the presence of human evil shows. We are not automatons.-Free will and human evil are another subject, and I don't feel that either of us is in a position to read your God's mind. However, I'm glad you find reasonable the suggestion that he is present in every cell, and therefore the cell is intelligent because its intelligence IS God. Clearly then you are not opposed to the concept in principle, so long as we put God in there.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, October 13, 2013, 21:31 (3846 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Having a conscious state to me means being conscious. I am the one who keeps emphasizing that there are different levels of consciousness, whereas you insist that there is only one ... the human level! That is why I prefer the word "intelligence", in order to avoid this confusion.-Prefer what you wish, but I am discussing the different types of conscious beings. Human consciousness involve self awareness and analytic thought. My dog, or chimps, are conscious and have a slight degree of consciousness in that they can do some simple future planning. My dog brings a ball. He is planning to play. There is a vast difference. 
> 
> dhw: I can only assume you now acknowledge that there are different types of consciousness. Presumably, then, you will accept that an organism which is capable of absorbing, processing, assessing and exchanging information, communicating with other organisms, making decisions and solving problems is conscious, though its consciousness is different from ours and does not involve self-awareness, formulating new theories, or abstract thinking like that of Higgs. -I'll agree with that statement. For organisms, not for single cells or groups of cells.-> 
> dhw;I have no problem accepting that we operate on a different level. But if you insist that only humans are conscious, then of course by your definition not even animals and plants can qualify, let alone cells!-See my clarification above-> 
> dhw: It is not an insistence. I offer it as an alternative hypothesis to the (equally?) dubious hypotheses of random mutations and divine preprogramming.-I know you do, because you have no other choice but to invent a spurious middle ground to avoid the only available choices.
> 
> dhw: According to your own hypothesis, God preprogrammed every innovation, every decision, into the very first organisms, and perhaps even every environmental change (apart from the occasional dabble), and magically the cells automatically logged onto precisely the right programme (out of billions) at the right time to create legs, lungs and livers. How credible is this?-If you accept theistic evolution, as I do, then it is credible for me. You have your fence.->
> Free will and human evil are another subject, and I don't feel that either of us is in a position to read your God's mind. However, I'm glad you find reasonable the suggestion that he is present in every cell, and therefore the cell is intelligent because its intelligence IS God. Clearly then you are not opposed to the concept in principle, so long as we put God in there.-God has to be there. And you are correct. I don't try to read His mind.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, October 14, 2013, 16:20 (3845 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Prefer what you wish, but I am discussing the different types of conscious beings. Human consciousness involve self awareness and analytic thought. My dog, or chimps, are conscious and have a slight degree of consciousness in that they can do some simple future planning. My dog brings a ball. He is planning to play. There is a vast difference.-Of course there is a vast difference. And I have no doubt there is a vast difference between a bacterium and your dog. And that is the point I am making. There are different levels and degrees of consciousness/intelligence. But at least you have now withdrawn your claim that only humans can claim to be conscious. Thank you.-dhw: I can only assume you now acknowledge that there are different types of consciousness. Presumably, then, you will accept that an organism which is capable of absorbing, processing, assessing and exchanging information, communicating with other organisms, making decisions and solving problems is conscious, though its consciousness is different from ours and does not involve self-awareness, formulating new theories, or abstract thinking like that of Higgs.
 
DAVID: I'll agree with that statement. For organisms, not for single cells or groups of cells. -But organisms ARE groups of cells. And just as you believe consciousness emerges from the cooperation of billions of cells that make up the brain, I am suggesting that innovations may emerge from similarly cooperating cells. The whole is greater than the parts. There is not one of the attributes listed above that cannot be applied both to your dog and to cells, individually and in groups.-dhw: According to your own hypothesis, God preprogrammed every innovation, every decision, into the very first organisms, and perhaps even every environmental change (apart from the occasional dabble), and magically the cells automatically logged onto precisely the right programme (out of billions) at the right time to create legs, lungs and livers. How credible is this?
DAVID: If you accept theistic evolution, as I do, then it is credible for me. You have your fence.-Yes of course it's credible for you, just as chance combinations creating life and innovations are credible to an atheist evolutionist, and an intelligent cell is credible to scientists like Margulis and Albrecht-Buehler. I'm afraid the fact that you believe your theory does not give you the authority to dismiss other theories as poppycock.
 
dhw: I'm glad you find reasonable the suggestion that he is present in every cell, and therefore the cell is intelligent because its intelligence IS God. Clearly then you are not opposed to the concept in principle, so long as we put God in there.-DAVID: God has to be there. -Then the cell is intelligent after all, so long as we call its intelligence "God" and not "intelligence".

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Monday, October 14, 2013, 17:45 (3845 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: But at least you have now withdrawn your claim that only humans can claim to be conscious. Thank you.-I never claimed that. It was your assumption from my poor explanations.-> 
> dhw: But organisms ARE groups of cells. And just as you believe consciousness emerges from the cooperation of billions of cells that make up the brain, I am suggesting that innovations may emerge from similarly cooperating cells. The whole is greater than the parts. There is not one of the attributes listed above that cannot be applied both to your dog and to cells, individually and in groups.-Now you want "emergent" planning by groups of cells. Cells respond to each other automatically. No brains involved, no consciousness for abstract planning. Planning requires abstract thought. Hunt and peck will not work. The requirements for a kidney are too exact, adjusting sodium levels or pH to the second decimal place.-> 
> dhw: I'm afraid the fact that you believe your theory does not give you the authority to dismiss other theories as poppycock.-My theory is not the cause of my poppycock response. it is my knowledge of cellular biochemistry. You are casting around for a middle ground taht does not exist. 
> 
> dhw: Then the cell is intelligent after all, so long as we call its intelligence "God" and not "intelligence".-Twisting my thoughts again. The cells contain an intelligent information code, which I ropose is placed there by God. The cells are automatic, with the appearance of being conscious. Life is an emergent property of the cell complexity. REcall the discussion in my new book about the definition of life. A difficult subject unless emergence is invoked.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 14:19 (3844 days ago) @ David Turell

Just look at brain complexity and perhaps you will understand my point of view:-"We have a hundred billion neurons in each human brain," said Nicholas Spitzer, a neurobiologist and co-director of the Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind at the University of California-San Diego (which is partnering with The Atlantic on this event). "Right now, the best we can do is to record the electrical activity of maybe a few hundred of those neurons. Gee, that's not very impressive."-http://www.theatlantic.com/events/archive/2013/10/in-conversation-with-neuroscientists/280146/-"As your readers may know, the nerve cells or neurons in the brain communicate with each other through the release of chemicals, called neurotransmitters," Spitzer said. "This allows a motor neuron that makes a muscle contract signal to the muscle to say, 'time to contract.' It seems like kind of a clumsy way to organize a signaling system."-But sometimes, those neurons change "jobs" ... a motor neuron might start signaling another function in the body, for example.-"We thought for a long time that the wiring of the brain was a little bit like the wiring of some sort of electronic device in that the connection of the wires in the 'device,' the brain, are fairly fixed. What we're finding is that the wires can remain in place, but the function of the circuit and the connection of the wires can change," Spitzer said. "This is something of a heresy."-"What's next for neuroscience? "The elephant in the room is developing a theory of the mind," said Spitzer. "Neuroscientists are proud of what they've learned, but if you're a little tough-minded, you might say, 'Do we actually have a theory of the way in which cognition works, imagination works, creativity operates?' The answer, fundamentally, is 'no.'"-The living brain has emergent properties. The brain does not know what you want to think or learn, but it adapts to that automatically when you do those things. This plasticity is supposed to have conjured itself up by chance, if you accept any part of Darwin's theory. Poppycock still fits.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 14:36 (3844 days ago) @ David Turell

Just look at brain complexity and perhaps you will understand my point of view:
> 
> "We have a hundred billion neurons in each human brain," said Nicholas Spitzer, a neurobiologist and co-director of the Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind at the University of California-San Diego (which is partnering with The Atlantic on this event). "Right now, the best we can do is to record the electrical activity of maybe a few hundred of those neurons. Gee, that's not very impressive."
> 
> http://www.theatlantic.com/events/archive/2013/10/in-conversation-with-neuroscientists/... 
> "As your readers may know, the nerve cells or neurons in the brain communicate with each other through the release of chemicals, called neurotransmitters," Spitzer said. "This allows a motor neuron that makes a muscle contract signal to the muscle to say, 'time to contract.' It seems like kind of a clumsy way to organize a signaling system."
> 
> But sometimes, those neurons change "jobs" ... a motor neuron might start signaling another function in the body, for example.
> 
> "We thought for a long time that the wiring of the brain was a little bit like the wiring of some sort of electronic device in that the connection of the wires in the 'device,' the brain, are fairly fixed. What we're finding is that the wires can remain in place, but the function of the circuit and the connection of the wires can change," Spitzer said. "This is something of a heresy."
> 
> "What's next for neuroscience? "The elephant in the room is developing a theory of the mind," said Spitzer. "Neuroscientists are proud of what they've learned, but if you're a little tough-minded, you might say, 'Do we actually have a theory of the way in which cognition works, imagination works, creativity operates?' The answer, fundamentally, is 'no.'"
> 
> The living brain has emergent properties. The brain does not know what you want to think or learn, but it adapts to that automatically when you do those things. This plasticity is supposed to have conjured itself up by chance, if you accept any part of Darwin's theory. Poppycock still fits.-Complex brain processes require complex research:
"The formation of long-term memory is dependent on protein synthesis at a specific location and time in brain tissues. 
Min and his team recently developed a new imaging technique to pinpoint exactly where and when cells produce new proteins. The method is significant in that it enables scientists to create high-resolution images of newly synthesized proteins in living cells."-
 Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2013-10-chemist-optical-imaging-technique-mystery.html#jCp

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 15:54 (3844 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: The living brain has emergent properties. The brain does not know what you want to think or learn, but it adapts to that automatically when you do those things. This plasticity is supposed to have conjured itself up by chance, if you accept any part of Darwin's theory. Poppycock still fits.-You persist in knocking down the straw man of chance. That is not our subject here. Our discussion concerns the alternative hypotheses I have offered in my other post on this thread: 1) your concept of divine preprogramming of every innovation and every organ right from the first forms of life; 2) the alternative explanation that all this complexity has come about through cooperation between cells, whose intelligent mechanisms may even have been invented by your God. The concept of the intelligent cell dispenses with chance, and also allows for theistic evolution.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 18:55 (3844 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Our discussion concerns the alternative hypotheses I have offered in my other post on this thread: 1) your concept of divine preprogramming of every innovation and every organ right from the first forms of life; 2) the alternative explanation that all this complexity has come about through cooperation between cells, whose intelligent mechanisms may even have been invented by your God. The concept of the intelligent cell dispenses with chance, and also allows for theistic evolution.-I am struggling to change your concept slightly: The cells act intelligently because they automatically follow an information program from an intelligent source. That is theistic evolution. That is our only difference in description. 1) and 2) are two parts of the same concept.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, October 16, 2013, 12:35 (3844 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Our discussion concerns the alternative hypotheses I have offered in my other post on this thread: 1) your concept of divine preprogramming of every innovation and every organ right from the first forms of life; 2) the alternative explanation that all this complexity has come about through cooperation between cells, whose intelligent mechanisms may even have been invented by your God. The concept of the intelligent cell dispenses with chance, and also allows for theistic evolution.-DAVID: I am struggling to change your concept slightly: The cells act intelligently because they automatically follow an information program from an intelligent source. That is theistic evolution. That is our only difference in description. 1) and 2) are two parts of the same concept.-No, they are not. First of all, as I keep repeating, the second hypothesis is meant only to explain the course of evolution, and it does not touch on the origin of the intelligence. Secondly, your hypothesis has God working everything out in advance, and although you claim not to be trying to read his mind, you have consistently said that his purpose was to produce human beings. Yours is an anthropocentrically teleological concept of evolution. The alternative that I am proposing is an ad hoc evolution, the theistic version of which would be that God created a mechanism that could adapt and invent in accordance with changing environmental conditions, i.e. God had no particular goal in mind, but just wanted to see what his mechanism would come up with (much more entertaining that way). Hence what I call the higgledy-piggledy course of evolution, with all its comings and goings. For this to happen, the cells could not be preprogrammed ... they would have to take their own decisions.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Wednesday, October 16, 2013, 19:06 (3843 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: I am struggling to change your concept slightly: The cells act intelligently because they automatically follow an information program from an intelligent source. That is theistic evolution. That is our only difference in description. 1) and 2) are two parts of the same concept.
> 
> dhw; No, they are not. First of all, as I keep repeating, the second hypothesis is meant only to explain the course of evolution, and it does not touch on the origin of the intelligence. Secondly, your hypothesis has God working everything out in advance, and although you claim not to be trying to read his mind, you have consistently said that his purpose was to produce human beings. Yours is an anthropocentrically teleological concept of evolution. The alternative that I am proposing is an ad hoc evolution, the theistic version of which would be that God created a mechanism that could adapt and invent in accordance with changing environmental conditions, i.e. God had no particular goal in mind, but just wanted to see what his mechanism would come up with (much more entertaining that way). Hence what I call the higgledy-piggledy course of evolution, with all its comings and goings. For this to happen, the cells could not be preprogrammed ... they would have to take their own decisions.-Or they are programmed for decision making that guides evolution to humans and God did have a goal. If we look at what we know, we see that the universe is designed to allow for life. That is a goal oriented observation. Then we see that we appear, and there is no reason why that should happen. The Great apes are happy and unchanged. There must be a teleological reason to invent us. We should have stayed as happy apes, but we didn't. What forced the development? No force is apparent, if we accept the Darwin idea that evolution is a response to challenges. If that statement is not true, we are back to God in control. Or your weasel way of cell invention which is really a far out concoction if you look at actual biochemistry.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 15:51 (3844 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: But at least you have now withdrawn your claim that only humans can claim to be conscious. Thank you.-DAVID: I never claimed that. It was your assumption from my poor explanations.-We have had major problems over this because of your definition of intelligence. 6 October: it is "not just the use of information but being able to analyze concepts presented by that information, formulate new theories from those concepts. In other words what we humans do with our brains and consciousness." 9 October: "Intelligence is the ability to learn information, to recognize new situations, to reason out solutions or challenges, to think abstractly as Higgs did when he thought of his particle." 12 October: "The word consciousness can only be applied to the state of abstract reasoning I have referred to." You could scarcely be more explicit, but confusingly you also agree that your dog has a level of intelligence / consciousness below that of humans. I think the reason for your dodging around is that once you agree that there are levels of intelligence / consciousness below that of humans, you cannot draw a line. You accepted all the criteria I listed as being appropriate for animals and plants, but even though they applied equally to cells (e.g. the ability to process and exchange information, communicate with other organisms, take decisions etc.), you excluded them for no reason other than the fact that you believe cells to be preprogrammed automatons.
 
dhw: But organisms ARE groups of cells. And just as you believe consciousness emerges from the cooperation of billions of cells that make up the brain, I am suggesting that innovations may emerge from similarly cooperating cells. The whole is greater than the parts. There is not one of the attributes listed above that cannot be applied both to your dog and to cells, individually and in groups.-DAVID: Now you want "emergent" planning by groups of cells. Cells respond to each other automatically. No brains involved, no consciousness for abstract planning. Planning requires abstract thought. Hunt and peck will not work. The requirements for a kidney are too exact, adjusting sodium levels or pH to the second decimal place. -We are going round in circles. You assume that the huge communities of cells which can cooperate in order to produce consciousness (you don't know how) can't produce new organs ... although even with your divine preprogramming this is precisely what they do. Here's what actually happened, as far as we know: Ants/cells cooperated and built a city/a kidney. Here are two hypotheses for us evolutionists: 1) An unknown power preprogrammed cells one day to automatically turn into ants which would one day automatically cooperate to build a city, and it also preprogrammed other organisms containing cells which would one day automatically cooperate to make a kidney. They are all preprogrammed automatons. 2) Ants/cells have the ability to combine their intelligences to build a city/a kidney. We do not know how they acquired this intelligence. On another thread we talked of what is "reasonable". It would be interesting to know which of these two hypotheses seems more reasonable to others who read our posts. (See also the discussion with Matt under "Cell Memories".)-dhw: I'm afraid the fact that you believe your theory does not give you the authority to dismiss other theories as poppycock.-DAVID: My theory is not the cause of my poppycock response. it is my knowledge of cellular biochemistry. You are casting around for a middle ground taht does not exist.-So your God's preprogramming of every organ and every innovation you can think of is the only reasonable hypothesis. I wonder how many biochemists agree with you.-dhw: Then the cell is intelligent after all, so long as we call its intelligence "God" and not "intelligence".-DAVID: Twisting my thoughts again. The cells contain an intelligent information code, which I ropose is placed there by God. The cells are automatic, with the appearance of being conscious. Life is an emergent property of the cell complexity. REcall the discussion in my new book about the definition of life. A difficult subject unless emergence is invoked.-How can you tell the difference between something that appears to be conscious and something that is conscious? I don't have any problem with the concept of emergence. "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts." Put a billion mini-intelligences together and they may produce an ant colony, a kidney, and even consciousness. That is emergence: the interacting of individual parts to produce a greater whole. You may propose that God preprogrammed it all, someone else may propose that God gave cells (and humans) the ever evolving ability to invent things for themselves, someone else may propose that the ability evolved of its own accord, and someone else may propose that it all began with a huge stroke of luck. Proposals of this nature do not arise from knowledge of cellular biochemistry ... they are all speculative hypotheses to explain the inexplicable.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 18:50 (3844 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: You accepted all the criteria I listed as being appropriate for animals and plants, but even though they applied equally to cells (e.g. the ability to process and exchange information, communicate with other organisms, take decisions etc.), you excluded them for no reason other than the fact that you believe cells to be preprogrammed automatons.-Cells do not have abstract thought or self-awareness. They work automatically. note how far my agreement goes.
> 
> dhw: We are going round in circles. You assume that the huge communities of cells which can cooperate in order to produce consciousness (you don't know how) can't produce new organs ... although even with your divine preprogramming this is precisely what they do.-No they don't do it by themselves. They follow s program handed to them. Take a bunch of workers to a pile of lumber and ask for a house. They will ask you for plans. - 
> dhw; So your God's preprogramming of every organ and every innovation you can think of is the only reasonable hypothesis. I wonder how many biochemists agree with you.-Most biochemists (90%) are atheists. You are back to Darwin .
> 
> dhw: You may propose that God preprogrammed it all, someone else may propose that God gave cells (and humans) the ever evolving ability to invent things for themselves, someone else may propose that the ability evolved of its own accord, and someone else may propose that it all began with a huge stroke of luck. Proposals of this nature do not arise from knowledge of cellular biochemistry ... they are all speculative hypotheses to explain the inexplicable.-Yes all speculation, but if you try to compute the odds for each of these based on a knowledge of biochemistry, arising as an 'ability evolved of its own accord' or 'stroke of luck' bringss us back to chance which even you will not accept.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, October 16, 2013, 12:28 (3844 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You accepted all the criteria I listed as being appropriate for animals and plants, but even though they applied equally to cells (e.g. the ability to process and exchange information, communicate with other organisms, take decisions etc.), you excluded them for no reason other than the fact that you believe cells to be preprogrammed automatons.-DAVID: Cells do not have abstract thought or self-awareness. They work automatically. note how far my agreement goes.-Only humans (so far as we know) have abstract thought and self-awareness, but you deny that you have ever claimed that only humans are conscious. You have agreed that your non-abstract-thinking, non-self-aware dog has a lesser degree of consciousness/intelligence than humans, so you accept the above criteria for animals and even plants, and you can scarcely deny that cells fulfil the same criteria. Therefore your argument is that, although cells fulfil the criteria by which you can judge animals and plants to be conscious but less conscious than humans, cells are not conscious. You just happen to know that.-dhw: We are going round in circles. You assume that the huge communities of cells which can cooperate in order to produce consciousness (you don't know how) can't produce new organs ... although even with your divine preprogramming this is precisely what they do.-DAVID: No they don't do it by themselves. They follow s program handed to them. Take a bunch of workers to a pile of lumber and ask for a house. They will ask you for plans.-They still cooperate to produce new organs. The process and result are the same. In my alternative hypothesis, just as ants come up with their effective strategies (see my post under "Cell Memories"), cells work out their strategy through their billions of combined intelligences. That's called emergence. As with consciousness, we don't know how it works. You accept the latter, so why not accept the possibility of the former?-dhw; So your God's preprogramming of every organ and every innovation you can think of is the only reasonable hypothesis. I wonder how many biochemists agree with you.-DAVID: Most biochemists (90%) are atheists. You are back to Darwin.-You have claimed that your knowledge of biochemistry supports your belief that God preprogrammed the earliest forms of life to produce all the innovations throughout evolution. Clearly, then, 90% of biochemists disagree with you. But even they are not back to Darwin, because Darwin was an agnostic who insisted that his theory was not incompatible with religion. This does not rest on the one hypothesis that God must have preprogrammed the whole caboodle. If God created the mechanism that enabled all forms of life to evolve from one or a few, there is no conflict with theism. The conflict is only with the biblical version of creation.
 
dhw: You may propose that God preprogrammed it all, someone else may propose that God gave cells (and humans) the ever evolving ability to invent things for themselves, someone else may propose that the ability evolved of its own accord, and someone else may propose that it all began with a huge stroke of luck. Proposals of this nature do not arise from knowledge of cellular biochemistry ... they are all speculative hypotheses to explain the inexplicable.-DAVID: Yes all speculation, but if you try to compute the odds for each of these based on a knowledge of biochemistry, arising as an 'ability evolved of its own accord' or 'stroke of luck' bringss us back to chance which even you will not accept.-I do not accept any of the hypotheses. I am an agnostic. None of these hypotheses are based on a knowledge of biochemistry. If you think yours is, how do you explain your own claim that 90% of biochemists are atheists?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Wednesday, October 16, 2013, 18:54 (3843 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Only humans (so far as we know) have abstract thought and self-awareness, but you deny that you have ever claimed that only humans are conscious. You have agreed that your non-abstract-thinking, non-self-aware dog has a lesser degree of consciousness/intelligence than humans, so you accept the above criteria for animals and even plants, and you can scarcely deny that cells fulfil the same criteria.-You continue to confuse the levels. Conscious state involves my dog being aware of his environment, living at my house. I am also consciouus at that level. But I also have consciousness of the type you describe at the human level. Only humans have it. That is why I think we should be classified as a group separate from Primates.-> dhw: just as ants come up with their effective strategies (see my post under "Cell Memories"), cells work out their strategy through their billions of combined intelligences. That's called emergence. As with consciousness, we don't know how it works. You accept the latter, so why not accept the possibility of the former? -Because cells work under controls in their genome. They cannot plan or design, but that is exactly what you want them to do by some kind of strange emergence.-
> dhw:If God created the mechanism that enabled all forms of life to evolve from one or a few, there is no conflict with theism. The conflict is only with the biblical version of creation.-Agreed.-
> 
> dhw: I do ot accept any of the hypotheses. I am an agnostic. None of these hypotheses are based on a knowledge of biochemistry. If you think yours is, how do you explain your own claim that 90% of biochemists are atheists?-Surveys taken on the higher levels of scientists in research always find 90% are atheists.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Thursday, October 17, 2013, 14:17 (3842 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Only humans (so far as we know) have abstract thought and self-awareness, but you deny that you have ever claimed that only humans are conscious. You have agreed that your non-abstract-thinking, non-self-aware dog has a lesser degree of consciousness/intelligence than humans, so you accept the above criteria for animals and even plants, and you can scarcely deny that cells fulfil the same criteria.-DAVID: You continue to confuse the levels. Conscious state involves my dog being aware of his environment, living at my house. I am also consciouus at that level. But I also have consciousness of the type you describe at the human level. Only humans have it. That is why I think we should be classified as a group separate from Primates.-I have never claimed that cells or dogs have the self-awareness of humans. My proposal is that cells have a degree of consciousness/intelligence which when they combine in their billions over billions of years has enabled them to come up with innovations. The innovations are a fact. Nobody knows how they occurred. You think God preplanned every innovation and species and behavioural mode (including your Venus flytrap) into the first few forms of life. I am suggesting that, if he exists, he only created the mechanism that would enable cells to devise their own combinations which led to higgledy-piggledy evolution.
 
dhw: I do not accept any of the hypotheses. I am an agnostic. None of these hypotheses are based on a knowledge of biochemistry. If you think yours is, how do you explain your own claim that 90% of biochemists are atheists?-DAVID: Surveys taken on the higher levels of scientists in research always find 90% are atheists.-And yet you claim that biochemistry supports your God hypothesis. Doesn't the 90% figure suggest to you that biochemistry allows for other explanations?-Dhw: ...Yours is an anthropocentrically teleological concept of evolution. The alternative that I am proposing is an ad hoc evolution, the theistic version of which would be that God created a mechanism that could adapt and invent in accordance with changing environmental conditions, i.e. God had no particular goal in mind, but just wanted to see what his mechanism would come up with (much more entertaining that way). For this to happen, the cells could not be preprogrammed ... they would have to take their own decisions.-DAVID: Or they are programmed for decision making that guides evolution to humans and God did have a goal. If we look at what we know, we see that the universe is designed to allow for life. That is a goal oriented observation. Then we see that we appear, and there is no reason why that should happen. -Nor is there any reason why dinosaurs should have appeared, or the Venus flytrap, or city-building ants. According to you, God also preprogrammed them, and every other innovation you can think of. -DAVID: The Great apes are happy and unchanged. There must be a teleological reason to invent us. -What was the teleological reason for the dinosaurs and the Venus flytrap and the ants? All the comings and goings of evolution fit in perfectly with the scenario of intelligent mechanisms (perhaps created by your God) following whatever course they chose. 
 
DAVID: We should have stayed as happy apes, but we didn't. What forced the development? No force is apparent, if we accept the Darwin idea that evolution is a response to challenges. If that statement is not true, we are back to God in control. Or your weasel way of cell invention which is really a far out concoction if you look at actual biochemistry.-Yes, Darwin saw evolution as a response to a series of challenges, but his theory depends on random mutations followed by Nature selecting those lucky strikes that were beneficial. The "intelligent cell" hypothesis takes randomness out of the equation, and as Margulis argues so potently, puts cooperation at the heart of evolution. This cooperation may not be solely as a result of challenges, because changes in the environment might also lead to new possibilities that are not NEEDED for survival, but enable organisms to find new niches for themselves through innovation. Hence dinosaurs, Venus flytraps, ants, and humans. If challenge was the only motivation, evolution could have stuck at the level of bacteria. This puts cells back in control of evolution, whether God gave them their intelligence or not.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 17, 2013, 15:21 (3842 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: I have never claimed that cells or dogs have the self-awareness of humans. My proposal is that cells have a degree of consciousness/intelligence which when they combine in their billions over billions of years has enabled them to come up with innovations. The innovations are a fact. Nobody knows how they occurred. You think God preplanned every innovation and species and behavioural mode (including your Venus flytrap) into the first few forms of life. I am suggesting that, if he exists, he only created the mechanism that would enable cells to devise their own combinations which led to higgledy-piggledy evolution.-Good on you. That statement reflects my thesis. In the past I have stated that God created life to be very inventive, so your conclusion about me is off a bit. The higgledy piggledy is part of that inventiveness, but the overall direction was always toward humans. We've covered this in the past'-> dhw: And yet you claim that biochemistry supports your God hypothesis. Doesn't the 90% figure suggest to you that biochemistry allows for other explanations?-No, it simply points out that there are many ways to analyze scientific data. Most scientists egotistically feel they can explain everything without God.-> 
> dhw: Nor is there any reason why dinosaurs should have appeared, or the Venus flytrap, or city-building ants. According to you, God also preprogrammed them, and every other innovation you can think of.-Answered above 
 
> 
> DAVID: We should have stayed as happy apes, but we didn't. What forced the development? No force is apparent, if we accept the Darwin idea that evolution is a response to challenges. If that statement is not true, we are back to God in control. Or your weasel way of cell invention which is really a far out concoction if you look at actual biochemistry.
> 
> dhw: Yes, Darwin saw evolution as a response to a series of challenges, but his theory depends on random mutations followed by Nature selecting those lucky strikes that were beneficial. The "intelligent cell" hypothesis takes randomness out of the equation, and as Margulis argues so potently, puts cooperation at the heart of evolution. This cooperation may not be solely as a result of challenges, because changes in the environment might also lead to new possibilities that are not NEEDED for survival, but enable organisms to find new niches for themselves through innovation. Hence dinosaurs, Venus flytraps, ants, and humans. If challenge was the only motivation, evolution could have stuck at the level of bacteria. This puts cells back in control of evolution, whether God gave them their intelligence or not.-This takes us back to Gould and his observation that evolution, starting with the simplest, could only evolve in the direction of complexity. But bacteria are the most successful group on Earth. They have been here 3.6 billion years and have the biggest biomass. Why bother with complexity when it is not needed? There must be a driving force toward complexity, which implies the installation of a cooperative drive toward complexity. God at work.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, October 18, 2013, 20:12 (3841 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: The innovations are a fact. Nobody knows how they occurred. You think God preplanned every innovation and species and behavioural mode (including your Venus flytrap) into the first few forms of life. I am suggesting that, if he exists, he only created the mechanism that would enable cells to devise their own combinations which led to higgledy-piggledy evolution.-DAVID: Good on you. That statement reflects my thesis. In the past I have stated that God created life to be very inventive, so your conclusion about me is off a bit. The higgledy piggledy is part of that inventiveness, but the overall direction was always toward humans. We've covered this in the past'-Our discussion concerns how this inventiveness is implemented. If you insist that cells are automatons, then they cannot possibly take decisions independently ... every innovation has to be preprogrammed, as must every strategic decision. That is the thesis you have proposed. In which case, your God also preprogrammed the dinosaur, the Venus flytrap, the ant, and us. If your God has given cells the ability to take their decisions independently, they are not automatons, and that explains the higgledy-piggledy advance of evolution.
 
dhw: And yet you claim that biochemistry supports your God hypothesis. Doesn't the 90% figure suggest to you that biochemistry allows for other explanations?-DAVID: No, it simply points out that there are many ways to analyze scientific data. Most scientists egotistically feel they can explain everything without God.-So 90% of biochemists have found different explanations from yours, although yours is based on your knowledge of biochemistry, and because they do not accept your explanation they are egotists. -dhw: The "intelligent cell" hypothesis takes randomness out of the equation, and as Margulis argues so potently, puts cooperation at the heart of evolution. This cooperation may not be solely as a result of challenges, because changes in the environment might also lead to new possibilities that are not NEEDED for survival, but enable organisms to find new niches for themselves through innovation. Hence dinosaurs, Venus flytraps, ants, and humans. If challenge was the only motivation, evolution could have stuck at the level of bacteria. This puts cells back in control of evolution, whether God gave them their intelligence or not.-DAVID: This takes us back to Gould and his observation that evolution, starting with the simplest, could only evolve in the direction of complexity. But bacteria are the most successful group on Earth. They have been here 3.6 billion years and have the biggest biomass. Why bother with complexity when it is not needed? There must be a driving force toward complexity, which implies the installation of a cooperative drive toward complexity. God at work.-You have repeated my own argument, but have inserted the words "installation" and "God at work". The alternative is that the drive toward complexity came from the intelligent cell, which may or may not have been invented by your God. You have now linked into the concept of cooperation. Same problem. If cells are automatons, they can only have been preprogrammed to cooperate, and what they produce through their cooperation must also have been preprogrammed, all the way back to the first forms of life. Those first cells sure were loaded.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, October 18, 2013, 20:38 (3841 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Good on you. That statement reflects my thesis. In the past I have stated that God created life to be very inventive, so your conclusion about me is off a bit. The higgledy piggledy is part of that inventiveness, but the overall direction was always toward humans. We've covered this in the past'
> 
> dhw: Our discussion concerns how this inventiveness is implemented. If you insist that cells are automatons, then they cannot possibly take decisions independently ... every innovation has to be preprogrammed, as must every strategic decision. That is the thesis you have proposed. -No I haven't proposed the meaning in your statement. Life is very inventive, I repeat, as allowed by God's original programming. Through epigenetic mechanisms I suspect some of the oddball forms and lifestyles appeared. -> 
> dhw; So 90% of biochemists have found different explanations from yours, although yours is based on your knowledge of biochemistry, and because they do not accept your explanation they are egotists.-Their atheism demands the conclusions they reach.-
> 
> dhw: You have repeated my own argument, but have inserted the words "installation" and "God at work". The alternative is that the drive toward complexity came from the intelligent cell, which may or may not have been invented by your God. You have now linked into the concept of cooperation. Same problem. If cells are automatons, they can only have been preprogrammed to cooperate, and what they produce through their cooperation must also have been preprogrammed, all the way back to the first forms of life. Those first cells sure were loaded.-Very likely. The orginal single cell at the origin of life was highly complex to have life, which makes OOL very difficult to replicate.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, October 19, 2013, 19:28 (3840 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: David, however, insists that cells are automatons, and so whatever innovations they have come up with can only have been preprogrammed by his god. Our difference is therefore not really one of definition at all. It is David's insistence that cells are automatons, and that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations.-DAVID: Agreed-dhw: Our discussion concerns how this inventiveness is implemented. If you insist that cells are automatons, then they cannot possibly take decisions independently ... every innovation has to be preprogrammed, as must every strategic decision. That is the thesis you have proposed.
 
DAVID: No I haven't proposed the meaning in your statement. Life is very inventive, I repeat, as allowed by God's original programming. Through epigenetic mechanisms I suspect some of the oddball forms and lifestyles appeared. -You have agreed that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations, but now oddball forms and lifestyles magically "appear"! So did the exquisitely engineered Venus flytrap 1) magically "appear" unprogrammed and without a clue what it was doing? 2) Did your God intervene and design it separately (Creationism)? 3) Did your God preprogramme it in the first cells? 4) Did its predecessor use its own initiative to design a new form (the intelligent cell)? 5) Did it produce itself through random mutations (neo-Darwinism)? If you insist that cells are automatons that can do nothing but obey their preprogrammed instructions, 2) and 3) are your only choices. Special creation is hardly an option for someone who believes evolution happened, and so you are left only with 3) which is what you agreed to in the first place! (See above.) And the same argument applies to every single innovation and every single lifestyle you can think of. (See also you own comment at the conclusion of this post.)- dhw; So 90% of biochemists have found different explanations from yours, although yours is based on your knowledge of biochemistry, and because they do not accept your explanation they are egotists.-DAVID: Their atheism demands the conclusions they reach.-Whereas of course your theism doesn't.-dhw: If cells are automatons, they can only have been preprogrammed to cooperate, and what they produce through their cooperation must also have been preprogrammed, all the way back to the first forms of life. Those first cells sure were loaded.-DAVID: Very likely. The orginal single cell at the origin of life was highly complex to have life, which makes OOL very difficult to replicate.-The difficulty of replicating OOL is not the issue here. You have again agreed that you think it very likely (not quite as strong as your usual insistence that it's the only explanation) that the first cells were preprogrammed by your God to produce every innovation from eukaroytes to humans, and this is based on your knowledge of biochemistry, in defiance of the 90% of egotistical, non-believing biochemists. Ah well, David, you may have the last laugh on all of us as you make your preprogrammed way through the pearly gates...

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, October 19, 2013, 21:19 (3840 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: You have agreed that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations, but now oddball forms and lifestyles magically "appear"! -Not entirely magically. Note my reference to epigenetic mechanisms. Obviously I am only making logical guesses, but it is my contention that cells are automatons, but also with epigenetic ability to try out new styles of living (migration), new forms of capture of food (venus fly trap) when the soil is not very carboniferous, new sizes when guppies end up in the wrong stream, new beaks when the size of seeds change (finches). Again, I don't know if God dabbles, or pre-programs these adaptations from the beginnning.-> dhw: So did the exquisitely engineered Venus flytrap 1) magically "appear" unprogrammed and without a clue what it was doing? 2) Did your God intervene and design it separately (Creationism)? 3) Did your God preprogramme it in the first cells? 4) Did its predecessor use its own initiative to design a new form (the intelligent cell)? 5) Did it produce itself through random mutations (neo-Darwinism)? If you insist that cells are automatons that can do nothing but obey their preprogrammed instructions, 2) and 3) are your only choices. Special creation is hardly an option for someone who believes evolution happened, and so you are left only with 3) which is what you agreed to in the first place! (See above.)-As a result of my above statement number 4 is closest to my theory. But again I differ with your theory: the cell uses intelligent information given to it in the beginning. I think the cell has a small group of automatic epigenetic responses from whic hit can make attempts to solve its problem, and this is is when variation occurs and natural election plays a role,The cell itself has no innate intelligence. Choice 3 also is in play as the course of evolution to create H. sapiens drives single cells to complex multicellular animals. As I've stated life appears to be very inventive.-
 
> dhw; The difficulty of replicating OOL is not the issue here. You have again agreed that you think it very likely (not quite as strong as your usual insistence that it's the only explanation) that the first cells were preprogrammed by your God to produce every innovation from eukaroytes to humans, and this is based on your knowledge of biochemistry, in defiance of the 90% of egotistical, non-believing biochemists. Ah well, David, you may have the last laugh on all of us as you make your preprogrammed way through the pearly gates...-I brought up OOL only because it is very obvious that highly complex cells are required to be alive, and threfore their DNA was highly complex from the beginning, ergo, God's intelligent information was in place.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, October 21, 2013, 14:25 (3838 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You have agreed that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations, but now oddball forms and lifestyles magically "appear"!
 
DAVID: Not entirely magically. Note my reference to epigenetic mechanisms. Obviously I am only making logical guesses, but it is my contention that cells are automatons, but also with epigenetic ability to try out new styles of living (migration), new forms of capture of food (venus fly trap) when the soil is not very carboniferous, new sizes when guppies end up in the wrong stream, new beaks when the size of seeds change (finches). Again, I don't know if God dabbles, or pre-programs these adaptations from the beginnning.-Even trying out new styles of living and new ways of capturing food entails existing cell communities (organs) experimenting, learning, using information for specific purposes. And if cellular combinations change as a result of these activities, it can only be as a result of selections made and decisions taken.
 
DAVID: ...the cell uses intelligent information given to it in the beginning. I think the cell has a small group of automatic epigenetic responses from which it can make attempts to solve its problem...-I don't believe evolution has progressed solely because of problems. As we keep telling each other, it could have stuck with bacteria if that was the case. New opportunities would have played just as important a role (e.g.- and especially -in the Cambrian Explosion). However your multiple choice theory makes for a fascinating scenario:-Sweet little Archie Optrex (always a sight for sore eyes) was running for his life, chased by big and nasty Tyrone Sore-Ass. Just like everyone else, Archie was made of cell automatons, but enough intelligence had somehow emerged from these for him to know that he was in deep shit. Suddenly, from the depths of the quantum world, he heard the recorded voice of the Lord God ... recorded because God had got fed up dabbling in response to every problem of every individual of every species in every environment. "OK Archie," said the voice, "you got a small preprogrammed group of automatic epigenetic responses to choose from: 1) keep on runnin'; 2) make yourself invisible; 3) fly, Archie, fly." Archie had a quick non-think (only humans can think), and what he non-thought was this: "If I keep runnin', I'll be dead in thirty seconds. I can't make myself invisible, 'cos God gave that programme to the chameleon. Bingo, I gotta fly!" And to the sound of angelic trumpets also resounding from the quantum world, little Archie flapped his preprogrammed front legs, tucked his pre-preprogrammed rear legs under his bottom, and soared up into the great blue yonder. And that, boys and girls, is how automatons learn to do things they've never done before.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Monday, October 21, 2013, 19:27 (3838 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Even trying out new styles of living and new ways of capturing food entails existing cell communities (organs) experimenting, learning, using information for specific purposes. And if cellular combinations change as a result of these activities, it can only be as a result of selections made and decisions taken.-No way. I'm using the kidney as the organ. The electrolyte levels much be precisely managed for life not to poison itself. And you want hunt and peck!
> 
> dhw: I don't believe evolution has progressed solely because of problems. As we keep telling each other, it could have stuck with bacteria if that was the case. New opportunities would have played just as important a role (e.g.- and especially -in the Cambrian Explosion).-You are right to accept my idea that a drive to complexity seesm built into the original DNA. The opportunity in thehttp://blogs.scientificamerican.com/not-bad-science/2013/10/21/lost-ants-backtrack-t... Cambrian was probably the rise in oxygen in the atmosphere, but that is a two-edged sword. Oxygen is a very dangerous element and had to be used but also controlled.-
> dhw: Sweet little Archie Optrex (always a sight for sore eyes) was running for his life, chased by big and nasty Tyrone Sore-Ass, etc.........-As an author and playwright your imagination is marvelous.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, November 01, 2013, 12:41 (3827 days ago) @ dhw

I am taking this discussion back to the Intelligence & Evolution thread, as it's really separate from Cell Memories and from Species Consciousness.-DAVID (under "Cell Memories"): I don't know what was planned as intermediate species on the way to humans. How do you know in your theistic mode that dinosaurs were planned? I don't. I don't know why you insist on that speculation. These were life's experiments on the way to us...-I'm trying to track your scenario back to its logical beginnings. You believe that evolution happened, which means that all living creatures descended from earlier living creatures. All living creatures are composed of cells/cell communities. Life doesn't experiment or invent. Only the cells from one generation to the next or your God can experiment and invent. You insist that cells and cell communities are automatons which cannot invent anything. Therefore whatever innovations led from pre-dinosaur to dinosaur must, according to your scenario, have been God's invention, i.e. the result of his preprogramming (= planning), unless he directly intervened (= special creation). This is the logical progression of your theistic mode, and it can only mean that he preplanned dinosaurs or created them specially.-Dhw (under "Species Consciousness"): The control lies in the limitation of choice (your a, b, c). But you still have not explained how an automaton can CHOOSE between a, b and c. And of course you can't, because you know as well as I do that an automaton cannot make decisions of its own. That is one reason why your scenario doesn't make sense to me.-DAVID: Please think outside your box. Stimuli have strength differentials. They have type differentials. Automatic responses could be programmed as graded responses depending on the characteristics of the stimuli. Electronic items do it all the time, and DNA is way more complex than the electronic algorithms the electronic boards.-We humans also have automatic responses to stimuli, many of which we are not even aware of. But the moment we wish to invent something new ... a machine, a strategy, a dwelling place, a method of hunting, farming, protecting ourselves ... we are forced to use our consciousness, to weigh up all the factors, and take innovative decisions, which we then pass on to later generations. But according to you, cells are incapable of this ... they cannot invent. So your God has to do the inventing for them. How does this fit in with their choosing between a), b) and c)? Do you mean they are stimulated by a "kidney-time" change in conditions, and then unknowingly choose between God's preprogrammed kidney, non-kidney and nothing-like-a-kidney, and succeed or fail accordingly? I'm afraid I still don't understand how you imagine this process works.
 
DAVID: I don't know the degree of pre-planning for anything. I simply propose that planning is necessary for complexity. The exact level of pre-planning vs, experimentation is anyone's guess.-You are using "experimentation" as if it were somehow separate from the cells and the programmes. What carries out the experiments? It can only be the cells/cell communities. Are they preprogrammed by your God to experiment (and to succeed or fail), does your God directly intervene and experiment by juggling them around because he's not sure what he wants or how to get what he wants, or do they experiment on their own initiative, and succeed or fail?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 01, 2013, 14:49 (3827 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: I'm trying to track your scenario back to its logical beginnings. You believe that evolution happened, which means that all living creatures descended from earlier living creatures. All living creatures are composed of cells/cell communities. Life doesn't experiment or invent.-I'm glad you are trying to do my thinking for me, but I cannot go as far as you wish. Life is an emergent phenomenon that arises when all the biochemical reactions work in concert. The procedures and plans for adaptation are coded in the DNA, which doesn't just make protein, the original simplistic interpretation.-> dhw: Only the cells from one generation to the next or your God can experiment and invent. You insist that cells and cell communities are automatons which cannot invent anything. Therefore whatever innovations led from pre-dinosaur to dinosaur must, according to your scenario, have been God's invention, i.e. the result of his preprogramming (= planning), unless he directly intervened (= special creation). This is the logical progression of your theistic mode, and it can only mean that he preplanned dinosaurs or created them specially.-I'm glad you are theorizing. All the above is possible, but you have left out life's built-in inventiveness, based on pre-programmed ability to adapt. So there are three ways; pre-planned creatures, special creation, or life invention. One proviso: complex organs have to be planned, so their information must have been implanted by God early on. Obviously this is all guess-work, based on biochemical observation.
> 
> dhw:.....But according to you, cells are incapable of this ... they cannot invent. So your God has to do the inventing for them. How does this fit in with their choosing between a), b) and c)? Do you mean they are stimulated by a "kidney-time" change in conditions, and then unknowingly choose between God's preprogrammed kidney, non-kidney and nothing-like-a-kidney, and succeed or fail accordingly? I'm afraid I still don't understand how you imagine this process works.-Frankly, as indicated above, neiher do I, but non-kidney and nothing-like-a-kidney were never options. That is frivolous thinking to muddy the waters.
> 
> dhw: You are using "experimentation" as if it were somehow separate from the cells and the programmes. What carries out the experiments? .....-I've explained the possible plan for stem cells to provide for some degree of variation. This is the 'experimentation' I mean. After all there must be some room for natural selection to work. Despite religions' expectations for God, I think He allowed life's built-in inventiveness some leeway.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, November 02, 2013, 20:00 (3826 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Only the cells from one generation to the next or your God can experiment and invent. You insist that cells and cell communities are automatons which cannot invent anything. Therefore whatever innovations led from pre-dinosaur to dinosaur must, according to your scenario, have been God's invention, i.e. the result of his preprogramming (= planning), unless he directly intervened (= special creation). This is the logical progression of your theistic mode...-DAVID: All the above is possible, but you have left out life's built-in inventiveness, based on pre-programmed ability to adapt. So there are three ways; pre-planned creatures, special creation, or life invention. One proviso: complex organs have to be planned, so their information must have been implanted by God early on. Obviously this is all guess-work, based on biochemical observation.-What does "life invention" mean? How does life invent? Living materials HAVE life, but any invention or adaptation has to come through and from the materials themselves or from your God if he exists. It's sometimes difficult to know where adaptation ends and invention begins, which is a problem for definitions of speciation, but if all organisms descended from earlier organisms, the unbroken chain between eukaryotes and dinosaurs must have contained countless innovations, all of which you say had to be preplanned and implanted into the earliest forms of life. So you're still stuck with your God having preplanned a whole range of extinct organisms. Yes indeed, pure guesswork. And I'm surprised that biochemical observation can tell you anything about God's plans.-dhw:.....But according to you, cells are incapable of this ... they cannot invent. So your God has to do the inventing for them. How does this fit in with their choosing between a), b) and c)? Do you mean they are stimulated by a "kidney-time" change in conditions, and then unknowingly choose between God's preprogrammed kidney, non-kidney and nothing-like-a-kidney, and succeed or fail accordingly? I'm afraid I still don't understand how you imagine this process works.-DAVID: Frankly, as indicated above, neiher do I, but non-kidney and nothing-like-a-kidney were never options. That is frivolous thinking to muddy the waters.-The waters are already muddy, which is why I'm asking for clarification! If you can't imagine how automatons can produce a kidney by choosing unknowingly between a), b) and c), why suggest it in the first place? Why not stick to your God's preprogramming (or special creation) of kidneys and every other innovation into the first organisms? At least it's simpler!-dhw: You are using "experimentation" as if it were somehow separate from the cells and the programmes. What carries out the experiments? .....-DAVID: I've explained the possible plan for stem cells to provide for some degree of variation. This is the 'experimentation' I mean. After all there must be some room for natural selection to work. Despite religions' expectations for God, I think He allowed life's built-in inventiveness some leeway.-The problem is innovation, not some degree of variation. All the new organs and all the new ways of life: preprogrammed from the beginning, or specially created. Or, strangely, some biochemists have actually observed how cells and cell communities communicate and cooperate...but no, perish the thought that they could be anything more than automatons...

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 03, 2013, 01:02 (3826 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: What does "life invention" mean? How does life invent? Living materials HAVE life, but any invention or adaptation has to come through and from the materials themselves or from your God if he exists. ..... Yes indeed, pure guesswork. And I'm surprised that biochemical observation can tell you anything about God's plans.-It is obvious that life has the ability to diversify into all sorts of wonderful animals and plants, and the migrating animals, for example, like the monarch butterflies who travel over thousands of miles through several metamorphoses and generations, and yet they do it each year. We have no idea how this developed, but if we accept evolution, it happened somehow. You and Ihave rejected chance. The only thing left is some type of planning. You want a committee of celll to do it. But it is hard for committees to reach the right conclusion every time, without some planning-> 
> dhw; The waters are already muddy, which is why I'm asking for clarification! If you can't imagine how automatons can produce a kidney by choosing unknowingly between a), b) and c), why suggest it in the first place? Why not stick to your God's preprogramming (or special creation) of kidneys and every other innovation into the first organisms? At least it's simpler!-I didn't say that automatonistic cells made a kidney. That is your suggestion. My a,b,c, automatic responses are to create minor variations for natural selection to act upon, but that process does not cause speciation or kidneys. Only an indwelling plan in DNA or God's active intervention does that kind of creation, and I have no way of telling which is correct.- 
> dhw; The problem is innovation, not some degree of variation. All the new organs and all the new ways of life: preprogrammed from the beginning, or specially created. Or, strangely, some biochemists have actually observed how cells and cell communities communicate and cooperate...but no, perish the thought that they could be anything more than automatons...-Yes the problem is innnovation. The cells are programmed to coooperate automatically and so they are observed to do so.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, November 03, 2013, 17:40 (3825 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: It is obvious that life has the ability to diversify into all sorts of wonderful animals and plants, and the migrating animals. [...] You and Ihave rejected chance. The only thing left is some type of planning. You want a committee of celll to do it. But it is hard for committees to reach the right conclusion every time, without some planning-The diversification of life through innovation can ONLY take place through cell communities undergoing changes and cooperating with one another, whether preprogrammed or not. But for all we know, each successful "committee" is counterbalanced by ten thousand unsuccessful committees. We know of the innovative successes, but not the failures. With regard to adaptation, however, we do know there have been successes and failures: dinosaurs failed to adapt and died out; bacteria adapted and lived on. Perfectly understandable in the case of ungodlike cell communities pursuing their own "agenda": you win some, you lose some. But if your almighty planner was behind it all, how come he had so many failures?-dhw; The problem is innovation, not some degree of variation. All the new organs and all the new ways of life: preprogrammed from the beginning, or specially created. Or, strangely, some biochemists have actually observed how cells and cell communities communicate and cooperate...but no, perish the thought that they could be anything more than automatons...-DAVID: Yes the problem is innnovation. The cells are programmed to coooperate automatically and so they are observed to do so.-They are observed to cooperate, but no-one has observed the original invention of the organs that led from eukaryotes to humans, and so no-one can say what enabled the cells to produce the innovations. That gives us both room to speculate.-DAVID: (under "Precambrian environment"): You have invented parlimentary cells that have committes, draw up complex plans to create kidneys. All to avoid a choice: chance or design. You have found Nagel's third way!! You must write a book. We can call it "The Intelligent Cell" And create the Wilsonian revolution in biology. At least my speculations have a basis in reality.-What basis? The only reality we know is that organs are composed of cooperating cells. It seems reasonable to assume, then, that cells/cell communities cooperated (whether programmed or not) to produce new organs. We are only just beginning to understand the mechanisms that enable cells to function, but I seem to remember one scientist saying that the cell is still, like the universe, 95% dark matter. That cells seem to work automatically in existing organs is true, because when they cease to do so, those organs tend to break down. But that tells us nothing about how they combined and cooperated in the first place to produce innovations. Please tell me which biology reference book provides scientific evidence that an unknown and unknowable power preprogrammed the first cells to pass on to their descendants all the programmes needed to produce countless innovations, that this same power also preprogrammed choices to create minor variations, and that this same power directed evolution so that it would end up with humans. Your speculations have no more basis in reality than mine. Still level pegging!

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 03, 2013, 19:10 (3825 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw; The diversification of life through innovation can ONLY take place through cell communities undergoing changes and cooperating with one another, whether preprogrammed or not. But for all we know, each successful "committee" is counterbalanced by ten thousand unsuccessful committees. We know of the innovative successes, but not the failures.-If you follow David Raup, bad luck not failure.-> dhw: With regard to adaptation, however, we do know there have been successes and failures: dinosaurs failed to adapt and died out; bacteria adapted and lived on. Perfectly understandable in the case of ungodlike cell communities pursuing their own "agenda": you win some, you lose some. But if your almighty planner was behind it all, how come he had so many failures?-That is why I have automatic a,b, and c choices. Creates variation and adaptation. And then the bad luck failures.
> 
> dhw; The problem is innovation, not some degree of variation. All the new organs and all the new ways of life: preprogrammed from the beginning, or specially created. Or, strangely, some biochemists have actually observed how cells and cell communities communicate and cooperate...but no, perish the thought that they could be anything more than automatons...-Find a biochemist who doesn't describe an automatic chemical series of answers to stimuli-> 
> dhw: They are observed to cooperate, but no-one has observed the original invention of the organs that led from eukaryotes to humans, and so no-one can say what enabled the cells to produce the innovations. That gives us both room to speculate.-But your speculation takes the ability of cells to an area of action they cannot perform.-> 
> dhw: The only reality we know is that organs are composed of cooperating cells. It seems reasonable to assume, then, that cells/cell communities cooperated (whether programmed or not) to produce new organs. We are only just beginning to understand the mechanisms that enable cells to function, but I seem to remember one scientist saying that the cell is still, like the universe, 95% dark matter. That cells seem to work automatically in existing organs is true, because when they cease to do so, those organs tend to break down. But that tells us nothing about how they combined and cooperated in the first place to produce innovations. Please tell me which biology reference book provides scientific evidence that an unknown and unknowable power preprogrammed the first cells to pass on to their descendants all the programmes needed to produce countless innovations, that this same power also preprogrammed choices to create minor variations, and that this same power directed evolution so that it would end up with humans. Your speculations have no more basis in reality than mine. Still level pegging!-Your speculation is based on cells doing more than just cooperating. They are realy programmed to do just that and no more. Where we are not level is that cells cannot plan for complex organ operations and functions. They just do what they are instructed to do.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, November 04, 2013, 15:02 (3824 days ago) @ David Turell

Dhw: The diversification of life through innovation can ONLY take place through cell communities undergoing changes and cooperating with one another, whether preprogrammed or not. But for all we know, each successful "committee" is counterbalanced by ten thousand unsuccessful committees. We know of the innovative successes, but not the failures. With regard to adaptation, however, we do know there have been successes and failures: dinosaurs failed to adapt and died out; bacteria adapted and lived on. Perfectly understandable in the case of ungodlike cell communities pursuing their own "agenda": you win some, you lose some. But if your almighty planner was behind it all, how come he had so many failures?-DAVID [two comments telescoped by me into one]: If you follow David Raup, bad luck not failure. [...] That is why I have automatic a,b, and c choices. Creates variation and adaptation. And then the bad luck failures.-What sort of lottery is this? Bad luck for the failures, and divine pre-planning for the successes. Ugh, and there was me thinking that there was you thinking that God had the progress from eukaryotes to humans all worked out!-DAVID: Find a biochemist who doesn't describe an automatic chemical series of answers to stimuli.-As I keep repeating, most of our own immediate responses to stimuli are chemical, but how we adapt our actions and create something new is a different process. You assume that chemical is synonymous with automatic, but you take seriously the suggestion that human intelligence emerges from chemical interactions between billions of cells. So why not other forms of intelligence? You also take seriously the suggestion that these chemical interactions can be controlled by an unknown mechanism that gives us free will. Maybe there is an unknown control mechanism (Albrecht-Buehler's "centrosome") in all cells and cell communities. And you also take seriously the possibility that the intelligence which emerges is NOT dependent on chemical reactions, because it is able to survive death. Biochemists frequently talk of bacterial/microbial intelligence, and collective intelligence, but they don't know its source, any more than they know the source of our own. According to you, however, 90% of them are atheists, which leaves 90% presumably believing that cells have some form of intelligence that is not preprogrammed by your God. And who knows what the other 10% would think of your theory? (See below.)
 
dhw: They are observed to cooperate, but no-one has observed the original invention of the organs that led from eukaryotes to humans, and so no-one can say what enabled the cells to produce the innovations. That gives us both room to speculate.-DAVID: Your speculation is based on cells doing more than just cooperating. They are realy programmed to do just that and no more. Where we are not level is that cells cannot plan for complex organ operations and functions. They just do what they are instructed to do.-That is your assumption, which may or may not be right. Nobody knows how cells managed to produce our organs. You wrote earlier: "At least my speculations have a basis in reality". I asked you what basis, but you have not responded to my question, so I'll repeat it: "Please tell me which biology reference book provides scientific evidence that an unknown and unknowable power preprogrammed the first cells to pass on to their descendants all the programmes needed to produce countless innovations, that this same power also preprogrammed choices to create minor variations, and that this same power directed evolution so that it would end up with humans. Your speculations have no more basis in reality than mine. Still level pegging!"

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 05, 2013, 01:17 (3824 days ago) @ dhw


> dhws: As I keep repeating, most of our own immediate responses to stimuli are chemical, but how we adapt our actions and create something new is a different process. You assume that chemical is synonymous with automatic, but you take seriously the suggestion that human intelligence emerges from chemical interactions between billions of cells.-Because you have invented a nebulous intelligence so as to avoid choosing between chance and design. -> dhw: Maybe there is an unknown control mechanism (Albrecht-Buehler's "centrosome") in all cells and cell communities. -I'm sure there are based on plans in DNA-> dhw: And you also take seriously the possibility that the intelligence which emerges is NOT dependent on chemical reactions, because it is able to survive death. Biochemists frequently talk of bacterial/microbial intelligence, and collective intelligence, but they don't know its source, any more than they know the source of our own. According to you, however, 90% of them are atheists, which leaves 90% presumably believing that cells have some form of intelligence that is not preprogrammed by your God. And who knows what the other 10% would think of your theory? -That is the worst stretch or reasoning I've ever seen. I don't presume that atheists would think cells have intelligence-> dhw: Nobody knows how cells managed to produce our organs. You wrote earlier: "At least my speculations have a basis in reality". I asked you what basis, but you have not responded to my question, so I'll repeat it: "Please tell me which biology reference book provides scientific evidence that an unknown and unknowable power preprogrammed the first cells to pass on to their descendants all the programmes needed to produce countless innovations, that this same power also preprogrammed choices to create minor variations, and that this same power directed evolution so that it would end up with humans. Your speculations have no more basis in reality than mine. Still level pegging!"-Because I start with biochemical reality and look at the results of evolution and extrapolate from there to reach a reasonable explanation. At least I choose a resaonble answer. With you it is all picket fence.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, November 05, 2013, 15:10 (3823 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You assume that chemical is synonymous with automatic, but you take seriously the suggestion that human intelligence emerges from chemical interactions between billions of cells.-DAVID: Because you have invented a nebulous intelligence so as to avoid choosing between chance and design.
 
A non sequitur. You believe that human intelligence can emerge from cooperation between human brain cells, but you are unwilling even to consider the possibility that other forms of intelligence might emerge from cooperation between other cells.-dhw: Maybe there is an unknown control mechanism (Albrecht-Buehler's "centrosome") in all cells and cell communities. 
DAVID: I'm sure there are based on plans in DNA-Good for you with your certainty, but I doubt if science supports you in your belief that God inserted plans into DNA.-dhw: Biochemists frequently talk of bacterial/microbial intelligence, and collective intelligence, but they don't know its source, any more than they know the source of our own. According to you, however, 90% of them are atheists, which leaves 90% presumably believing that cells have some form of intelligence that is not preprogrammed by your God. And who knows what the other 10% would think of your theory? -DAVID: That is the worst stretch or reasoning I've ever seen. I don't presume that atheists would think cells have intelligence.-My fault for not phrasing it better. "90% of them..." refers back to those biochemists that talk of bacterial/microbial intelligence but don't know its source. Perhaps it would have been clearer if I'd said: "Many biochemists talk..." (See below for references.) However, it's always worth remembering that 90% of biochemists in general reject your theory of divine preprogramming!-dhw: Your speculations have no more basis in reality than mine. Still level pegging!
DAVID: Because I start with biochemical reality and look at the results of evolution and extrapolate from there to reach a reasonable explanation. At least I choose a resaonble answer. With you it is all picket fence.-I have considered three hypotheses, all of which start with biochemical reality (cells must cooperate in the production of new organs), look at the results of evolution, and extrapolate a reasonable but unsubstantiated explanation. Since neither the God, the chance nor the panpsychist hypothesis has any backing from science, I cannot consider your willingness to choose one unscientific hypothesis over the others as a reason for your claiming that your God hypothesis is based in reality.-*****-If you google bacterial/microbial intelligence, you will find 191,000 references. I have chosen three quotes just from the first page which are unequivocal ... one of them being from my favourite expert in the field. -"While the number of bacteria in a colony can be more than 100 times the number of people on Earth, bacteria are twittering (" bacterial twittering" or "chemical tweeting") to make sure they all know what they all doing (by exchanging "chemical tweets"); each cell is both an actor and a spectator in the bacterial Game of Life. Acting jointly, these tiny organisms can sense the environment, process information, solve problems and make decisions so as to thrive in harsh environments. In better times, when exposed to an environment containing abundant nutrients, instead of rushing to exhaust the available resources, as human communities often do, bacteria save for the future and make sure to be prepared for hard times that might befall them in the future."
www.tamar.tau.ac.il/~eshel/html/intelligence_of_Bacteria-html
(I've had trouble getting back to this one.)-"So how does a colony of bacteria decide which genetic mutations afford the greatest chance of survival and expansion? Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine, hold that bacteria communicate among themselves, writing, "It is clearly essential to figure out how the bacteria can obtain semantic meaning, so as to initiate, for example, the proper context-dependent transitions between different operating states of the genome (370-371)." Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them, Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine do conceive that bacteria have shared social communicative abilities, which, because of the nature of language, implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings of their codes (371). Based on these speculations, it would indeed appear that not only are bacteria sentient (by choosing), and intelligent (by communicating), but that they are also socially organized (but civilized?)."-www.justburrus.blogspot.com/2010/03/bacterial-sentience-intelligence.html-MARGULIS: People think that if you can't talk, you can't be intelligent. But you know that's not true if you have a dog. You can communicate with them without talking. If you define intelligence as speaking American English, well maybe they're not. But if you define it in the much more broad sense of behaviors that are modified on the individual level, that involve choice and change and response to the environment, there's every bit of evidence that intelligence is a property of life from the very beginning. It's been modified, of course, and changed and amplified, even, but it's an intrinsic property of cells.
www.astrobio.net/interview/211/bacterial-intelligence

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 05, 2013, 17:36 (3823 days ago) @ dhw


>dhw: A non sequitur. You believe that human intelligence can emerge from cooperation between human brain cells, but you are unwilling even to consider the possibility that other forms of intelligence might emerge from cooperation between other cells.-Exactly. See my most recent entry on brain DNA complexity.-
> dhw: However, it's always worth remembering that 90% of biochemists in general reject your theory of divine preprogramming!-Because they have faith in atheism.-> dhw: I have considered three hypotheses, all of which start with biochemical reality (cells must cooperate in the production of new organs),-You persist in missing the point. Cells do not, of their own volition cooperate. They are forced to follow an organizatinal plan in the DNA they are given. 
> *****
> 
> dhw: If you google bacterial/microbial intelligence, you will find 191,000 references. I have chosen three quotes just from the first page which are unequivocal ... one of them being from my favourite expert in the field.-I know this approach. Sounds good. 
> 
> "While the number of bacteria in a colony can be more than 100 times the number of people on Earth, bacteria are twittering (" bacterial twittering" or "chemical tweeting") to make sure they all know what they all doing (by exchanging "chemical tweets"); each cell is both an actor and a spectator in the bacterial Game of Life. Acting jointly, these tiny organisms can sense the environment, process information, solve problems and make decisions so as to thrive in harsh environments. In better times, when exposed to an environment containing abundant nutrients, instead of rushing to exhaust the available resources, as human communities often do, bacteria save for the future and make sure to be prepared for hard times that might befall them in the future."
> www.tamar.tau.ac.il/~eshel/html/intelligence_of_Bacteria-html
> (I've had trouble getting back to this one.)
> 
> dhw: "So how does a colony of bacteria decide which genetic mutations afford the greatest chance of survival and expansion? Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine, hold that bacteria communicate among themselves, writing, "It is clearly essential to figure out how the bacteria can obtain semantic meaning, so as to initiate, for example, the proper context-dependent transitions between different operating states of the genome (370-371)." Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them, Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine do conceive that bacteria have shared social communicative abilities, which, because of the nature of language, implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings of their codes (371). Based on these speculations, it would indeed appear that not only are bacteria sentient (by choosing), and intelligent (by communicating), but that they are also socially organized (but civilized?)."
> 
> www.justburrus.blogspot.com/2010/03/bacterial-sentience-intelligence.html
> 
> dhw: MARGULIS: People think that if you can't talk, you can't be intelligent. But you know that's not true if you have a dog. You can communicate with them without talking. If you define intelligence as speaking American English, well maybe they're not. But if you define it in the much more broad sense of behaviors that are modified on the individual level, that involve choice and change and response to the environment, there's every bit of evidence that intelligence is a property of life from the very beginning. It's been modified, of course, and changed and amplified, even, but it's an intrinsic property of cells.
> www.astrobio.net/interview/211/bacterial-intelligence-I did not remove any of this. I've read this stuff over and over in the past. It is fun to discuss it this way, but the cells work by biochemical code processes, as in the bolded sentence above. It is part of the Gaia Earth philosophy to which Margulis was a worshipper..

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, November 06, 2013, 19:29 (3822 days ago) @ David Turell

DHW: However, it's always worth remembering that 90% of biochemists in general reject your theory of divine preprogramming!
DAVID: Because they have faith in atheism.-A strange way of putting it. I would say they do not have faith in a self-aware eternal God for whose existence there is no scientific evidence. Perhaps they have faith that one day they will discover a material solution to our mysteries. But more to the point, they are professionals working in a field which you claim provides the basis for your own faith. A 90% no is not much of an endorsement, is it?-Dhw: I have considered three hypotheses, all of which start with biochemical reality (cells must cooperate in the production of new organs), look at the results of evolution, and extrapolate a reasonable but unsubstantiated explanation.-DAVID: You persist in missing the point. Cells do not, of their own volition cooperate. They are forced to follow an organizational plan in the DNA they are given.-If you mean that cells follow a plan devised BY a mechanism of unknown origin within their DNA, we might strike a deal, but if you mean the plan has been placed there by your God and cells are automatons (which of course you have always maintained), you are missing my point, which is quite simply that we DO NOT KNOW. This is admirably illustrated by your misinterpretation of the sentence you bolded in one of the three quotations supporting the concept or at least the possibility of the intelligent cell. The sentence begins: "Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them...."-Your comment: "...the cells work by biochemical code processes, as in the bolded sentence above." That is the MEANS of communication (like us using voices, birds singing, bees dancing, ants using chemicals etc.), but the researchers don't understand how they do the coding and messaging. Do you understand the processes by which your brain and body translate your thoughts into spoken or written words? The researchers do argue, however, that it implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings, which suggests that bacteria are sentient (by choosing), intelligent (by communicating) and socially organized. Of course you prefer not to "bold" that.-I quoted Margulis, who says intelligence is "an intrinsic property of cells". You commented: "It is part of the Gaia Earth philosophy to which Margulis was a worshipper." She clarifies her views on Gaia in the interview, which is on
 
www.astrobio.net/interview/2111/bacterial-intelligence (I got one digit wrong yesterday.)-You rightly complain when atheists dismiss ID science because the scientists believe in God, but you sink precisely to that level when you dismiss Margulis's research on cells by ridiculing her support for aspects of the Gaia hypothesis. (Why "worshipper" anyway? She rejects Lovelock's idea that Earth is a superorganism, and replaces it with "ecosystem".) You should consider her research on cells and her conclusion in the context only of her science.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Thursday, November 07, 2013, 02:18 (3822 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: But more to the point, they are professionals working in a field which you claim provides the basis for your own faith. A 90% no is not much of an endorsement, is it?-They have made a choice to be atheists. They have a position which will not agree with me. You won't choose.-
> dhw: If you mean that cells follow a plan devised BY a mechanism of unknown origin within their DNA, we might strike a deal,-I can agree that cells follow a plan and no proven source of the plan is at issue.-> dhw;but if you mean the plan has been placed there by your God and cells are automatons (which of course you have always maintained), you are missing my point, which is quite simply that we DO NOT KNOW. This is admirably illustrated by your misinterpretation of the sentence you bolded in one of the three quotations supporting the concept or at least the possibility of the intelligent cell. The sentence begins: "Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them...."-But that is exactly my point: the coded messages are biochemical series of reactions. We don't fully understand the DNA control of those messages.
> 
> dhw: Your comment: "...the cells work by biochemical code processes, as in the bolded sentence above." That is the MEANS of communication (like us using voices, birds singing, bees dancing, ants using chemicals etc.), but the researchers don't understand how they do the coding and messaging.-They and I know it is a series of biochemcial reactions. no one yet understands the controls over this.-> dhw: Do you understand the processes by which your brain and body translate your thoughts into spoken or written words?-No one does.-> dhw; The researchers do argue, however, that it implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings, which suggests that bacteria are sentient (by choosing), intelligent (by communicating) and socially organized. Of course you prefer not to "bold" that.-I have a perfect right to disagree with their far out interpretation.-
> dhw: You should consider her research on cells and her conclusion in the context only of her science.-A fair criticism. To me some of the ideas seem like a wooly extention of reality. But on the other hand living organisms emerge as more than a sum of their parts. Life itself is an emergent process.I just think Margulis pushes the point romantically too far.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Thursday, November 07, 2013, 14:19 (3821 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: But more to the point, they are professionals working in a field which you claim provides the basis for your own faith. A 90% no is not much of an endorsement, is it?
DAVID: They have made a choice to be atheists. They have a position which will not agree with me. You won't choose.-A fair summary. It does not alter the fact that 90% of professional scientists working in your field do not endorse your interpretation of the science, and I wonder if even the other 10% would do so.-dhw: If you mean that cells follow a plan devised BY a mechanism of unknown origin within their DNA, we might strike a deal.
DAVID: I can agree that cells follow a plan and no proven source of the plan is at issue.-Not sure what you mean by no "proven" source is "at issue". Keep it simple. We do not know the source.-Dhw: ...if you mean the plan has been placed there by your God and cells are automatons (which of course you have always maintained), you are missing my point, which is quite simply that we DO NOT KNOW. This is admirably illustrated by your misinterpretation of the sentence you bolded in one of the three quotations supporting the concept or at least the possibility of the intelligent cell. The sentence begins: "Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them...."-DAVID: But that is exactly my point: the coded messages are biochemical series of reactions. We don't fully understand the DNA control of those messages.-Your point is not their point. They are not talking about the messages as a series of reactions. They are talking about how cells code and send messages. You can argue that ALL communication is reaction ... to the environment, to the presence of other organisms, or even to oneself. The messages are the result of the reactions. "Don't fully understand..." and "don't yet understand..." (below): another Dawkins tactic. Both of you try to make out that we know or will soon know most of it, and what we know confirms your/his personal opinion. The above researchers simply "do not understand..." No adverb.-dhw: Do you understand the processes by which your brain and body translate your thoughts into spoken or written words?
DAVID: No one does.-And similarly no-one understands how cells are able to code and send the messages that enable them to cooperate with one another.-dhw; The researchers do argue, however, that it implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings, which suggests that bacteria are sentient (by choosing), intelligent (by communicating) and socially organized. Of course you prefer not to "bold" that.
DAVID: I have a perfect right to disagree with their far out interpretation.-You do indeed have a perfect right to disagree, and to denigrate their research as "far out" or "poppycock" or "kooky". They would have the same right to denigrate your divine preprogramming as "far out", and Dawkins has a perfect right to call God a delusion. We learn nothing from such subjective use of language. Nor do we learn anything from statements such as "Cells do not of their own volition cooperate." This is opinion masquerading as scientific fact, which is no doubt precisely the accusation you would like to level at Margulis. One eye open, one eye shut!
 
dhw: You should consider her research on cells and her conclusion in the context only of her science.
DAVID: A fair criticism. To me some of the ideas seem like a wooly extention of reality. But on the other hand living organisms emerge as more than a sum of their parts. Life itself is an emergent process.I just think Margulis pushes the point romantically too far.-And you are entitled to your opinion, but I'm happy to see your "other hand" as a promising sign of agnostic tolerance!

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 08, 2013, 01:33 (3821 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw:It does not alter the fact that 90% of professional scientists working in your field do not endorse your interpretation of the science, and I wonder if even the other 10% would do so.-But they would agree with my automaton interpretation through biochemical reactions.-
> dhw:Your point is not their point. They are not talking about the messages as a series of reactions. They are talking about how cells code and send messages. -You would have to read the science itself to understand that they really are talking about biochemical reactions. No one yet understands how DNA controls this.
> 
> dhw: And similarly no-one understands how cells are able to code and send the messages that enable them to cooperate with one another.-I agree, but we recognize that is is chemical signalling.
> 
> dhw: Nor do we learn anything from statements such as "Cells do not of their own volition cooperate." This is opinion masquerading as scientific fact,-No masquerade. Of course cells are not independent. They operate exactly according to DNA plans, which we as yet do not fully understand. You again sound as if you are giving cells thoughts and minds. -> 
> dhw: And you are entitled to your opinion, but I'm happy to see your "other hand" as a promising sign of agnostic tolerance!-No I more than tolerate your right to agnosticism. What bothers me is your invention of an impossible theory to protect your on-the-fence position.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, November 08, 2013, 19:41 (3820 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Your point is not their point. They are not talking about the messages as a series of reactions. They are talking about how cells code and send messages. 
DAVID: You would have to read the science itself to understand that they really are talking about biochemical reactions. No one yet understands how DNA controls this.-You always make it seem that somehow DNA is not part of the cell! Perhaps the cell is the microbody and DNA is or rather contains the equivalent of a microbrain - the mysterious mechanism that controls the activities of the cell (which Albrecht-Buehler calls the centrosome).
 
dhw: And similarly no-one understands how cells are able to code and send the messages that enable them to cooperate with one another.
DAVID: I agree, but we recognize that is is chemical signalling.-They may use chemicals as we use the voice. Chemical is not a synonym for automatic.-dhw: Nor do we learn anything from statements such as "Cells do not of their own volition cooperate." This is opinion masquerading as scientific fact.-DAVID: No masquerade. Of course cells are not independent. They operate exactly according to DNA plans, which we as yet do not fully understand. You again sound as if you are giving cells thoughts and minds.-Again you talk as if DNA were not part of the cell (see above). We do not have a clue how these plans are formed. We only know that cells cooperate in producing adaptation and innovation. We are composed of cells, and our minds may emerge from cells, and I believe we are descended from cell communities all the way back to the beginning of life. If this is true, our thoughts and minds are developments from their cooperation, whether preplanned or not. We are told by some scientists that bacteria (single cells) "sense the environment, process information, solve problems and make decisions", and even "save for the future". I would regard those as attributes required for "intelligence". Other scientists tell us that cells are "sentient (by choosing) and intelligent (by communicating)" and socially organized. Margulis says outright that intelligence is "an intrinsic property of cells". Albrecht-Buehler has written a book about the intelligence of cells. These scientists don't anthropomorphize them ... which seems to be your stock reply ("giving cells thoughts and minds") ... but they all agree that cells have the attributes of intelligence. Of course you have the right to believe that cells are automatons, but you don't know any more than the rest of us how DNA produces the "plans". Your dismissal of all this research is on a par with that of the atheist who says, "We don't know how it all happened, but it certainly wasn't God."-dhw: And you are entitled to your opinion, but I'm happy to see your "other hand" as a promising sign of agnostic tolerance!
DAVID: No I more than tolerate your right to agnosticism. What bothers me is your invention of an impossible theory to protect your on-the-fence position.-And yet according to some scientists in the field, it is not impossible. And according to your figures, your own theory of divine preprogramming is regarded as impossible by 90% of all those in the field. The strange thing is that, just like Darwin's theory, the one I'm offering is perfectly compatible with faith in God. It requires an intelligent mechanism within the cells that is flexible enough to cope with different environments and to produce an almost infinite number of combinations to invent new forms. (Precisely what we have, of course.) And the theist can argue to his heart's content that such a mechanism could not have invented itself, and so must have been designed. You constantly exhort us all to think out of the box. Is it possible, just possible that your refusal even to consider this hypothesis is due to your eagerness to place man as the be-all and end-all of evolution (which requires the notion of cells as automatons merely obeying God's instructions). Is it possible, just possible that your attempt to read God's mind has boxed you in?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 09, 2013, 00:31 (3820 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Your point is not their point. They are not talking about the messages as a series of reactions. They are talking about how cells code and send messages. 
> DAVID: You would have to read the science itself to understand that they really are talking about biochemical reactions. No one yet understands how DNA controls this.
> 
> You always make it seem that somehow DNA is not part of the cell! Perhaps the cell is the microbody and DNA is or rather contains the equivalent of a microbrain - the mysterious mechanism that controls the activities of the cell (which Albrecht-Buehler calls the centrosome).
> 
> dhw: And similarly no-one understands how cells are able to code and send the messages that enable them to cooperate with one another.
> DAVID: I agree, but we recognize that is is chemical signalling.
> 
> They may use chemicals as we use the voice. Chemical is not a synonym for automatic.
> 
> dhw: Nor do we learn anything from statements such as "Cells do not of their own volition cooperate." This is opinion masquerading as scientific fact.
> 
> DAVID: No masquerade. Of course cells are not independent. They operate exactly according to DNA plans, which we as yet do not fully understand. You again sound as if you are giving cells thoughts and minds.
> 
> Again you talk as if DNA were not part of the cell (see above). We do not have a clue how these plans are formed. We only know that cells cooperate in producing adaptation and innovation. We are composed of cells, and our minds may emerge from cells, and I believe we are descended from cell communities all the way back to the beginning of life. If this is true, our thoughts and minds are developments from their cooperation, whether preplanned or not. We are told by some scientists that bacteria (single cells) "sense the environment, process information, solve problems and make decisions", and even "save for the future". I would regard those as attributes required for "intelligence". Other scientists tell us that cells are "sentient (by choosing) and intelligent (by communicating)" and socially organized. Margulis says outright that intelligence is "an intrinsic property of cells". Albrecht-Buehler has written a book about the intelligence of cells. These scientists don't anthropomorphize them ... which seems to be your stock reply ("giving cells thoughts and minds") ... but they all agree that cells have the attributes of intelligence. Of course you have the right to believe that cells are automatons, but you don't know any more than the rest of us how DNA produces the "plans". Your dismissal of all this research is on a par with that of the atheist who says, "We don't know how it all happened, but it certainly wasn't God."
> 
> dhw: And you are entitled to your opinion, but I'm happy to see your "other hand" as a promising sign of agnostic tolerance!
> DAVID: No I more than tolerate your right to agnosticism. What bothers me is your invention of an impossible theory to protect your on-the-fence position.
> 
> And yet according to some scientists in the field, it is not impossible. And according to your figures, your own theory of divine preprogramming is regarded as impossible by 90% of all those in the field. The strange thing is that, just like Darwin's theory, the one I'm offering is perfectly compatible with faith in God. It requires an intelligent mechanism within the cells that is flexible enough to cope with different environments and to produce an almost infinite number of combinations to invent new forms. (Precisely what we have, of course.) And the theist can argue to his heart's content that such a mechanism could not have invented itself, and so must have been designed. You constantly exhort us all to think out of the box. Is it possible, just possible that your refusal even to consider this hypothesis is due to your eagerness to place man as the be-all and end-all of evolution (which requires the notion of cells as automatons merely obeying God's instructions). Is it possible, just possible that your attempt to read God's mind has boxed you in?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 09, 2013, 00:35 (3820 days ago) @ David Turell


> > dhw: You always make it seem that somehow DNA is not part of the cell! -You forget that each type of cell has its own form of DNA adapted from the original DNA of the stem cells. DNA runs each cell.-
> > 
> > dhw: Again you talk as if DNA were not part of the cell (see above). We do not have a clue how these plans are formed. We only know that cells cooperate in producing adaptation and innovation. -We only know that groups of cells perform different functions. Cells cooperate with each other according the way they are planned to cooperate.-
>> > 
> > dhw: The strange thing is that, just like Darwin's theory, the one I'm offering is perfectly compatible with faith in God. It requires an intelligent mechanism within the cells that is flexible enough to cope with different environments and to produce an almost infinite number of combinations to invent new forms. (Precisely what we have, of course.)-Yes, but the way you reach your theory doesn't fit the reality of biochemistry as I see it.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, November 09, 2013, 14:13 (3819 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You always make it seem that somehow DNA is not part of the cell! -DAVID: You forget that each type of cell has its own form of DNA adapted from the original DNA of the stem cells. DNA runs each cell.-As Albrecht-Buehler points out, each cell has its own control centre (centrosome), just as each ant is an individual with its own brain. So are you saying his "centrosome" is part of the DNA? That's fine with me. -dhw: Again you talk as if DNA were not part of the cell (see above). We do not have a clue how these plans are formed. We only know that cells cooperate in producing adaptation and innovation. 
DAVID: We only know that groups of cells perform different functions. Cells cooperate with each other according the way they are planned to cooperate.-The only slight problem here is your use of the passive voice, which is your sneaky way of saying "God planned it all". The alternative is that the control centres in each cell cooperate with one another in precisely the same way as individual ants cooperate with one another (see the ant thread) to produce a single unified outcome. This does not shut out your God ... it allows for him to be the inventor of the mechanism, as opposed to him having inserted billions of programmes into the first automatons. Remember, I'm only concerned here with how evolution works.-dhw: The strange thing is that, just like Darwin's theory, the one I'm offering is perfectly compatible with faith in God. It requires an intelligent mechanism within the cells that is flexible enough to cope with different environments and to produce an almost infinite number of combinations to invent new forms. (Precisely what we have, of course.)
DAVID: Yes, but the way you reach your theory doesn't fit the reality of biochemistry as I see it.-And yet you admit that no-one understands how the biochemistry works! The scientists who have observed the behaviour of cells and concluded that they have their own form of intelligence don't seem to have any particular religious or non-religious standpoint. They have simply published their conclusions. And you reject them because the reality of biochemistry as they see it doesn't fit in with your concept of how God works. I'm not asking you to believe this alternative hypothesis ... I'm only asking for a degree of open-mindedness on the subject.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 09, 2013, 15:32 (3819 days ago) @ dhw

dhw; And yet you admit that no-one understands how the biochemistry works! The scientists who have observed the behaviour of cells and concluded that they have their own form of intelligence don't seem to have any particular religious or non-religious standpoint. They have simply published their conclusions.-We are learning how the biochemistry works, and the more we learn, the more automatic it is seen to be.-
> dhw; And you reject them because the reality of biochemistry as they see it doesn't fit in with your concept of how God works. I'm not asking you to believe this alternative hypothesis ... I'm only asking for a degree of open-mindedness on the subject.-No. I'm pretty firm in my conclusions. As a writer you like the romanticism of the scientists' anthropomorphic descriptions.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, November 10, 2013, 19:27 (3818 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: We are learning how the biochemistry works, and the more we learn, the more automatic it is seen to be.-Strange, I was under the impression that the more we learn, the more complex and mysterious it is seen to be. And the more difficult it becomes for scientists to avoid using terms like "intelligence", as below (under "Quorum sensing"):-DAVID: I've presented this before I think: Bacterial colonies use chemicals to communicate and to adapt group behavior. It is all at the molecular level, and I conclude DNA manages it since sRNA (small) are used:-http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn17390-why-microbes-are-smarter-than-you-thought.html-QUOTE: "But many bacteria and protists also exhibit behaviour that looks remarkably intelligent. This behaviour isn't the result of conscious thought ... the sort you find in humans and other complex animals ... because single-celled organisms don't have nervous systems, let alone brains."-Margulis also warned against equating this kind of intelligence with the human type, and the description of them as "biological computers" is probably a term you like. But I like some of these observations:
 
"Bacteria talk to each other with chemicals. They do so for a host of reasons, some of them hard to understand unless you are another bacterium." 
"In response to these chemical messages, the other bacteria set themselves up further away, completely changing the shape of the colony." 
"Pathogenic (disease-causing) bacteria often use quorum sensing to decide when to launch an attack on their host." 
"Not only can bacteria be talkative and co-operative, but they also form communities."-Very similar to ants, and considerably less similar to computers. This is not human "intelligence", but intelligence of their own kind.-DAVID: As a writer you like the romanticism of the scientists' anthropomorphic descriptions. -They don't seem to be able to find any other form of description. It's as though our own intelligence is simply a vast extension of the intelligence we have inherited from the cellular communities that were our ancestors. It always surprises me when people accept the idea that we are descended from lesser organisms and yet can't quite accept the idea that what we are derives from them. I suspect it's a throwback to the days when folk believed in special creation.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 10, 2013, 19:59 (3818 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: QUOTE: "But many bacteria and protists also exhibit behaviour that looks remarkably intelligent. This behaviour isn't the result of conscious thought ... the sort you find in humans and other complex animals ... because single-celled organisms don't have nervous systems, let alone brains."
> 
> Margulis also warned against equating this kind of intelligence with the human type, and the description of them as "biological computers" is probably a term you like. But I like some of these observations:
> 
> "Bacteria talk to each other with chemicals. They do so for a host of reasons, some of them hard to understand unless you are another bacterium." 
> "In response to these chemical messages, the other bacteria set themselves up further away, completely changing the shape of the colony." 
> "Pathogenic (disease-causing) bacteria often use quorum sensing to decide when to launch an attack on their host." 
> "Not only can bacteria be talkative and co-operative, but they also form communities."
> 
> dhw:Very similar to ants, and considerably less similar to computers. This is not human "intelligence", but intelligence of their own kind.-Yes, the intelligence is of a kind that exists in a planning process, that I predict will be found in DNA.
> 
> DAVID: As a writer you like the romanticism of the scientists' anthropomorphic descriptions. 
> 
> dhw: They don't seem to be able to find any other form of description. It's as though our own intelligence is simply a vast extension of the intelligence we have inherited from the cellular communities that were our ancestors. It always surprises me when people accept the idea that we are descended from lesser organisms and yet can't quite accept the idea that what we are derives from them. -Of course, if we accept evolution there is a derivation from the lesser organisms. Our descent does not make the derivation smaller, as you imply. You mention the 'vast extension' yourself. You just don't want to think of it as vast enough to make us different in kind. Tell me if there a is a dividing line of difference for you, or will you refuse to accept any dividing line and keep moving the goal posts?

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, November 11, 2013, 20:01 (3817 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Very similar to ants, and considerably less similar to computers. This is not human "intelligence", but intelligence of their own kind.
DAVID: Yes, the intelligence is of a kind that exists in a planning process, that I predict will be found in DNA.-So God even preprogrammed the billion and one bacterial adaptations into the first cells, as well as all the innovations leading to humans. It's a wonder they didn't burst.-DAVID: As a writer you like the romanticism of the scientists' anthropomorphic descriptions. 
dhw: They don't seem to be able to find any other form of description. It's as though our own intelligence is simply a vast extension of the intelligence we have inherited from the cellular communities that were our ancestors. It always surprises me when people accept the idea that we are descended from lesser organisms and yet can't quite accept the idea that what we are derives from them. 
DAVID: Of course, if we accept evolution there is a derivation from the lesser organisms. Our descent does not make the derivation smaller, as you imply. You mention the 'vast extension' yourself. You just don't want to think of it as vast enough to make us different in kind. Tell me if there a is a dividing line of difference for you, or will you refuse to accept any dividing line and keep moving the goal posts?-I will say yet again that the distinction between degree and kind is irrelevant to me. It is important to you because you want to buttress your belief in anthropocentric evolution. This raises any number of impossible questions, such as how God could have preprogrammed the first cells with all the innovations leading to humans; why there have been so many extinctions...I needn't repeat all the problems, as we've discussed them endlessly. Of course I accept, and always have accepted, that there is a vast, colossal, huge, massive ... how many adjectives would you like? - difference between our mental capacity and that of all other organisms. If that is as a result of our enlarged brain (I prefer to keep an open mind about the source of our consciousness), I would take it to be the equivalent of a dog's vastly more advanced sense of smell because his nose contains upwards of 125 million sensory cells compared to our 5-10 million. Do you think this gap large enough to argue that dogs are different from us in kind, and therefore God guided evolution towards dogs? We don't need dividing lines or goalposts. We know our differences, and we know our similarities. Since I neither believe nor disbelieve in God, you can hardly expect me to support your claim that God created life in order to produce humans, and I suspect that is what underlies your hostility towards the intelligent cell hypothesis as well as your insistence on "kind" rather than "degree".

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Monday, November 11, 2013, 22:04 (3817 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: Yes, the intelligence is of a kind that exists in a planning process, that I predict will be found in DNA.
> 
> dhw:So God even preprogrammed the billion and one bacterial adaptations into the first cells, as well as all the innovations leading to humans. It's a wonder they didn't burst.-If you remember the material I presented in the book about first life, the folks who look at such things predicted a very complex first form of cells to really be life. -> 
> dhw:I will say yet again that the distinction between degree and kind is irrelevant to me. I would take it to be the equivalent of a dog's vastly more advanced sense of smell because his nose contains upwards of 125 million sensory cells compared to our 5-10 million. Do you think this gap large enough to argue that dogs are different from us in kind, and therefore God guided evolution towards dogs?-I love your thought process, equating deep thought with deep sniffing. -> dhw: We know our differences, and we know our similarities. Since I neither believe nor disbelieve in God, you can hardly expect me to support your claim that God created life in order to produce humans, and I suspect that is what underlies your hostility towards the intelligent cell hypothesis as well as your insistence on "kind" rather than "degree".-The hostilty is at a deeper level. You refuse to recognize that the intelligence you tout is really intelligent information in DNA, a very different concept than yours. Cells are under control of that information, which then supplies the planning for more complexity. Remembering Gould, who in "Full House" discussed the success of bacteria, who were the start of life and are still here 3.6 billion years later with the biggest biomass on Earth. His excuse for the unnecessary complexity that then appeared in multicellular organisms, was that evolution could only go in one direction, from very simple to complex. Totally illogical because their success does not require developing multicellular complexity. Gould could not think beyond Darwin. To make any sense of it, evolution had to be planned in those first complex single cells. Otherwise there was no reason, even in Darwin's theory, for it to happen.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, November 12, 2013, 19:03 (3816 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: If you remember the material I presented in the book about first life, the folks who look at such things predicted a very complex first form of cells to really be life. -No argument there. But I do jib at the idea of your God preprogramming those first cells with billions of essential (for you) adaptations and innovations, when a single mechanism could have produced all the variations of evolution.
 
dhw: I will say yet again that the distinction between degree and kind is irrelevant to me. I would take it to be the equivalent of a dog's vastly more advanced sense of smell because his nose contains upwards of 125 million sensory cells compared to our 5-10 million. Do you think this gap large enough to argue that dogs are different from us in kind, and therefore God guided evolution towards dogs?
DAVID: I love your thought process, equating deep thought with deep sniffing.-But I do not love your editing. It was the large human brain that was the equivalent of the dog's 125 million sensory cells, i.e. if God preprogrammed such an extraordinarily complex brain (or stepped in to make it separately), he must have done the same with such an extraordinarily complex nose. This is just one example among the hundreds you yourself have given us in which organisms come up with unique features or modes of behaviour. That does not mean a Venus flytrap has the same intelligence as Einstein. -dhw: We know our differences, and we know our similarities. Since I neither believe nor disbelieve in God, you can hardly expect me to support your claim that God created life in order to produce humans, and I suspect that is what underlies your hostility towards the intelligent cell hypothesis as well as your insistence on "kind" rather than "degree".-DAVID: The hostilty is at a deeper level. You refuse to recognize that the intelligence you tout is really intelligent information in DNA, a very different concept than yours. Cells are under control of that information, which then supplies the planning for more complexity. -When we say humans are intelligent beings, we don't separate them from their brains. DNA is part of the cell! You say all the information and preplanning is contained within the DNA. I substitute "the intelligent mechanism", and if that is in the DNA, so be it. You have absolutely no way of knowing whether all the information and planning is processed by an automatic machine obeying God's instructions, or an independent intelligence (possibly invented by your God, and as "touted" by numerous scientists I have cited) making its own decisions. Nor do I, of course, but I am merely considering alternatives. -DAVID: Remembering Gould, who in "Full House" discussed the success of bacteria, who were the start of life and are still here 3.6 billion years later with the biggest biomass on Earth. His excuse for the unnecessary complexity that then appeared in multicellular organisms, was that evolution could only go in one direction, from very simple to complex. Totally illogical because their success does not require developing multicellular complexity. Gould could not think beyond Darwin. To make any sense of it, evolution had to be planned in those first complex single cells. Otherwise there was no reason, even in Darwin's theory, for it to happen.-We have both made the same point over and over again, and it gives just as much support to my alternative as it does to your God theory. The crucial change came when some cells decided to cooperate. That left lots of cells staying as they were, and others experimenting ... just as humans do. And one experiment led to another, as different communities of cells created different forms of life. No Gouldian "could only go in one direction", no Turellian "God planned it all". Cooperation is the key, and it does not in any way shut out your God, who could have given cells their ability to cooperate in the first place. It only shuts out your notion that God planted a few billion innovative and adaptive programmes into the first few cells.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 12, 2013, 19:46 (3816 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: It was the large human brain that was the equivalent of the dog's 125 million sensory cells, i.e. if God preprogrammed such an extraordinarily complex brain (or stepped in to make it separately), he must have done the same with such an extraordinarily complex nose. This is just one example among the hundreds you yourself have given us in which organisms come up with unique features or modes of behaviour. -You have given a proposal of how orgnisms might plan these complex behaviors, but plans can only come from intelligence to make a plan aforehand. How do the intelligent cells do it by hunt and peck, the only other way it can work? Especially in the time frame of the Cambrian?-
> When we say humans are intelligent beings, we don't separate them from their brains. DNA is part of the cell! You say all the information and preplanning is contained within the DNA. I substitute "the intelligent mechanism", and if that is in the DNA, so be it. You have absolutely no way of knowing whether all the information and planning is processed by an automatic machine obeying God's instructions, or an independent intelligence (possibly invented by your God, and as "touted" by numerous scientists I have cited) making its own decisions. Nor do I, of course, but I am merely considering alternatives.-As noted above, not intelligent cells are not a viable alternative. -> 
> dhw: We have both made the same point over and over again, and it gives just as much support to my alternative as it does to your God theory. The crucial change came when some cells decided to cooperate. .....And one experiment led to another, as different communities of cells created different forms of life. Cooperation is the key, and it does not in any way shut out your God, who could have given cells their ability to cooperate in the first place. It only shuts out your notion that God planted a few billion innovative and adaptive programmes into the first few cells.-Nail on the head: I have admitted in the past an either or. I cannot know if God implanted all the plans or interceded and pushed the cells to group together as organs by direct dabbling. Independence of God's options is not feasible as chance takes over. You just want intelligent cells with no theory of how they got that way.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, November 13, 2013, 16:13 (3815 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: The crucial change came when some cells decided to cooperate. .....And one experiment led to another, as different communities of cells created different forms of life. Cooperation is the key, and it does not in any way shut out your God, who could have given cells their ability to cooperate in the first place. It only shuts out your notion that God planted a few billion innovative and adaptive programmes into the first few cells.-DAVID: Nail on the head: I have admitted in the past an either or. I cannot know if God implanted all the plans or interceded and pushed the cells to group together as organs by direct dabbling. Independence of God's options is not feasible as chance takes over. You just want intelligent cells with no theory of how they got that way.-That is a complete non sequitur. The whole point of the intelligent cell scenario is that chance does not take over. Each cell community with its combined intelligences takes its own decisions according to prevailing conditions. We are dealing with how evolution works, not with the origin of intelligence (we have discussed the God, chance, and panpsychist hypotheses many times). According to you, the purpose of evolution was to produce humans, who are unique and must be the product of direct dabbling, or special divine programmes inserted into the very first cells. And yet there are countless life forms that are also unique, and so those too must have been the product of direct dabbling or special divine preprogramming of the very first cells. I am flabbergasted at what God must have packed into those first few cells, and I am puzzled by your God's special focus (preplanned or dabbled) on the Venus flytrap, the dog's nose, the elephant's trunk, and all the other billions of unique forms, organs, lifestyles, when according to you it's humans he's aiming at. If I believed in God, I would find an intelligent, infinitely flexible mechanism more convincing as an explanation for the variety of life forms, but you refuse point blank to contemplate this alternative, even if your God invented it.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Wednesday, November 13, 2013, 23:30 (3815 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: That is a complete non sequitur. The whole point of the intelligent cell scenario is that chance does not take over. Each cell community with its combined intelligences takes its own decisions according to prevailing conditions.We are dealing with how evolution works, not with the origin of intelligence (we have discussed the God, chance, and panpsychist hypotheses many times). -Not a non sequitor. That is exactly my point you are avoiding. Explain to me where the intelligence comes from. Either there is existing eternal intelligence or it appears from somewhere by some mechanism. What is your mechanism?-> dhw:According to you, the purpose of evolution was to produce humans,...... If I believed in God, I would find an intelligent, infinitely flexible mechanism more convincing as an explanation for the variety of life forms, but you refuse point blank to contemplate this alternative, even if your God invented it.-I don't really follow what you are having God invent. Cells are intelligent only through DNA. That is an intelligently invented code, for as far as we know only intelligence can invent a code. That code is exhibited by a very inventive group of living organisms, which come up with all sorts of amazing life forms. And as I've said over and over, I have no idea how much God-dabbling occurs.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Thursday, November 14, 2013, 19:17 (3814 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: That is a complete non sequitur. The whole point of the intelligent cell scenario is that chance does not take over. Each cell community with its combined intelligences takes its own decisions according to prevailing conditions.We are dealing with how evolution works, not with the origin of intelligence (we have discussed the God, chance, and panpsychist hypotheses many times). -DAVID: Not a non sequitor. That is exactly my point you are avoiding. Explain to me where the intelligence comes from. -There are two different points at issue here: 1) How does evolution work? 2) How did it all begin? We don't like Darwin's random mutations and gradualism. You think your God crammed the very first cells with programmes for umpteen billion innovations, adaptations, strategies and lifestyles, and those he didn't preprogramme were the result of his dabbling. I'm proposing that cell communities pool their intelligences, and natural selection decides which innovations will survive. Where the intelligence comes from is point 2) ... three hypotheses: a) God, b) chance, c) panpsychist evolution.
 
DAVID: Either there is existing eternal intelligence or it appears from somewhere by some mechanism. What is your mechanism? -Same three hypotheses, each as nebulous as the other. I'm particularly puzzled, though, by your belief in first cause energy BEING intelligent, and your rejection of the possibility that it might BECOME intelligent.
 
dhw: According to you, the purpose of evolution was to produce humans,...... If I believed in God, I would find an intelligent, infinitely flexible mechanism more convincing as an explanation for the variety of life forms, but you refuse point blank to contemplate this alternative, even if your God invented it.-DAVID: I don't really follow what you are having God invent. Cells are intelligent only through DNA. -So are humans "only intelligent through DNA"? Some scientists tell us that cells are intelligent in their own way. Humans are also intelligent in their own way. Nobody knows how human intelligence arises. Nobody knows how cellular intelligence arises. The intelligence of ants appears to emerge from the cooperating community of individual ants. Human intelligence appears to emerge from the cooperating community of individual brain cells. Maybe cellular intelligence also emerges from cooperating communities of individual cells. You can't explain human, let alone divine intelligence, and yet you want me to explain cellular intelligence!

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 15, 2013, 02:17 (3814 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Not a non sequitor. That is exactly my point you are avoiding. Explain to me where the intelligence comes from. 
> 
> dhw;There are two different points at issue here: 1) How does evolution work? 2) How did it all begin? We don't like Darwin's random mutations and gradualism. You think your God crammed the very first cells with programmes for umpteen billion innovations, adaptations, strategies and lifestyles, and those he didn't preprogramme were the result of his dabbling. I'm proposing that cell communities pool their intelligences, and natural selection decides which innovations will survive. Where the intelligence comes from is point 2) ... three hypotheses: a) God, b) chance, c) panpsychist evolution.-You have it bass ackwards. How evolution works has nothing to do with the primary question. Number 2 is the issue. How did it all begin? Your panpsychist evolution implies a pan-consciousness at the very beginning. Is it your eternal first cause? Why do you keep bringing up chance ("we don't like random mutations")? We've agreed it doesn't work that way. God and panpsychism are left, sounding like two peas in the same pod.-
> 
> dhw: Same three hypotheses, each as nebulous as the other. I'm particularly puzzled, though, by your belief in first cause energy BEING intelligent, and your rejection of the possibility that it might BECOME intelligent.-Tell me how a first cause starts off as stupid and becomes intelligent. What does it study? Or how?-
> 
> dhw: Nobody knows how human intelligence arises. Nobody knows how cellular intelligence arises. The intelligence of ants appears to emerge from the cooperating community of individual ants. Human intelligence appears to emerge from the cooperating community of individual brain cells. Maybe cellular intelligence also emerges from cooperating communities of individual cells. You can't explain human, let alone divine intelligence, and yet you want me to explain cellular intelligence!-That is a strange set of statements. We know how intelligence arises. We don't know about consciousness. We know that some animals have remarkable degrees of intelligence but not self-aware consciousness. We know we developed an enormous brain. With its 100 billion neurons, and trillions of synapsees it is a giant computer far beyond the ones we have invented. It is true we don't know why that brain appeared, since it is not neccessary in ape life, unless we invoke a cause like God. And as I have told you, a point you are unwilling to accept, intelligent cells run on intelligent information in their coded DNA. Which ends up as a kind of circular arrangement. We only know of codes developed by intelligence. Do you know of a code by chance? I don't.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, November 15, 2013, 20:02 (3813 days ago) @ David Turell

Dhw: There are two different points at issue here: 1) How does evolution work? 2) How did it all begin?
 
DAVID: You have it bass ackwards. How evolution works has nothing to do with the primary question. Number 2 is the issue. How did it all begin? -They are both issues, but I can understand why you are so reluctant to discuss how evolution works. With your God stuffing the first few cells with billions of programmes for innovations, adaptations, lifestyles and strategies, dabbling (= separate creation not evolution), aiming for humans but deliberately preprogramming or creating countless other unique forms, offering multiple choices to organisms that can't take their own decisions....Much safer to ask about beginnings. Once again: three equally unbelievable hypotheses: 1) God, 2) chance, 3) my panpsychist hypothesis.-DAVID: Your panpsychist evolution implies a pan-consciousness at the very beginning. Is it your eternal first cause? Why do you keep bringing up chance ("we don't like random mutations")? We've agreed it doesn't work that way. God and panpsychism are left, sounding like two peas in the same pod.-Most forms of panpsychism are theistic, but you've obviously forgotten my atheist alternative. Instead of inexplicably conscious first cause energy, we have non-conscious energy which throughout eternity has transformed itself into matter, and as matter has gone on changing, the energy within it has inexplicably become conscious of change. That consciousness has evolved within the materials it initially gave rise to, and it has continued to evolve through cooperation. No single overall consciousness, but only an infinite number of individual consciousnesses contained within matter, though possibly surviving the disintegration of that matter.
 
Why do I keep bringing up chance? Because you keep asking how it all began, and you keep forgetting that I find the three hypotheses equally unbelievable.-dhw: The intelligence of ants appears to emerge from the cooperating community of individual ants. Human intelligence appears to emerge from the cooperating community of individual brain cells. Maybe cellular intelligence also emerges from cooperating communities of individual cells. You can't explain human, let alone divine intelligence, and yet you want me to explain cellular intelligence!-DAVID: That is a strange set of statements. We know how intelligence arises. We don't know about consciousness. We know that some animals have remarkable degrees of intelligence but not self-aware consciousness. We know we developed an enormous brain. With its 100 billion neurons, and trillions of synapsees it is a giant computer far beyond the ones we have invented.-You always try to equate consciousness with self-consciousness. I don't see how it is possible for animals, birds, insects to cope with life unless they are AWARE (conscious) of their environment and of means to cope with it. And so organisms cannot act intelligently without a degree of consciousness (which does not mean self-consciousness). As for our brain, we don't know how it works. The 100 billion neurons don't solve the mystery. You even believe that consciousness/intelligence can survive without those neurons! -DAVID: And as I have told you, a point you are unwilling to accept, intelligent cells run on intelligent information in their coded DNA. Which ends up as a kind of circular arrangement. We only know of codes developed by intelligence. Do you know of a code by chance? I don't.-Information is useless unless there is an intelligence that knows how to use it. We are all built of cells, which you say are automatons, and we all have coded DNA. If our independent human intelligence "emerges" from the interactive cooperation of automaton cells, then intelligence may have "emerged" in all forms of life, reaching back to the very formation of DNA. And if intelligence is energy, other organisms may have it too (after all, you believe in animal souls).
 
DAVID (under "Cell sensing"): Need I note that genes are just big biochemical molecules. Sensing is done biochemically. The word 'sensing', implying neurological activity, should not ever carry that implication.-In that context, our own sight, smell, taste, touch, hearing ("sensing") are all automatic processes which provide information. That is stage one. Stage two is the conscious (but not necessarily self-conscious) use of that information.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 16, 2013, 02:14 (3813 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Most forms of panpsychism are theistic,-See my most recent entry about the panpsychism neuro-scientist. He is not a theist.-> dhw: but you've obviously forgotten my atheist alternative. Instead of inexplicably conscious first cause energy, we have non-conscious energy which throughout eternity has transformed itself into matter, and as matter has gone on changing, the energy within it has inexplicably become conscious of change. That consciousness has evolved within the materials it initially gave rise to, and it has continued to evolve through cooperation. No single overall consciousness, but only an infinite number of individual consciousnesses contained within matter, though possibly surviving the disintegration of that matter.-No, I haven't fogotten. It is one of the most convoluted cockamammy (sp?)weird theories I have every come across. Quite an invention to get around a specific first cause.-> 
> dhw: You always try to equate consciousness with self-consciousness. I don't see how it is possible for animals, birds, insects to cope with life unless they are AWARE (conscious) of their environment and of means to cope with it. And so organisms cannot act intelligently without a degree of consciousness (which does not mean self-consciousness). -No, I keep the concept of consciousness in two parts. All those organisms are conscious,not self-aware conscious.-> 
> DAVID: We only know of codes developed by intelligence. Do you know of a code by chance? I don't.[/i]-> 
> dhw: Information is useless unless there is an intelligence that knows how to use it. We are all built of cells, which you say are automatons, and we all have coded DNA. If our independent human intelligence "emerges" from the interactive cooperation of automaton cells, then intelligence may have "emerged" in all forms of life, reaching back to the very formation of DNA. And if intelligence is energy, other organisms may have it too (after all, you believe in animal souls).-Nicely put, talking all around my point. How do you create 'emergent' intelligence. I assume you simply woke up one day and were very intelligent without studying or reading anything. And you are obviously extremely intelligent. Intelligence is developed over time by a plastic brain absorbing knowledge. Intelligenced is the use of developed knowledge.-> 
> DAVID (under "Cell sensing"): Need I note that genes are just big biochemical molecules. Sensing is done biochemically. The word 'sensing', implying neurological activity, should not ever carry that implication.
> 
> dhw: In that context, our own sight, smell, taste, touch, hearing ("sensing") are all automatic processes which provide information. That is stage one. Stage two is the conscious (but not necessarily self-conscious) use of that information.-Of course. Think of our sense of sight. Electrical impulses arrive at the brain, and abracadabra, pictures in our heads! And it all happens automatically. I don't have to think to see. Much of biology is automatic reactions of enormous complexity, which is why Darwinian chance is so iffy.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, November 16, 2013, 18:56 (3812 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Most forms of panpsychism are theistic...
DAVID: See my most recent entry about the panpsychism neuro-scientist. He is not a theist.-Many thanks for a most stimulating article. I greatly appreciate the way you draw attention to articles that support ideas you disapprove of. -dhw: ...but you've obviously forgotten my atheist alternative. Instead of inexplicably conscious first cause energy, we have non-conscious energy which throughout eternity has transformed itself into matter, and as matter has gone on changing, the energy within it has inexplicably become conscious of change. That consciousness has evolved within the materials it initially gave rise to, and it has continued to evolve through cooperation. No single overall consciousness, but only an infinite number of individual consciousnesses contained within matter, though possibly surviving the disintegration of that matter.-DAVID: No, I haven't fogotten. It is one of the most convoluted cockamammy (sp?)weird theories I have every come across.
 
Nothing convoluted about energy becoming matter. Nothing convoluted about consciousness evolving within materials through cooperation (compare bacterial consciousness with human consciousness). Nothing convoluted about individual consciousnesses within matter (that's us, folks, and all our fellow organisms), or possibly surviving physical death (your own belief in human and animal souls). The problem, of course, is the beginning of individualized consciousness ... but that's no more of a convolution than the never-beginning consciousness of your God. No, David, if you really want a convoluted, cockamamie weird theory, I recommend the Turell Theory of How Evolution Works.-dhw: Information is useless unless there is an intelligence that knows how to use it. We are all built of cells, which you say are automatons, and we all have coded DNA. If our independent human intelligence "emerges" from the interactive cooperation of automaton cells, then intelligence may have "emerged" in all forms of life, reaching back to the very formation of DNA. And if intelligence is energy, other organisms may have it too (after all, you believe in animal souls).
DAVID: Nicely put, talking all around my point. How do you create 'emergent' intelligence. I assume you simply woke up one day and were very intelligent without studying or reading anything. And you are obviously extremely intelligent. Intelligence is developed over time by a plastic brain absorbing knowledge. Intelligence is the use of developed knowledge.-I take intelligence to mean the ABILITY to use information, and that ability evolves with experience and the acquisition of knowledge. We know how it's used, but we don't know where it comes from or even what it consists of. It is inextricably linked to consciousness (awareness), and maybe it "emerges" from the interactions between cooperating cells. A newborn baby must have it, but we don't know HOW intelligent the child is until it starts to use that ability. The same applies to all organisms. So why are you so certain that humans have the ability but ants don't? How can you tell whether an organism is behaving intelligently because it is intelligent (i.e. has its own ability to use information) or because it has been preprogrammed to behave as if it were intelligent?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 16, 2013, 21:16 (3812 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Many thanks for a most stimulating article. I greatly appreciate the way you draw attention to articles that support ideas you disapprove of. -I started out not sure exactly what to believe. Read everything is every direction and reached logical conclusions. 
> 
> dhw: The problem, of course, is the beginning of individualized consciousness ... but that's no more of a convolution than the never-beginning consciousness of your God. -It is really a mystery, how any degree of consciousness arose. But we have it. Could an inorganic universe develop it without creating life and our powerful minds? I don't think an inorganic universe, by itself, could ever do that.-> 
> dhw; I take intelligence to mean the ABILITY to use information, and that ability evolves with experience and the acquisition of knowledge. We know how it's used, but we don't know where it comes from or even what it consists of.......... So why are you so certain that humans have the ability but ants don't? How can you tell whether an organism is behaving intelligently because it is intelligent (i.e. has its own ability to use information) or because it has been preprogrammed to behave as if it were intelligent?-One problem with your reply is lack of a source for information. Where does the information originate that intelligence then uses? Imagine an initial living cell. It must develop some way to sense food sources and using that information then learn responses to get the food. It is a chicken/egg situation from the beginning. It means the initial cells were more complete and more complex than origin of life theories generally allow for.-As for the second part, the ant is either intelligent or behaves as if it is, and the simple answer we can't really tell. But on observaatin of ant or bee societies, the roles of the various types of insects are so rigid, it all looks like instinct. You want to get the ants and bees to think their way there from simpler beginnings. I think it is more logical to assume they worked from a framework of plans. Termite mound, bee hives, and wasps nests always look exactly the same.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, November 17, 2013, 13:59 (3811 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: The problem, of course, is the beginning of individualized consciousness ... but that's no more of a convolution than the never-beginning consciousness of your God. 
DAVID: It is really a mystery, how any degree of consciousness arose. But we have it. Could an inorganic universe develop it without creating life and our powerful minds? I don't think an inorganic universe, by itself, could ever do that.-Yes, it's a mystery, whichever way you look at it. How can anyone believe that the intricacies of life assembled themselves without any guidance? How can anyone believe that, before the arrival of our universe, the ALL THAT IS consisted of a single, infinite, eternal self-aware mind? It's enough to drive you to agnosticism.-DAVID: One problem with your reply is lack of a source for information. Where does the information originate that intelligence then uses? Imagine an initial living cell. It must develop some way to sense food sources and using that information then learn responses to get the food. It is a chicken/egg situation from the beginning. It means the initial cells were more complete and more complex than origin of life theories generally allow for.-Yes again, the cell has to be sentient as well as intelligent. I'm glad you now recognize that individual cells need to have both attributes. But once more you are asking me to explain what no-one on this Earth can explain ... the origin of life and of consciousness.-DAVID: As for the second part, the ant is either intelligent or behaves as if it is, and the simple answer we can't really tell. But on observaatin of ant or bee societies, the roles of the various types of insects are so rigid, it all looks like instinct. You want to get the ants and bees to think their way there from simpler beginnings. I think it is more logical to assume they worked from a framework of plans. Termite mound, bee hives, and wasps nests always look exactly the same.-There are all kinds of ants and all kinds of ant societies, depending on the environment they have to cope with, but of course once a system has been found to work, it will remain the same. Basically, heart cells, liver cells, kidney cells etc. also conform to a pattern. But first, just like every strategy and every lifestyle, they have to be invented, and your concept of evolution therefore still lumbers you with your God having to load the first few cells with billions of programmes to be handed down over billions of years to billions of different organisms. Those that were not preprogrammed had to be specially created. I agree that the initial cells had to be complex, but do you really believe they were THAT complex?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 17, 2013, 15:31 (3811 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw:Yes, it's a mystery, whichever way you look at it. How can anyone believe that the intricacies of life assembled themselves without any guidance? How can anyone believe that, before the arrival of our universe, the ALL THAT IS consisted of a single, infinite, eternal self-aware mind? It's enough to drive you to agnosticism.-It drove St. thomas to believe in God. The intricacies of life and the organization of the universe follow laws and plans. Thopse laws and plans had to come from somewhere.
> 
> DAVID: One problem with your reply is lack of a source for information. Where does the information originate that intelligence then uses? ....It means the initial cells were more complete and more complex than origin of life theories generally allow for.
> 
> dhw:Yes again, the cell has to be sentient as well as intelligent. I'm glad you now recognize that individual cells need to have both attributes. But once more you are asking me to explain what no-one on this Earth can explain ... the origin of life and of consciousness.-You are again avoiding the question, which is deeper than OOL or consciousness. Where does the information come from that OOL and consciousness use? Information, as a concept, requires a source that supplies information, especially when (not if) the first living cells, complex as they had to be, operated by using that information. Takes us back to Thomism.-
> dhw:your God having to load the first few cells with billions of programmes to be handed down over billions of years to billions of different organisms. Those that were not preprogrammed had to be specially created. I agree that the initial cells had to be complex, but do you really believe they were THAT complex?-Most of the recent discussions of the form of early life make that assumption.
The simplest single-celled forms now living are highly complex. No one can think of a lesser complex form that could remain as living.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, November 18, 2013, 20:08 (3810 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Yes, it's a mystery, whichever way you look at it. How can anyone believe that the intricacies of life assembled themselves without any guidance? How can anyone believe that, before the arrival of our universe, the ALL THAT IS consisted of a single, infinite, eternal self-aware mind? It's enough to drive you to agnosticism.
DAVID: It drove St. thomas to believe in God. The intricacies of life and the organization of the universe follow laws and plans. Thopse laws and plans had to come from somewhere.-Indeed. That is the mystery. So St Thomas solved it by creating another mystery.-dhw: Yes again, the cell has to be sentient as well as intelligent. I'm glad you now recognize that individual cells need to have both attributes. But once more you are asking me to explain what no-one on this Earth can explain ... the origin of life and of consciousness.
DAVID: You are again avoiding the question, which is deeper than OOL or consciousness. Where does the information come from that OOL and consciousness use? Information, as a concept, requires a source that supplies information, especially when (not if) the first living cells, complex as they had to be, operated by using that information. Takes us back to Thomism.-Why don't you just say "first cause" instead of beating about the bush? And we have debated this ad nauseam. You think the first cause was eternal self-conscious energy. Please explain how eternal energy can be conscious of itself. Nobody can. You have to accept it on faith. If someone says first cause was unconscious energy, which through matter evolved individual consciousnesses, you can say: Please explain how energy can evolve consciousness. Nobody can. You have to accept it on faith. Please explain how chance could assemble a living cell capable of reproduction and evolution. Nobody can. You have to accept it on faith. We only know that the information is there. We don't know how it got there. ALL explanations depend on faith.-dhw: I agree that the initial cells had to be complex, but do you really believe they were THAT complex?
DAVID: Most of the recent discussions of the form of early life make that assumption. The simplest single-celled forms now living are highly complex. No one can think of a lesser complex form that could remain as living.-No question about it, they are highly complex. Some people even believe they are also intelligent, as you have now acknowledged. But how many researchers do you know of who believe that the first living cells contained billions of programmes that were handed down over billions of years to billions of different organisms, to enable single cells to evolve into humans? -Dhw: (under "God & reality"): Fine up to now. But then he goes and spoils it all with this: "It is something or Someone, that must be revealed and, in fact, has been: "In the beginning, was the Logos." Just like all the others, this is a presupposition, or "fiat" (strange use of the word, but certainly more applicable to religion than to science). The usual atheist pots and theist kettles.-DAVID: Just because he used "Logos" you slip away from the point. The laws, principal requirements of life, the mechanics of the universe all follow rules and laws we can define with our minds. There has to be a source of such an underlying organization of information. Only a thoughtful mind could create such a structure of laws and rules.-Alternatively, unconscious energy produces matter, which by its very nature is constantly changing. Maybe matter follows its own natural laws of self-organization. We humans see what happens, and so we extrapolate laws from what we see. If you insist that you can't make laws without a lawmaker, the atheist has every right to ask what made the maker of the laws. If you insist that consciousness had to be designed, who designed the consciousness of the designer? You would like to see this as an escape route. It's not. It's a logical impasse.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 19, 2013, 12:23 (3809 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Please explain how energy can evolve consciousness. Nobody can. You have to accept it on faith. Please explain how chance could assemble a living cell capable of reproduction and evolution. Nobody can. You have to accept it on faith. We only know that the information is there. We don't know how it got there. ALL explanations depend on faith.-We can only look at what we observe within ourselves: only intelligence can produce organized information such as we find in DNA. You have to be willing to take your thinking that far. And then some of us can make the leap, and you don't want to.
> 
> dhw: No question about it, they [cells] are highly complex. Some people even believe they are also intelligent, as you have now acknowledged. But how many researchers do you know of who believe that the first living cells contained billions of programmes that were handed down over billions of years to billions of different organisms, to enable single cells to evolve into humans?-Paul Davies for one. See my recent entry.- 
> dhw: Alternatively, unconscious energy produces matter, which by its very nature is constantly changing. Maybe matter follows its own natural laws of self-organization. We humans see what happens, and so we extrapolate laws from what we see. If you insist that you can't make laws without a lawmaker, the atheist has every right to ask what made the maker of the laws. If you insist that consciousness had to be designed, who designed the consciousness of the designer? You would like to see this as an escape route. It's not. It's a logical impasse.-You are escaping by using infinite regress. There must be an eternal first cause which provides information, not disorganization..

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, November 20, 2013, 14:31 (3808 days ago) @ David Turell

I am combining responses on this thread, as "Different..." and "All Alone" cover the same ground.-dhw: We only know that the information is there. We don't know how it got there. ALL explanations depend on faith.
DAVID: We can only look at what we observe within ourselves: only intelligence can produce organized information such as we find in DNA. You have to be willing to take your thinking that far. And then some of us can make the leap, and you don't want to.-I see no good reason to take the leap. The ground on both sides of the fence is full of deep holes.-dhw: How many researchers do you know of who believe that the first living cells contained billions of programmes that were handed down over billions of years to billions of different organisms, to enable single cells to evolve into humans?
DAVID: Paul Davies for one. See my recent entry. -http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/19/opinion/are-we-alone-in-the-universe.html?nl=todayshe...-DAVIES: "The underlying problem is complexity. Even the simplest bacterium is, at the molecular level, staggeringly complex."
 
No argument from me. No support for you (see below).-Dhw: If [God] didn't preprogramme all the species and all the means of coping with all the different environments and all the different problems, and coming up with one out of all the different choices, he actually intervened personally. You can almost hear Chuck chuckling.
 
DAVID: That is a fairly accurate statement of my suppositions. The reason Chuck would chuckle is he invented a supposition that is falling apart, because he didn't have the knowledge to know any better. Completely eliminate him from your thinking, start fresh and you will end up like I am, accepting the fact that we evolved, but we are still learning how it was done and we are discovering amazing complexity and an intricate coding system filled with enormous amounts of information, the source of which we must guess at.-Yes, we're still learning how it was done (you and I disagree with Darwin about random mutations), and we don't know the source of the coding system (Darwin said he didn't either), and yes to your claims of amazing complexity. But amazing complexity does not have to mean billions of computer programmes passed on from the first automated cells to subsequent automated cells to produce billions and billions of innovations, lifestyles, strategies etc. A cell with its own form of intelligence would also have to be amazingly complex. At least I can quote some scientists in the field who support that idea. You cite Paul Davies as supporting you, but I can find no mention of your divine preprogramming-plus-dabbling anthropocentric theory (do please give me a reference), and he doesn't even accept your attack on Darwin. Here are two quotes from the article you recommended in support of your argument: -DAVIES: "Darwin gave us a powerful explanation of how life on Earth evolved over billions of years, but he would not be drawn out on the question of how life got going in the first place. "One might as well speculate about the origin of matter," he quipped."
DAVIES: "Although the pathway from microbes to complex thinking beings like humans may still be a very difficult one, at least we know the mechanism whereby it happens — Darwinian evolution."-Davies accepts that evolution happened, and so do you. Why, then, this constant sniping at Darwin? What else apart from random mutations and gradualism makes you so hostile?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Wednesday, November 20, 2013, 15:35 (3808 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: A cell with its own form of intelligence would also have to be amazingly complex. At least I can quote some scientists in the field who support that idea. You cite Paul Davies as supporting you, but I can find no mention of your divine preprogramming-plus-dabbling anthropocentric theory (do please give me a reference), and he doesn't even accept your attack on Darwin. -It is my idea, no reference except in my head.
>
> DAVIES: "Although the pathway from microbes to complex thinking beings like humans may still be a very difficult one, at least we know the mechanism whereby it happens — Darwinian evolution."
> 
> dhw: Davies accepts that evolution happened, and so do you. Why, then, this constant sniping at Darwin? What else apart from random mutations and gradualism makes you so hostile?-I have every right to use Davies as I wish. I agree that some process of evolution occurred but it may not be by the simplistic way Darwin proposed from his ignorance of what we now know. The weaknesses in Darwinism are more than gradualism and randon mutations. Most mutations are detrimental. The theory sounds like a simple dramatic process, but: doesn't tell us how species appear (there is a guess); natural selection is another way of saying survival of the fittest, a tautology, so NS is a passive process; fittest is not well-defined philosophically, but most Darwinists use reproductive success, and that may not be the right approch to fitness, if fitness is even a factor. For example the first human forms were very vulnerable, a dangerous step forward. How to interpret fitness here? In summary, I look at all the critical reviews of Darwin and I find them reasonable. You should read them also. The Darwin explanation is too glib, very slick and tells us little except we evolved somehow, and it ain't simple.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Thursday, November 21, 2013, 14:04 (3807 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You cite Paul Davies as supporting you, but I can find no mention of your divine preprogramming-plus-dabbling anthropocentric theory (do please give me a reference), and he doesn't even accept your attack on Darwin. 
DAVID: It is my idea, no reference except in my head.-Thank you for your honest answer.-dhw: Davies accepts that evolution happened, and so do you. Why, then, this constant sniping at Darwin? What else apart from random mutations and gradualism makes you so hostile?
DAVID: I have every right to use Davies as I wish. -Not when you claim that he supports your personal theory of evolution.-DAVID: I agree that some process of evolution occurred but it may not be by the simplistic way Darwin proposed from his ignorance of what we now know. The weaknesses in Darwinism are more than gradualism and randon mutations. Most mutations are detrimental. The theory sounds like a simple dramatic process, but: doesn't tell us how species appear (there is a guess)...-And the guess is random mutations, which we have rejected.-DAVID: [...] natural selection is another way of saying survival of the fittest, a tautology, so NS is a passive process; -Agreed. The title of his book is inaccurate.-DAVID: [...] fittest is not well-defined philosophically, but most Darwinists use reproductive success, and that may not be the right approch to fitness.-"Survival of the fittest" was not Darwin's coinage ... that was Herbert Spencer's. I don't know whether Darwin actually discussed the definition of "fitness", but that is not an argument against the theory of common descent or the process by which organisms change their structure (we don't know how) in order to cope with or exploit the environment.-DAVID: In summary, I look at all the critical reviews of Darwin and I find them reasonable. You should read them also. The Darwin explanation is too glib, very slick and tells us little except we evolved somehow, and it ain't simple.-You have posted a large number, and I also find them very reasonable. The main focus is on mutations and gradualism, plus the crucial one of complexity, which underpins all the ID attacks on Darwin, including your own. But these are not attacks on Darwin at all, who time and again reiterated that his theory was not incompatible with religion. These are attacks on certain "glib", "slick" atheist neo-Darwinists who interpret his theory to suit their own agenda. As for "tells us little except we evolved", that seems to me to be rather a glib, slick way of dismissing a theory that has revolutionized the way people think ... especially when the dismissal comes from someone who lives in a country full of Creationists.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Thursday, November 21, 2013, 14:58 (3807 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: "Survival of the fittest" was not Darwin's coinage ... that was Herbert Spencer's. I don't know whether Darwin actually discussed the definition of "fitness", but that is not an argument against the theory of common descent or the process by which organisms change their structure (we don't know how) in order to cope with or exploit the environment.-I know the origin, but in the climate of opinion today the Darwinists meld together all of the above, and so I tend to argue against it all in one lump sum.-> 
> dhw: The main focus is on mutations and gradualism, plus the crucial one of complexity, which underpins all the ID attacks on Darwin, including your own. But these are not attacks on Darwin at all, who time and again reiterated that his theory was not incompatible with religion. ...... As for "tells us little except we evolved", that seems to me to be rather a glib, slick way of dismissing a theory that has revolutionized the way people think ... especially when the dismissal comes from someone who lives in a country full of Creationists.-I am a form of creationist also. Darin's true contribution was to make reasonable the concept that we evolved, even if his theory is sorely lacking, and not his fault from lack of future knowledge.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, November 22, 2013, 14:10 (3806 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: "Survival of the fittest" was not Darwin's coinage ... that was Herbert Spencer's. I don't know whether Darwin actually discussed the definition of "fitness", but that isnot an argument against the theory of common descent or the process by which organisms change their structure (we don't know how) in order to cope with or exploit the environment.-DAVID: I know the origin, but in the climate of opinion today the Darwinists meld together all of the above, and so I tend to argue against it all in one lump sum.-Which sadly puts you in the same bracket as those atheists who argue against ID "all in one lump sum". Every argument should be taken on its merits. -dhw: The main focus is on mutations and gradualism, plus the crucial one of complexity, which underpins all the ID attacks on Darwin, including your own. But these are not attacks on Darwin at all, who time and again reiterated that his theory was not incompatible with religion. ...... As for "tells us little except we evolved", that seems to me to be rather a glib, slick way of dismissing a theory that has revolutionized the way people think ... especially when the dismissal comes from someone who lives in a country full of Creationists.-DAVID: I am a form of creationist also. Darin's true contribution was to make reasonable the concept that we evolved, even if his theory is sorely lacking, and not his fault from lack of future knowledge.-You said that Darwin "invented a supposition that is falling apart", and the discovery of even more complexity "will destroy Darwinism". Would it not be more accurate to say that Darwin's "reasonable" Theory of Evolution will not fall apart and will not be destroyed, but we are now learning more and more about the complexities that have enabled evolution to take place?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 22, 2013, 19:34 (3806 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: You said that Darwin "invented a supposition that is falling apart", and the discovery of even more complexity "will destroy Darwinism". Would it not be more accurate to say that Darwin's "reasonable" Theory of Evolution will not fall apart and will not be destroyed, but we are now learning more and more about the complexities that have enabled evolution to take place?-No. Darwin made guesses that are not correct. Not his fault. He correctly popularized the concept that we evolved, were not instantly created per Genesis. His theory of the mechanism of evolution is not workable.

Intelligence & Evolution;panpsychism

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 16, 2013, 01:29 (3813 days ago) @ David Turell

A story about a scientist who practices panpsychism and studies the brain:-dhw, enjoy:-http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/11/christof-koch-panpsychism-consciousness/all/

Intelligence & Evolution

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Thursday, October 17, 2013, 17:21 (3842 days ago) @ David Turell

If I might interject here, you two are dickering over a language barrier that needn't exist. -I just the following terminology changes and proposed meanings:-aware(ness) - having perception of the state of something external to the self. 
self-aware - having perception of the state internal to the self.-conscious - the state of being able to reason about the states, internal or external in a solid, concrete manner. (i.e. A dog can identify a smell(external), is cognizant that it is hungry, and can follow the smell to food) This type of cognition requires no abstract or progressive reasoning ability.-Self-Conscious - the state of being aware of your own awareness, including the ability to reason in an abstract manner, form purposeful intentions that are driven by pre-planning, and the conceptual understanding of time in terms of past, present, and future.-I am open to modifications.

--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 17, 2013, 20:51 (3842 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained


> Tony:aware(ness) - having perception of the state of something external to the self. 
> self-aware - having perception of the state internal to the self.
> 
> conscious - the state of being able to reason about the states, internal or external in a solid, concrete manner. (i.e. A dog can identify a smell(external), is cognizant that it is hungry, and can follow the smell to food) This type of cognition requires no abstract or progressive reasoning ability.
> 
> Self-Conscious - the state of being aware of your own awareness, including the ability to reason in an abstract manner, form purposeful intentions that are driven by pre-planning, and the conceptual understanding of time in terms of past, present, and future.
> 
> I am open to modifications.-thank you. Your 'self-conscious' is what I define as consciousness. Of course, if one has consciousness one is also conscious.

Intelligence & Evolution

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Friday, October 18, 2013, 14:48 (3841 days ago) @ David Turell

It is a step-wise progression. Each subsequent step must contain all of the functionality of the previous step and add something that the previous step did not possess.

--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, October 18, 2013, 15:28 (3841 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained

tony: It is a step-wise progression. Each subsequent step must contain all of the functionality of the previous step and add something that the previous step did not possess.-If you mean gradations of difference in definition, I agree. If you are referring to evolution the gaps are huge.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, October 18, 2013, 20:06 (3841 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained

TONY: If I might interject here, you two are dickering over a language barrier that needn't exist.-aware(ness) - having perception of the state of something external to the self. 
self-aware - having perception of the state internal to the self.
conscious - the state of being able to reason about the states, internal or external in a solid, concrete manner. (i.e. A dog can identify a smell(external), is cognizant that it is hungry, and can follow the smell to food) This type of cognition requires no abstract or progressive reasoning ability.
Self-Conscious - the state of being aware of your own awareness, including the ability to reason in an abstract manner, form purposeful intentions that are driven by pre-planning, and the conceptual understanding of time in terms of past, present, and future.
I am open to modifications.-DAVID: thank you. Your 'self-conscious' is what I define as consciousness. Of course, if one has consciousness one is also conscious.-Why consciousness should be the same as self-conscious I don't know. It's along the same mysterious lines as "ants do not have consciousness but they are conscious". However, this is a very gallant piece of refereeing, Tony, which is much appreciated!
 
TONY: It is a step-wise progression. Each subsequent step must contain all of the functionality of the previous step and add something that the previous step did not possess.-The step-wise progression is important, especially since as humans we do not have any means of judging the extent of our fellow creatures' consciousness or even self-consciousness. For instance, I would argue that "the ability to form purposeful intentions that are driven by pre-planning" is apparent in the behaviour of many organisms, but is not necessarily a sign of self-awareness. You only need think of the way many animals, birds and insects prepare for the change of seasons, build defences, store food, enter into symbiotic relationships, strategically hunt their prey...-However, the problem of definition is actually a diversion from the real issue between David and myself. I am suggesting that evolution may be driven by "the intelligent cell" (I've stressed repeatedly that I prefer to use "intelligent" rather than conscious, precisely because David does not distinguish between conscious and self-conscious). Cells are able to absorb, process, and exchange information, communicate with one another, cooperate, take decisions, and solve problems. With these abilities, and allowing for billions of cells cooperating over billions of years, I argue that their combined intelligences may have enabled them progressively to invent the many organs that exist today. That intelligence may or may not have been given to them by a god. David, however, insists that cells are automatons, and so whatever innovations they have come up with can only have been preprogrammed by his god. Our difference is therefore not really one of definition at all. It is David's insistence that cells are automatons, and that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, October 18, 2013, 20:30 (3841 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: David, however, insists that cells are automatons, and so whatever innovations they have come up with can only have been preprogrammed by his god. Our difference is therefore not really one of definition at all. It is David's insistence that cells are automatons, and that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations.-Agreed

Intelligence & Evolution: H. sapiens began?

by David Turell @, Monday, November 18, 2013, 17:51 (3810 days ago) @ David Turell

Picking a past history of a beginning:-http://www.the-scientist.com//?articles.view/articleNo/38008/title/Dating-the-Origin-of-Us/

Intelligence & Evolution

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Friday, November 22, 2013, 15:58 (3806 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: David, however, insists that cells are automatons, and so whatever innovations they have come up with can only have been preprogrammed by his god. Our difference is therefore not really one of definition at all. It is David's insistence that cells are automatons, and that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations.
> 
> Agreed-David defines them at the stage that I labeled aware, which is, the ability to detect and act upon things outside of yourself, but not possessing any form of self-identity or the identity of others beyond a purely mechanical state. -DHW is defining them at the stage that I labeled them at the stage of self-conscious, which is, they are able to reason and plan for the future, which requires abstract thought as well as the awareness of identity of both themselves and others. -The reason I make the distinction is actually immensely practical in the discussion. It provides intermediary steps between the cut and dry definitions. Intelligence has to do more with memory and function than it does understanding and reasoning. An intelligent creature can take in information and apply that information in the context that it was received. What it CAN'T do, is to apply abstract reasoning and future planning based on prior experience. That to me is where the whole house of cards around your intelligent cell falls down. In terms of magnitudes of complexity, the intelligent cell far, far, far exceeds the complexity that we have witnessed, and cells are incredibly complex as they are. The ability to learn, remember, recall, communicate, reason, plan, and apply are all far far beyond the scope of simple intelligence. -In David's view on the other hand, the complexity is not much greater than things we are already able to accomplish with fairly basic computer programs. Define a set of tasks, states, parameters, and variables, and then give the instructs as to how to handle them.

--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Friday, November 22, 2013, 17:52 (3806 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained

dhw: David, however, insists that cells are automatons, and so whatever innovations they have come up with can only have been preprogrammed by his god. Our difference is therefore not really one of definition at all. It is David's insistence that cells are automatons, and that divine preprogramming is the only explanation for innovations.
DAVID: Agreed.
TONY: David defines them [cells] at the stage that I labeled aware, which is, the ability to detect and act upon things outside of yourself, but not possessing any form of self-identity or the identity of others beyond a purely mechanical state. 
DHW is defining them at the stage that I labeled them at the stage of self-conscious, which is, they are able to reason and plan for the future, which requires abstract thought as well as the awareness of identity of both themselves and others.-Welcome back, Tony. I'm afraid you've missed a great deal of this exchange. David insists that cells/cell communities are automatons descended from automatons descended from automatons etc. that were preprogrammed by his God from the very beginning to produce every possible innovation, adaptation, strategy and lifestyle (his version of theistic evolution) ... unless God intervened personally to make changes (= Creationism). He denies them any awareness. I say they have awareness, the ability to communicate, to cooperate, to process information, and to take decisions. But they are NOT self-aware.-TONY: The ability to learn, remember, recall, communicate, reason, plan, and apply are all far far beyond the scope of simple intelligence.-But according to some scientists (Margulis, Albrecht-Buehler, and others I have cited) who have studied the behaviour of bacteria, they do have the abilities I have listed. "Reason" and "plan" are too close to what you call "abstract thinking", but these single cells appear (I can't be dogmatic) to be able to work out for themselves how to adapt to or exploit any number of conditions. From that, I extrapolate the possibility that evolution got underway when the first cells combined to create multicellularity, and from then on cell communities pooled what I call their "intelligence" to create ever more complex organisms. Every organ is a cooperative cellular community which also cooperates with other cell communities within the same body. No, the "intelligent cell" is not a human being, but it is not an automaton. Put single cells together into vast communities, and what "emerges" (emergence being the theory that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts) is an intelligence ultimately extending to the human mind. I have used ants as an analogy to the simpler communities, but I don't want to repeat all the arguments here.-TONY: In David's view on the other hand, the complexity is not much greater than things we are already able to accomplish with fairly basic computer programs. Define a set of tasks, states, parameters, and variables, and then give the instructs as to how to handle them.-Yes, this is a good parallel to David's hypothesis. But the only way it can fit in with the vast spread of the evolutionary bush is if God put the instructions into the FIRST CELLS, providing billions and billions of programmes to be handed down through billions of generations to provide automatic responses to billions of different environments and situations. His alternative is constant intervention. My suggestion is that if God exists, he has provided cells with the "intelligence" to work out their own way of dealing with the billions of environments, challenges and situations that have confronted them throughout the history of life on Earth. Each innovation/ adaptation represents an individual decision by cell communities, thus leading to the colossal variety of life and lifestyles this planet has worked its way through. Do you really believe a fairly basic computer programme inserted into the first living cells could have accomplished this?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 22, 2013, 19:56 (3806 days ago) @ dhw


> TONY: In David's view on the other hand, the complexity is not much greater than things we are already able to accomplish with fairly basic computer programs. Define a set of tasks, states, parameters, and variables, and then give the instructs as to how to handle them.
> 
> dhw: Yes, this is a good parallel to David's hypothesis. But the only way it can fit in with the vast spread of the evolutionary bush is if God put the instructions into the FIRST CELLS, providing billions and billions of programmes to be handed down through billions of generations to provide automatic responses to billions of different environments and situations. His alternative is constant intervention. My suggestion is that if God exists, he has provided cells with the "intelligence" to work out their own way of dealing with the billions of environments, challenges and situations that have confronted them throughout the history of life on Earth. Each innovation/ adaptation represents an individual decision by cell communities, thus leading to the colossal variety of life and lifestyles this planet has worked its way through. Do you really believe a fairly basic computer programme inserted into the first living cells could have accomplished this?-I do. And it is not intelligence, as I have just pointed out. It is information as life's plan plus an intelligent computer program in DNA to carry it out. We are the result of a living computer. You are missing the point. What I admit I cannot determine is total preprogramming or some dabbling. We still don't know enough about the intricacies of DNA/RNA controls over gene expression to make more accurate guesses. Genes only code for protein, but the production and intergration of protein into functional living organs is an enormous jump from there. We are just now beginning to get some sense of the size of comtrols over that jump, and the final jump to running the functionality of the program of that organ by more information or plans in the DNA. Crick's postulate that genes made proteins is correct, but is a narrow statement that shows he couldn't think beyond the end of his nose. Protein manufacture is just a very tiny smidgen of the living process. You do not seem to understand this, based on our previous discussions. Tony understands.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, November 23, 2013, 17:00 (3805 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Each innovation/ adaptation represents an individual decision by cell communities, thus leading to the colossal variety of life and lifestyles this planet has worked its way through. Do you really believe a fairly basic computer programme inserted into the first living cells could have accomplished this?-DAVID: I do. And it is not intelligence, as I have just pointed out. It is information as life's plan plus an intelligent computer program in DNA to carry it out. We are the result of a living computer. You are missing the point. What I admit I cannot determine is total preprogramming or some dabbling. We still don't know enough about the intricacies of DNA/RNA controls over gene expression to make more accurate guesses. Genes only code for protein, but the production and intergration of protein into functional living organs is an enormous jump from there. We are just now beginning to get some sense of the size of comtrols over that jump, and the final jump to running the functionality of the program of that organ by more information or plans in the DNA. Crick's postulate that genes made proteins is correct, but is a narrow statement that shows he couldn't think beyond the end of his nose. Protein manufacture is just a very tiny smidgen of the living process. You do not seem to understand this, based on our previous discussions. Tony understands.-I do not believe that Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler & Co would dispute what you say about the intricacies of the various production and integration processes, and I would not dream of doing so. I dispute your insistence that the cell is an automaton, and that every single step from eukaryotes to humans was either preprogrammed in the first living cells or the result of God's intervention. You have acknowledged that we are barely beginning to understand the mechanism that controls the behaviour of cells, and yet you state with the greatest authority that it is not intelligence. I have quoted several experts in the field who state that it IS intelligence. You have acknowledged that your theory concerning preprogramming and divine dabbling is entirely of your own making, and you cannot cite a single biochemist who supports it. I admire your courage in standing alone against the scientific world, but courage, faith and authoritative statements are not enough to win over an old sceptic like me.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 24, 2013, 00:48 (3805 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: I do not believe that Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler & Co would dispute what you say about the intricacies of the various production and integration processes, and I would not dream of doing so. I dispute your insistence that the cell is an automaton, and that every single step from eukaryotes to humans was either preprogrammed in the first living cells or the result of God's intervention. You have acknowledged that we are barely beginning to understand the mechanism that controls the behaviour of cells, and yet you state with the greatest authority that it is not intelligence. I have quoted several experts in the field who state that it IS intelligence. You have acknowledged that your theory concerning preprogramming and divine dabbling is entirely of your own making, and you cannot cite a single biochemist who supports it. I admire your courage in standing alone against the scientific world, but courage, faith and authoritative statements are not enough to win over an old sceptic like me.-You were born with the potential of great intelligence. you exhibit it now, but how did you get there? You had to absorb a great deal of information both from experience and from being taught. Intelligence requires information in order to work properly. You keep telling me that intelligent cells cells just function as is. Don't they have information to work with? As for support for my position, Michael Behe, Professor at Leigh U. of Black Box fame. I could list others. I haven't bothered because the request from you is off the point of the discussion. You keep avoiding the issue of the fact that intelligent cells operate on information they have implanted within them.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, November 24, 2013, 17:52 (3804 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You have acknowledged that your theory concerning preprogramming and divine dabbling is entirely of your own making, and you cannot cite a single biochemist who supports it. I admire your courage in standing alone against the scientific world, but courage, faith and authoritative statements are not enough to win over an old sceptic like me.-DAVID: You were born with the potential of great intelligence. you exhibit it now, but how did you get there? You had to absorb a great deal of information both from experience and from being taught. Intelligence requires information in order to work properly. You keep telling me that intelligent cells cells just function as is. Don't they have information to work with? -You are juggling with two meanings of the word "information". The information we acquire through experience is what I meant when I referred to a mindless universe packed with information, which only an intelligent mind can perceive. When I pointed this out, you said you meant "the plan by which life operates", i.e. DNA. Human intelligence also operates through such inborn "information". Just like us, cells process the information they absorb from the world around them, but the "information" that constitutes the mechanism whereby they do the processing, communicate with one another, take their decisions etc. is, just like ours, of unknown origin.
 
DAVID: As for support for my position, Michael Behe, Professor at Leigh U. of Black Box fame. I could list others. I haven't bothered because the request from you is off the point of the discussion. You keep avoiding the issue of the fact that intelligent cells operate on information they have implanted within them.
 
There are two subjects under discussion here: 1) your hypothesis that every innovation/adaptation/lifestyle/strategy was preprogrammed in the very first cells by your God, although sometimes he intervened. 2) My hypothesis that evolution has proceeded not through random mutations or preprogramming of the first cells, but through changes engineered by intelligent cells/cell communities.
 
I have searched for any mention by Behe of your God installing billions of innovative programmes into the very first cells, to be passed on through billions of generations. All the websites I have found indicate that he believes in common descent and natural selection, but not in random mutations, and argues that the irreducible complexity (of cells) is an indication of intelligent design. He refuses to be drawn on the nature, motives or methods of a designer. Please give me a reference in which Behe explicitly supports your hypothesis of God preprogramming the very first cells to produce billions of innovations billions of years later.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 24, 2013, 19:01 (3804 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: You are juggling with two meanings of the word "information". The information we acquire through experience is what I meant when I referred to a mindless universe packed with information, which only an intelligent mind can perceive. When I pointed this out, you said you meant "the plan by which life operates", i.e. DNA. Human intelligence also operates through such inborn "information". -I know this. CIA intelligence is information received by spying. This is not the information I am describing. You have not answered the issue. There is information in DNA that runs the plan of life. I am not discussing received information--> 
> dhw; There are two subjects under discussion here: 1) your hypothesis that every innovation/adaptation/lifestyle/strategy was preprogrammed in the very first cells by your God, although sometimes he intervened. 2) My hypothesis that evolution has proceeded not through random mutations or preprogramming of the first cells, but through changes engineered by intelligent cells/cell communities.-I know your proposal. There is no evidence cells are capable of this.
> 
> dhw: I have searched for any mention by Behe of your God installing billions of innovative programmes into the very first cells, to be passed on through billions of generations. All the websites I have found indicate that he believes in common descent and natural selection, but not in random mutations, and argues that the irreducible complexity (of cells) is an indication of intelligent design. He refuses to be drawn on the nature, motives or methods of a designer. Please give me a reference in which Behe explicitly supports your hypothesis of God preprogramming the very first cells to produce billions of innovations billions of years later.-I admit he does not explicitly say that, but his doctrine of irreducible complexity implies it. He is stating that organs can only be made by planning. By the way he is Catholic.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, November 25, 2013, 14:12 (3803 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You are juggling with two meanings of the word "information". The information we acquire through experience is what I meant when I referred to a mindless universe packed with information, which only an intelligent mind can perceive. When I pointed this out, you said you meant "the plan by which life operates", i.e. DNA. Human intelligence also operates through such inborn "information". 
DAVID: I know this. CIA intelligence is information received by spying. This is not the information I am describing. You have not answered the issue. There is information in DNA that runs the plan of life. I am not discussing received information.-Nor am I. Since when was CIA intelligence "inborn"? I referred precisely to what you are referring to. Human intelligence also operates through what you call "the information in DNA that runs the plan of life". You have left out the rest of my response: "Just like us, cells process the information they absorb from the world around them, but the "information" that constitutes the mechanism whereby they do the processing, communicate with one another, take their decisions etc. is, just like ours, of unknown origin." In other words, we do not know the source of our (faculty of) intelligence or theirs, but that does not mean we or they are not intelligent!-You called on Michael Behe to support your claim that God planted billions of programmes into the first cells, to be passed through billions of generations to cover billions of innovations, strategies, lifestyles, strategies.-DAVID: I admit he does not explicitly say that, but his doctrine of irreducible complexity implies it. He is stating that organs can only be made by planning. By the way he is Catholic.-I could just as well argue that "irreducible complexity" implies that the intelligent cell is so complex that it must have been designed. From what I've read, Behe gives individual examples, but nothing remotely resembling your colossal generalization. The Catholic view of evolution is that God guided the whole process, but humans and their souls were the subject of special creation. No mention there either of those umpteen billion programmes. You said earlier that your preprogramming theory was entirely of your own making. Perhaps you should stick to that.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Monday, November 25, 2013, 15:22 (3803 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Since when was CIA intelligence "inborn"? I referred precisely to what you are referring to. Human intelligence also operates through what you call "the information in DNA that runs the plan of life".-That statement is precisely what you are missing. The CIA sends out spies to procure information by a plan developed within the organization. The information developed is external, the plan internal.-> dhw: You have left out the rest of my response: "Just like us, cells process the information they absorb from the world around them, but the "information" that constitutes the mechanism whereby they do the processing, communicate with one another, take their decisions etc. is, just like ours, of unknown origin." In other words, we do not know the source of our (faculty of) intelligence or theirs, but that does not mean we or they are not intelligent!-Left out because it is wrong. DNA in the cells and the cells constituent proteins run by a chemical plan mediated within the genome. As Shapiro notes it is all chemistry and physics. Our brain cells under the same tingt controls, but consciousness and intelligent thought emerges somehow so our brain is at a different level than single cells. You are right about the source of our conscious intelligence.
> 
> dhw: I could just as well argue that "irreducible complexity" implies that the intelligent cell is so complex that it must have been designed.-Why don't you. It is so obvious.-> dhw: From what I've read, Behe gives individual examples, but nothing remotely resembling your colossal generalization. The Catholic view of evolution is that God guided the whole process, but humans and their souls were the subject of special creation. No mention there either of those umpteen billion programmes. You said earlier that your preprogramming theory was entirely of your own making. Perhaps you should stick to that.-I'm stuck with it. I mentioned Behe's religion, with whom I have chatted in person, just as a background to his thinking. He and his church appear to support theistic evolution, which to me implies evolutionary programming ,especially human programming as you point out..

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, November 26, 2013, 19:03 (3802 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You have left out the rest of my response: "Just like us, cells process the information they absorb from the world around them, but the "information" that constitutes the mechanism whereby they do the processing, communicate with one another, take their decisions etc. is, just like ours, of unknown origin." In other words, we do not know the source of our (faculty of) intelligence or theirs, but that does not mean we or they are not intelligent!-DAVID: Left out because it is wrong. DNA in the cells and the cells constituent proteins run by a chemical plan mediated within the genome. As Shapiro notes it is all chemistry and physics. Our brain cells under the same tingt controls, but consciousness and intelligent thought emerges somehow so our brain is at a different level than single cells. You are right about the source of our conscious intelligence.-You dismiss my statement as wrong but then confirm it, except to insist again that the mechanism for cellular processing, communicating and decision-making is all preprogrammed (whereas I said its origin was unknown). You go on to say that human consciousness and intelligent thought emerges SOMEHOW. Of course our brain is at a different level than single cells. It consists of billions of cells, but that does not mean single cells and other cell communities are not SOMEHOW intelligent. Shapiro does not say it is all chemistry and physics, though maybe ALL intelligence is chemistry and physics ("naturalistic" explanation). Nobody knows. He says we can learn a lot from cells about chemistry, physics and evolution, and he also says they are sentient, very intelligent beings. (That doesn't, of course, mean they are human!)
 
dhw: I could just as well argue that "irreducible complexity" implies that the intelligent cell is so complex that it must have been designed.
DAVID: Why don't you. It is so obvious.-It may be (see below), but we are discussing Intelligence and Evolution, and our discussion centres on your refusal to accept the possibility that intelligent cells and cell communities might be a better explanation than the first few cells passing on billions and billions of programmes.
 
dhw: You said earlier that your preprogramming theory was entirely of your own making. Perhaps you should stick to that.
DAVID: I'm stuck with it. I mentioned Behe's religion, with whom I have chatted in person, just as a background to his thinking. He and his church appear to support theistic evolution, which to me implies evolutionary programming ,especially human programming as you point out.-Yes, he and his church explicitly support theistic evolution, and the church supports special creation of humans and their souls. "Evolutionary programming", however, is a much vaguer concept than your preprogramming of the very first cells with billions of innovations to be passed down through billions of generations. Are you beginning to equivocate? The creation of an intelligent cell capable of innumerable combinations leading to innumerable forms of life could also be called evolutionary programming, it can be attributed to your God, and it allows for his dabbling.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 26, 2013, 21:56 (3802 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw:You dismiss my statement as wrong but then confirm it, except to insist again that the mechanism for cellular processing, communicating and decision-making is all preprogrammed (whereas I said its origin was unknown). You go on to say that human consciousness and intelligent thought emerges SOMEHOW.......Nobody knows. He says we can learn a lot from cells about chemistry, physics and evolution, and he also says they are sentient, very intelligent beings. (That doesn't, of course, mean they are human!)-It also doesn't mean they can think and plan on their own-> 
> dhw: "Evolutionary programming", however, is a much vaguer concept than your preprogramming of the very first cells with billions of innovations to be passed down through billions of generations. Are you beginning to equivocate? The creation of an intelligent cell capable of innumerable combinations leading to innumerable forms of life could also be called evolutionary programming, it can be attributed to your God, and it allows for his dabbling.-I haven't changed. I've said all along that theistic evolution is either entirely preprogrammed or there is dabbling, and I can't tell which is correct.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, November 27, 2013, 18:07 (3801 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Dembski confirms that Shapiro sees cooperation between intelligent cells as a key factor in evolution. Doing their own engineering, reworking existing structures and all Shapiro's other "smart" examples take us far, far away from your theory of preprogrammed automatons.
DAVID: In your view. The cooperation is all planned. Do Dembski or Shapiro describe the method of cooperation? No.-From the Shapiro article I quoted originally: "Contemporary research in many laboratories on cell-cell signaling, symbiosis and pathogenesis show that bacteria utilize sophisticated mechanisms for intercellular communication..." One of those laboratories came up with the expressions "bacterial twittering" and "chemical tweeting". Like the rest of us, cells use language (i.e. their own means of communication) as their method of cooperation.-dhw: You have so far dismissed the findings of all these different scientists as "metaphors", "poppycock", "kooky", and "woolly liberal". Is it not possible that during their many years of research they have seen something you haven't?
DAVID: No. I've read most of their material and I still interpret your insistence on making it sould like they are really thinking and planning as overreaching.-Perhaps that is because you like to use words like "think" and "plan", since they can encompass the sort of abstract thinking that only humans appear to be capable of. Then you can pounce and ridicule the idea of ants holding committee meetings. In the same way you like to pounce on "conscious" and identify the term with human self-awareness, so that cells and ants can be disqualified. Just stick to "intelligence".-dhw: More authoritative statements, as if the cells' intelligent behaviour could not possibly be the result of them actually being intelligent...[Shapiro] concludes that they are very intelligent, sentient beings ... and I suspect you are the only person in the world who would take that to be a definition of automatons. As you say, though, your theory is entirely of your own making!-DAVID: The whole ID community interprets this as I do. you are misreading Dembski and Behe.-The ID community argues that cells are too complex not to have been designed. If the whole of the ID community supports your hypothesis that every single innovation, adaptation, strategy and lifestyle was either preprogrammed in the very first cells or the result of God's dabbling, why do you have to resort to subjectively interpreted "implications" instead of concrete references?
 
DAVID: I've said all along that theistic evolution is either entirely preprogrammed or there is dabbling, and I can't tell which is correct.-Judging by the Catholic version, dabbling fits in with the ID approach. Your problem arises when you insist that God preprogrammed the very first cells to pass on billions of innovations etc. (i.e. the non-dabbling component of your hypothesis). The wonderful example you have given of fire ants organizing themselves into rafts illustrates the point.
 
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24654-fire-ants-writhe-to-make-unsinkable-rafts.html-Read the conclusion to that article:
"The idea of conceptualising a swarm of ants as a smart material is quite imaginative," says Scott Turner at Syracuse University in New York. "They were able to show how each of the units of the material are cognitive, aware of their surroundings and respond with a coordinated set of behaviours. This is opening the door to some really interesting questions."-Interesting indeed. Each ant is cognitive, aware, and able to coordinate behaviours (=cooperate). It conforms perfectly to the intelligent cell concept developed by Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler and various other modern scientists. According to you, though, this is not an option. There are only two possibilities: 1) Your God preprogrammed the very first automaton cells to pass on the raft concept, so that billions of years later (after billions of different innovations, adaptations, lifestyles, strategies) automaton fire ants would automatically carry out God's inbuilt instructions on how fire ants should deal with floods. 2) God peeped out from behind his quantum curtain, saw that the automaton ants were in trouble, and decided to give their little grey cells a tweak so that they would unconsciously, unthinkingly, automatically construct their rafts. Your ants don't have the slightest clue what they are doing. They are not individually cognitive or aware or cooperative, no matter what the researchers may say.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Wednesday, November 27, 2013, 18:37 (3801 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: From the Shapiro article I quoted originally: "Contemporary research in many laboratories on cell-cell signaling, symbiosis and pathogenesis show that bacteria utilize sophisticated mechanisms for intercellular communication..." One of those laboratories came up with the expressions "bacterial twittering" and "chemical tweeting". Like the rest of us, cells use language (i.e. their own means of communication) as their method of cooperation.-I know all this. You can't make me change my inerpretation. To popularize his findings Shapiro was on Huntington Post with a series of articles I've followed, using anthropomorhized interpretive writings to sell his ideas to the reading public. So what.
]
> 
> dhw: Perhaps that is because you like to use words like "think" and "plan", since they can encompass the sort of abstract thinking that only humans appear to be capable of. Then you can pounce and ridicule the idea of ants holding committee meetings. In the same way you like to pounce on "conscious" and identify the term with human self-awareness, so that cells and ants can be disqualified. Just stick to "intelligence".-The point is the art and science of instinct is a dead end. We don't know how it works. We can observe it but have no idea of its origins, planned or developed and how was it developed? Evolution can cover all of this and we can see body plan evolution in action but mental action is hidden from us.
> 
> dhw: The ID community argues that cells are too complex not to have been designed. If the whole of the ID community supports your hypothesis that every single innovation, adaptation, strategy and lifestyle was either preprogrammed in the very first cells or the result of God's dabbling, why do you have to resort to subjectively interpreted "implications" instead of concrete references?-Because there are constant concrete references in the website Uncommon Descent, open to everyone. Take a look.
> 
> DAVID: I've said all along that theistic evolution is either entirely preprogrammed or there is dabbling, and I can't tell which is correct.
> 
> dhw: Read the conclusion to that article [ant rafts]:
> "The idea of conceptualising a swarm of ants as a smart material is quite imaginative," says Scott Turner at Syracuse University in New York. "They were able to show how each of the units of the material are cognitive, aware of their surroundings and respond with a coordinated set of behaviours. This is opening the door to some really interesting questions."
> 
> Interesting indeed. Each ant is cognitive, aware, and able to coordinate behaviours (=cooperate). ...According to you, though, this is not an option. ... Your ants don't have the slightest clue what they are doing. They are not individually cognitive or aware or cooperative, no matter what the researchers may say.-You are reading popular science reporting. It reads like ants are human. That is the way non-scientists like to get their science news. And the writers provide it that way. Of course ants are aware, and they cooperate, because they have to to achieve the goal of floating in a river. Their instinct drives each ant to do his part. But each ant has no idea why he is doing it. He simple knows what to do from his genome in the brain.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Thursday, November 28, 2013, 14:31 (3800 days ago) @ David Turell

SHAPIRO: "Contemporary research in many laboratories on cell-cell signaling, symbiosis and pathogenesis show that bacteria utilize sophisticated mechanisms for intercellular communication..." 
DAVID: I know all this. You can't make me change my inerpretation. To popularize his findings Shapiro was on Huntington Post with a series of articles I've followed, using anthropomorhized interpretive writings to sell his ideas to the reading public. So what.-The quote was in answer to your claim that Shapiro did not describe the method of cooperation. He did, as do all the other scientists I have cited. Why would they all deliberately mislead the public? How will that make them popular? Is it not possible that as a result of their research they genuinely believe cells are intelligent?-DAVID: The point is the art and science of instinct is a dead end. We don't know how it works. We can observe it but have no idea of its origins, planned or developed and how was it developed? Evolution can cover all of this and we can see body plan evolution in action but mental action is hidden from us.-Nor do we know how independent intelligence works. We can observe it but have no idea of its origins. Many researchers have observed it in ants and cells, but apparently they are all poppycockists, wooly liberals or popularity-seekers.-dhw: If the whole of the ID community supports your hypothesis [...] why do you have to resort to subjectively interpreted "implications" instead of concrete references?
DAVID: Because there are constant concrete references in the website Uncommon Descent, open to everyone. Take a look.-Please don't subject me to a long search. Just give me one reference to an article explicitly arguing that God implanted billions of programmes into the very first cells, to ensure that billions of years later organisms would produce billions of innovations, adaptations, lifestyles and strategies, with God occasionally dabbling along the way. And please explain why if this is such a common hypothesis, you claimed that it was "entirely of your own making".-DAVID (referring to the fire ant raft): You are reading popular science reporting. It reads like ants are human. That is the way non-scientists like to get their science news. And the writers provide it that way. Of course ants are aware, and they cooperate, because they have to to achieve the goal of floating in a river. Their instinct drives each ant to do his part. But each ant has no idea why he is doing it. He simple knows what to do from his genome in the brain.-Nobody is claiming that ants are human. The claim is that they are aware, cognitive, sentient, able to process information, communicate and cooperate, take and implement decisions, work out strategies ... all of these being signs that they are "intelligent" in their own right. You now agree that they are aware, and in order to cooperate they must have means of communication and the means to process whatever is communicated, so how do you know they are unaware of what and why they are communicating? And do please tell us whether you think God preprogrammed the raft strategy in the very first living cells, or did a dabble to save the ants, Noah-like, from the flood?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 29, 2013, 15:11 (3799 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: The quote was in answer to your claim that Shapiro did not describe the method of cooperation. He did, as do all the other scientists I have cited. Why would they all deliberately mislead the public? How will that make them popular? Is it not possible that as a result of their research they genuinely believe cells are intelligent?-If you look at the following link you will see that cells sence and respond to stimuli by biochemical reactions. They are all set up to be automatic: -Cell Biochemistry (N.B. Right hand mouse click and open link in a new tab or window)
> 
> dhw:Nor do we know how independent intelligence works. We can observe it but have no idea of its origins. Many researchers have observed it in ants and cells,-The form of 'intellligence' they observe is shown in the pdf presented. How evolution did that by chance is very problematic. The systems look like implanted intelligent plans to me.-
> dhw: If the whole of the ID community supports your hypothesis [...] why do you have to resort to subjectively interpreted "implications" instead of concrete references?-Because when they discuss this approach the pdf presented is the kind of evidence they give.-
> dhw:Please don't subject me to a long search. Just give me one reference to an article explicitly arguing that God implanted billions of programmes into the very first cells, to ensure that billions of years later organisms would produce billions of innovations, adaptations, lifestyles and strategies, with God occasionally dabbling along the way. And please explain why if this is such a common hypothesis, you claimed that it was "entirely of your own making".-Not my own making as I have explained. How about you tell me how the cells got so complicated to be the source of life, an emergent phenomenon. The ID folks have studied all of this and I agree with their consclusion.-> 
> dhw: And do please tell us whether you think God preprogrammed the raft strategy in the very first living cells, or did a dabble to save the ants, Noah-like, from the flood?-All I can do is observe and my natures wonders stream of observations on this website show how inventive life is. Is each one a God dabble? Or did God create life to be very inventive on its own? Your choice. Since you stand back as the non-believer What do you think? All Darwin-style evolution?

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, November 30, 2013, 12:25 (3798 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Is it not possible that as a result of their research they [Shapiro, Margulis, Albrecht-Buehler & Co) genuinely believe cells are intelligent?-DAVID: If you look at the following link you will see that cells sence and respond to stimuli by biochemical reactions. They are all set up to be automatic: 
Cell Biochemistry (N.B. Right hand mouse click to open link in a new tab or window)-We also sense and respond to stimuli by biochemical reactions. Diagrams can only illustrate the physical features of the cell/the ant/the human brain. You can't illustrate intelligence any more than you can illustrate God's programme for fire ant rafting. Albrecht-Buehler also illustrates his hypothesis, showing the centrosome and microtubules (subtitled "brain and nerves?"). If human intelligence "emerges" from the interaction of many parts, so might intelligence emerge from the interacting parts of the cell, and from interactions within cell communities. You say cells are set up to be automatic, whereas Shapiro, Margulis et al say they are intelligent. Why should your interpretation carry more weight than theirs? And you still haven't said why you think they are kidding us for the sake of popularity.-DAVID: The form of 'intellligence' they observe is shown in the pdf presented. How evolution did that by chance is very problematic. The systems look like implanted intelligent plans to me.-The pdf explains how cells use chemistry to talk to each other, sense their environment, change their behaviour by exchanging data and coordinating, and make different decisions. It is purely a matter of interpretation whether these actions are controlled by an autonomous intelligence or an implanted programme. You needn't keep flogging the dead horse of chance, as that is not an issue between us. (See below for origin of "the systems".)-dhw: If the whole of the ID community supports your hypothesis [...] why do you have to resort to subjectively interpreted "implications" instead of concrete references?
DAVID: Because when they discuss this approach the pdf presented is the kind of evidence they give.-This kind of evidence shows only that the cell seems too complex not to have been designed. It has nothing to do with your hypothesis that God preprogrammed the first cells to pass on billions...oh well, see below.-dhw: Just give me one reference to an article explicitly arguing that God implanted billions of programmes into the very first cells, to ensure that billions of years later organisms would produce billions of innovations, adaptations, lifestyles and strategies, with God occasionally dabbling along the way. And please explain why if this is such a common hypothesis, you claimed that it was "entirely of your own making".-DAVID: Not my own making as I have explained. How about you tell me how the cells got so complicated to be the source of life, an emergent phenomenon. The ID folks have studied all of this and I agree with their consclusion.-You agree with their conclusion that cells were designed. But you seem to be out on your own with the hypothesis summarized above. I admire you for your individuality and your faith. As for your attempt to turn the tables on me, I do not profess to have an answer, but I have offered three equally unlikely possibilities: God, chance and panpsychist evolution. The "intelligent cell" hypothesis can be applied to all three, and remember I have suggested it in order to explain the process of evolution.
 
dhw: And do please tell us whether you think God preprogrammed the raft strategy in the very first living cells, or did a dabble to save the ants, Noah-like, from the flood?-DAVID: All I can do is observe and my natures wonders stream of observations on this website show how inventive life is. Is each one a God dabble? Or did God create life to be very inventive on its own? Your choice. Since you stand back as the non-believer What do you think? All Darwin-style evolution?-I love the stream of Nature's Wonders that you offer us, and they are an education in themselves. The above alternatives have left out your God's preprogramming the first cells with all those billions of innovations etc. "Each one a God dabble" = Creationism, which I find just as difficult to swallow. I am therefore inclined to believe that the vast variety of life produced by evolution can only have come through an inventive mechanism within the cells themselves (life itself doesn't invent) ... a mechanism permitting a huge range of combinations, very much dictated by the demands or opportunities presented by a randomly changing environment. This would certainly explain Darwin-style evolution, although the process is very different from what he envisaged ... mutations intelligently engineered from within the cells themselves, and not random. The origin of the "intelligent cell" - if the hypothesis is true - remains a mystery (see the three options above), but Darwin's theory also avoids speculation on the origin of life itself.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 30, 2013, 15:59 (3798 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: We also sense and respond to stimuli by biochemical reactions. Diagrams can only illustrate the physical features of the cell/the ant/the human brain. You can't illustrate intelligence any more than you can illustrate God's programme for fire ant rafting....You say cells are set up to be automatic, whereas Shapiro, Margulis et al say they are intelligent. Why should your interpretation carry more weight than theirs? And you still haven't said why you think they are kidding us for the sake of popularity. -As you can see from the pdf the biochemical processes are very complex molecular reactions. True neurons are a requirement for the emergence of true consciousness. The cells are not conscious, they are automaticaly reactive as shown by the diagrams. Shapiro says cells are sentient, not a word that gives you a conscious result. He describes automatic response mechanisms. My interpretation has as much weight as his. Read Larry Moran on the subject of Shapiro's interpretations of evoltion. Bias is as bias does. I've approached this with an open mind and my current bias is doe to honest conclusions. Popular science literature requires 'humanized' simplification. Dawkins keeps reminding his readers, it only 'looks' designed.
> 
> DAVID: The form of 'intellligence' they observe is shown in the pdf presented. How evolution did that by chance is very problematic. The systems look like implanted intelligent plans to me.
> 
> dhw: The pdf explains how cells use chemistry to talk to each other, sense their environment, change their behaviour by exchanging data and coordinating, and make different decisions. It is purely a matter of interpretation whether these actions are controlled by an autonomous intelligence or an implanted programme.-Autonomous intelligence requires a source mechanism. Please supply one. I think out of thin air is appropriate and acceptable-> 
> dhw: You agree with their conclusion that cells were designed. But you seem to be out on your own with the hypothesis summarized above.... As for your attempt to turn the tables on me, I do not profess to have an answer, but I have offered three equally unlikely possibilities: God, chance and panpsychist evolution. The "intelligent cell" hypothesis can be applied to all three, and remember I have suggested it in order to explain the process of evolution.-Admirable effort, but no basis is research. Philosophy equal to the uselessness of the zeno paradox, but defended with the zeal of Dr. Henry..
> 
> dhw: And do please tell us whether you think God preprogrammed the raft strategy in the very first living cells, or did a dabble to save the ants, Noah-like, from the flood?-Stop flogging. I have admitted I have no way of telling. My point from Natures wonders is the inventiveness of living things. It doesn't tell us how the inventions are created. 
> 
> DHW: I love the stream of Nature's Wonders that you offer us, and they are an education in themselves. ... I am therefore inclined to believe that the vast variety of life produced by evolution can only have come through an inventive mechanism within the cells themselves (life itself doesn't invent) ... a mechanism permitting a huge range of combinations, very much dictated by the demands or opportunities presented by a randomly changing environment. This would certainly explain Darwin-style evolution, although the process is very different from what he envisaged ... mutations intelligently engineered from within the cells themselves, and not random. The origin of the "intelligent cell" - if the hypothesis is true - remains a mystery (see the three options above), but Darwin's theory also avoids speculation on the origin of life itself.-OK, to avoid speculations, life arrives miraculously, cells are miraculously intelligently self-inventive, and it all started from a miraculous big bang. What is the formula for faith: x-times miracles = faith? Parsimony tells us only one First cause is needed.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, December 01, 2013, 16:31 (3797 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: As you can see from the pdf the biochemical processes are very complex molecular reactions. True neurons are a requirement for the emergence of true consciousness. The cells are not conscious, they are automaticaly reactive as shown by the diagrams. Shapiro says cells are sentient, not a word that gives you a conscious result. He describes automatic response mechanisms. My interpretation has as much weight as his.
 
1) No-one is denying the complexity of the biochemical processes involved in reactions. The issue is whether decisions are preprogrammed/dabbled with by your God, or worked out by the cells/cell communities themselves. 2) As usual, you prefer to use "conscious" instead of "intelligent", which enables you to equivocate over the meaning of "conscious". What is "true" consciousness? There are different levels of consciousness. 3) The diagrams CAN only show reactions. They can't show whether cellular decisions are taken automatically or intelligently. 4) You cling to "sentient" and ignore "very intelligent". Note that Shapiro calls them sentient beings, not sentient automatons. 5) I have no problem with your claim that your interpretation has as much weight as his. My problem is your denial that his interpretation (and that of several others in this specialized field) has as much weight as yours.-DAVID: Bias is as bias does. I've approached this with an open mind and my current bias is doe to honest conclusions. Popular science literature requires 'humanized' simplification.
 
I have never doubted the honesty of your conclusions. Nor do I doubt the honesty of Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler and the rest, and I find it surprising that your open-mindedness should permit you to dismiss their many years of research as merely an attempt to gain popularity. They are all unequivocal in their conclusion that cells are intelligent.-dhw: The pdf explains how cells use chemistry to talk to each other, sense their environment, change their behaviour by exchanging data and coordinating, and make different decisions. It is purely a matter of interpretation whether these actions are controlled by an autonomous intelligence or an implanted programme.
DAVID: Autonomous intelligence requires a source mechanism. Please supply one. I think out of thin air is appropriate and acceptable.-Certainly in the case of your God, "out of thin air" seems to be appropriate and acceptable. If intelligence "emerges" from interaction between cells, perhaps it can also emerge from interaction between the components of individual cells. "Intelligence is a fractal property or/and an emergent property: ...Intelligent ecologies contain intelligent populations, which contain intelligent organisms, which contain intelligent cells, which contain intelligent compartments, which contain...and so forth." (Albrecht-Buehler). He thinks the source mechanism or "brain" is the centrosome.
 
dhw: I have offered three equally unlikely possibilities: God, chance and panpsychist evolution. The "intelligent cell" hypothesis can be applied to all three, and remember I have suggested it in order to explain the process of evolution.
DAVID: Admirable effort, but no basis is research. Philosophy equal to the uselessness of the zeno paradox, but defended with the zeal of Dr. Henry.-You say it has no basis in research because you are not prepared to take Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler and all the other researchers seriously. And yet you have failed to provide one single researcher who backs your zealous defence of your theory of billions of innovative, adaptive, strategic programmes divinely inserted into the first cells.-dhw: And do please tell us whether you think God preprogrammed the raft strategy in the very first living cells, or did a dabble to save the ants, Noah-like, from the flood?
DAVID: Stop flogging. I have admitted I have no way of telling. My point from Natures wonders is the inventiveness of living things. It doesn't tell us how the inventions are created.-But you keep telling us how you think the inventions were created: you insist that they were either preprogrammed billions of years ago, or God dabbled. And you refuse point blank to consider the possibility that your God might have created an intelligent mechanism that did its own inventing.-DHW: This would certainly explain Darwin-style evolution, although the process is very different from what he envisaged ... mutations intelligently engineered from within the cells themselves, and not random. The origin of the "intelligent cell" - if the hypothesis is true - remains a mystery (see the three options above), but Darwin's theory also avoids speculation on the origin of life itself.
DAVID: OK, to avoid speculations, life arrives miraculously, cells are miraculously intelligently self-inventive, and it all started from a miraculous big bang. What is the formula for faith: x-times miracles = faith? Parsimony tells us only one First cause is needed.-Once again, you prefer to ignore the fact that I am offering a hypothesis to explain the course of evolution. One possible explanation of the "intelligent cell" is that God created it, so that gives you your one First Cause.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, December 01, 2013, 21:21 (3797 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: I have no problem with your claim that your interpretation has as much weight as his [Shapiro]. My problem is your denial that his interpretation (and that of several others in this specialized field) has as much weight as yours.-They have a right to their own interpretations. All I am saying is what they provide as information are a series of automatic biochemcial reactions to stimuli.
> 
> dhw:I have never doubted the honesty of your conclusions..... They are all unequivocal in their conclusion that cells are intelligent.-The cells follow intelligent plans. That is a different level of interpretation of the cells responses.-> DAVID: Autonomous intelligence requires a source mechanism. Please supply one. I think out of thin air is appropriate and acceptable.
> 
> dhw: "Intelligence is a fractal property or/and an emergent property: ...Intelligent ecologies contain intelligent populations, which contain intelligent organisms, which contain intelligent cells, which contain intelligent compartments, which contain...and so forth." (Albrecht-Buehler). He thinks the source mechanism or "brain" is the centrosome.-Note the word "he thinks". I think also. Of course decisions are made inthe centrosome, but I think they are all automatic guided by the strength of the stimulous to pipck a planned response. Believe me, he cannot deny that thought.
> 
> dhw; You say it has no basis in research because you are not prepared to take Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler and all the other researchers seriously.-Of course I take them seriously. I use their research to reach my conclusions.-> dhw: And yet you have failed to provide one single researcher who backs your zealous defence of your theory of billions of innovative, adaptive, strategic programmes divinely inserted into the first cells.-I've told you over and over all the ID folks feel like I do. Please take my word for it. I know what I have read. -> 
> dhw: But you keep telling us how you think the inventions were created: you insist that they were either preprogrammed billions of years ago, or God dabbled. And you refuse point blank to consider the possibility that your God might have created an intelligent mechanism that did its own inventing.-I've admitted that, when I point out how clever life is at coming up with natures wonders.
> 
> dhw: Once again, you prefer to ignore the fact that I am offering a hypothesis to explain the course of evolution. One possible explanation of the "intelligent cell" is that God created it, so that gives you your one First Cause.-Fine, I accept that possibility. What you have been doing is conjuring up intelligent cells with no real explanation, while downgrading the chance mechanism of Darwin. I'll accept it gratefully. Now you sound like an IDer.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, December 02, 2013, 13:20 (3796 days ago) @ David Turell

I will try to summarize our discussion, since David's last post offers some important concessions.-We have been locked in battle for many weeks over the concept of the "intelligent cell" as a possible explanation for the course of evolution. David believes that cells behave automatically, and God has preprogrammed them or dabbled with them. However, he takes seriously the research carried out by Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler and others, who conclude that cells are indeed intelligent. In his previous post, still in the context of the intelligent cell, he again raised the question of First Cause.-Dhw: I am offering a hypothesis to explain the course of evolution. One possible explanation of the "intelligent cell" is that God created it, so that gives you your one First Cause.-DAVID: Fine, I accept that possibility. What you have been doing is conjuring up intelligent cells with no real explanation, while downgrading the chance mechanism of Darwin. I'll accept it gratefully. Now you sound like an IDer.-As an agnostic, I am open to all options though believing in none. I gratefully accept your gracious acceptance that the intelligent cell offers a possible explanation for the course of evolution, and using the mental powers conferred on me by Professor Henry, I reach across the Atlantic to shake your mental hand.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Monday, December 02, 2013, 13:35 (3796 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: I will try to summarize our discussion, since David's last post offers some important concessions.
> 
> We have been locked in battle for many weeks over the concept of the "intelligent cell" as a possible explanation for the course of evolution. David believes that cells behave automatically, and God has preprogrammed them or dabbled with them. However, he takes seriously the research carried out by Margulis, Shapiro, Albrecht-Buehler and others, who conclude that cells are indeed intelligent. In his previous post, still in the context of the intelligent cell, he again raised the question of First Cause.
> 
> As an agnostic, I am open to all options though believing in none. I gratefully accept your gracious acceptance that the intelligent cell offers a possible explanation for the course of evolution, -All I have been trying to do is have you accept the theory that the way the cells seem intelligent is that they operate from intelligent instructions (information) in their genomes, with tightly controlled responses to stimuli. Otherwise cancer.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, December 03, 2013, 16:58 (3795 days ago) @ David Turell

Dhw: I am offering a hypothesis to explain the course of evolution. One possible explanation of the "intelligent cell" is that God created it, so that gives you your one First Cause.-DAVID: Fine, I accept that possibility. What you have been doing is conjuring up intelligent cells with no real explanation, while downgrading the chance mechanism of Darwin. I'll accept it gratefully. Now you sound like an IDer. -Dhw: As an agnostic, I am open to all options though believing in none. I gratefully accept your gracious acceptance that the intelligent cell offers a possible explanation for the course of evolution...-DAVID: All I have been trying to do is have you accept the theory that the way the cells seem intelligent is that they operate from intelligent instructions (information) in their genomes, with tightly controlled responses to stimuli. Otherwise cancer.-Oh! So now we are back to "the cells seem intelligent". Let me try once more. Allowing for all the automatic processes that take place within ALL living organisms, including our highly intelligent selves, do you accept the possibility (I ask no more) that cells not only seem intelligent but actually are intelligent in their own right, as per Shapiro, Margulis, Albrecht-Buehler & Co., with your own proviso that God created the mechanism that gave them that intelligence?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, December 03, 2013, 17:23 (3795 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Oh! So now we are back to "the cells seem intelligent". Let me try once more. Allowing for all the automatic processes that take place within ALL living organisms, including our highly intelligent selves, do you accept the possibility (I ask no more) that cells not only seem intelligent but actually are intelligent in their own right, as per Shapiro, Margulis, Albrecht-Buehler & Co., with your own proviso that God created the mechanism that gave them that intelligence?-No, I will never leave the point that cells operate under a plan that contains intelligently supplied information. It makes them seem independently intelligent.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Wednesday, December 04, 2013, 14:52 (3794 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: No, I will never leave the point that cells operate under a plan that contains intelligently supplied information. It makes them seem independently intelligent.-Turell says cells are automatons
That have an IQ of zero.
"No, they're intelligent," say Margulis,
Albrecht-Buehler, Shapiro.-"Cells only seem intelligent,"
Says Turell, as if he knew.
Ah well, perhaps we only seem
To be intelligent too.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Wednesday, December 04, 2013, 15:32 (3794 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: No, I will never leave the point that cells operate under a plan that contains intelligently supplied information. It makes them seem independently intelligent.
> 
> dhw: Turell says cells are automatons
> That have an IQ of zero.
> "No, they're intelligent," say Margulis,
> Albrecht-Buehler, Shapiro.
> 
> "Cells only seem intelligent,"
> Says Turell, as if he knew.
> Ah well, perhaps we only seem
> To be intelligent too.-Certainly true of some humans

Intelligence & Evolution: pea plant risk taking

by David Turell @, Friday, July 01, 2016, 02:18 (2855 days ago) @ dhw

If a pea plant has rooting choices it will chose to take a risk if the supply of nutrients is dice:-http://phys.org/news/2016-06-pea-ability-gamblea.html-"An international team of scientists from Oxford University, UK, and Tel-Hai College, Israel, has shown that pea plants can demonstrate sensitivity to risk - namely, that they can make adaptive choices that take into account environmental variance, an ability previously unknown outside the animal kingdom. -"In the study, published in the journal Current Biology, pea plants were grown with their roots split between two pots, thus facing the decision of which pot to prioritise.-"In a preliminary experiment, the researchers showed that the plants grew more roots in a pot endowed with higher levels of nutrients - an adaptive response similar to animals allocating greater foraging effort to richer food patches. In a series of follow-up experiments, they then split the roots of each plant between two pots that had equal average nutrient concentrations, but where one pot had a constant level and the other a variable level, asking whether plants would 'prefer' to grow more roots in one or the other.-"Based on theoretical analyses of how decision makers such as humans or animals respond to similar choices, the researchers predicted that plants might prefer the variable pot (ie be risk prone) when the average nutrient level was low, and the constant pot (ie be risk averse) when average nutrient level was high.-"This is because when the average nutrient level is below what is required for the plant to thrive, the variable option at least offers the chance to 'gamble' on a run of good luck. On the other hand, when average conditions are good, it makes sense to take the safe option.-"The researchers found that this is exactly what the pea plants did.-***-"'To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of an adaptive response to risk in an organism without a nervous system. We do not conclude that plants are intelligent in the sense used for humans or other animals, but rather that complex and interesting behaviours can theoretically be predicted as biological adaptations - and executed by organisms - on the basis of processes evolved to exploit natural opportunities efficiently.-"'We do not yet know how the plants' sense variance functions, or even if their physiology is specifically adapted to respond to risk, but the findings lead us to look even at pea plants as dynamic strategists and to model their decision processes just as one would model an intelligent agent."-***-"The pea plants were 'risk prone", meaning they grew more roots in the unpredictable pot, when the mean nutrient concentration of both pots was below 0.01g/L. They were 'risk averse", meaning they grew more roots in the constant pot, when the mean nutrient concentration was 0.15g/L or higher.-"Efrat Dener, now a master's student at Ben Gurion University, Israel, and the study's first author, said: "Like most people, including even experienced farmers and gardeners, I used to look at plants as passive receivers of circumstances. This line of experiments illustrates how wrong that view is: living organisms are designed by natural selection to exploit their opportunities, and this often implies a great deal of flexibility."-Comment: I'm not surprised at the findings. In the unpredictable pot at low concentration, more roots means more root searching for scant food, while at the higher level the plant is getting a satisfactory supply so extra root growth supplies more energy. All could be based on sensory programming. As usual the living organisms are very inventive in arranging for survival.

Intelligence & Evolution: pea plant risk taking

by dhw, Friday, July 01, 2016, 12:23 (2855 days ago) @ David Turell

QUOTE: "Efrat Dener, now a master's student at Ben Gurion University, Israel, and the study's first author, said: "Like most people, including even experienced farmers and gardeners, I used to look at plants as passive receivers of circumstances. This line of experiments illustrates how wrong that view is: living organisms are designed by natural selection to exploit their opportunities, and this often implies a great deal of flexibility."-David's comment: I'm not surprised at the findings. In the unpredictable pot at low concentration, more roots means more root searching for scant food, while at the higher level the plant is getting a satisfactory supply so extra root growth supplies more energy. All could be based on sensory programming. As usual the living organisms are very inventive in arranging for survival.-As always, I must thank you for the rich array of articles you are presenting to us. There isn't time to comment on all of them, and in many cases there is no need to do so anyway, but they really are appreciated. In this particular case, I cannot resist returning to the panpsychist view that all living organisms are possessed of some form of quasi-consciousness. I agree with the author that plants are not mere “passive receivers”, though I disagree that they are “designed by natural selection”. Natural selection never designed anything: it can only select from what is already in existence. I like your comment: “As usual the living organisms are very inventive in arranging for survival.” Yes, indeed. It may even be that your God does not need to "help" them, because he has given them the means to do the inventing for themselves.

Intelligence & Evolution: pea plant risk taking

by David Turell @, Friday, July 01, 2016, 18:38 (2854 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: I like your comment: “As usual the living organisms are very inventive in arranging for survival.” Yes, indeed. It may even be that your God does not need to "help" them, because he has given them the means to do the inventing for themselves. - Very possible, but since I think God maintains control. such inventing is programmed to follow his wishes.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Friday, November 22, 2013, 19:30 (3806 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained


> Tony: The reason I make the distinction is actually immensely practical in the discussion. It provides intermediary steps between the cut and dry definitions. Intelligence has to do more with memory and function than it does understanding and reasoning. The ability to learn, remember, recall, communicate, reason, plan, and apply are all far far beyond the scope of simple intelligence. 
> 
> Tony: In David's view on the other hand, the complexity is not much greater than things we are already able to accomplish with fairly basic computer programs. Define a set of tasks, states, parameters, and variables, and then give the instructs as to how to handle them.-Thank you and right on the money.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Saturday, November 23, 2013, 17:12 (3805 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained

You stated with similar authority to David's that "the whole house of cards around your intelligent cell falls down" because "the ability to learn, remember, recall, communicate, reason, plan and apply are all far far beyond the scope of simple intelligence". Reasoning and planning are words I would certainly hesitate to use because they are too closely linked to abstract thinking, but I have gone back over the various threads to repeat the scientific support for the concept of the intelligent cell. Here are four quotes from different sources that suggest this is far from being a house of cards:-1) "While the number of bacteria in a colony can be more than 100 times the number of people on Earth, bacteria are twittering (" bacterial twittering" or "chemical tweeting") to make sure they all know what they all doing (by exchanging "chemical tweets"); each cell is both an actor and a spectator in the bacterial Game of Life. Acting jointly, these tiny organisms can sense the environment, process information, solve problems and make decisions so as to thrive in harsh environments. In better times, when exposed to an environment containing abundant nutrients, instead of rushing to exhaust the available resources, as human communities often do, bacteria save for the future and make sure to be prepared for hard times that might befall them in the future."
www.tamar.tau.ac.il/~eshel/html/intelligence_of_Bacteria-html
(I've had trouble getting back to this one.)-2) "So how does a colony of bacteria decide which genetic mutations afford the greatest chance of survival and expansion? Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine, hold that bacteria communicate among themselves, writing, "It is clearly essential to figure out how the bacteria can obtain semantic meaning, so as to initiate, for example, the proper context-dependent transitions between different operating states of the genome (370-371)." Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them, Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine do conceive that bacteria have shared social communicative abilities, which, because of the nature of language, implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings of their codes (371). Based on these speculations, it would indeed appear that not only are bacteria sentient (by choosing), and intelligent (by communicating), but that they are also socially organized (but civilized?)."
www.justburrus.blogspot.com/2010/03/bacterial-sentience-intelligence.html-3) MARGULIS: People think that if you can't talk, you can't be intelligent. But you know that's not true if you have a dog. You can communicate with them without talking. If you define intelligence as speaking American English, well maybe they're not. But if you define it in the much more broad sense of behaviors that are modified on the individual level, that involve choice and change and response to the environment, there's every bit of evidence that intelligence is a property of life from the very beginning. It's been modified, of course, and changed and amplified, even, but it's an intrinsic property of cells.
www.astrobio.net/interview/211/bacterial-intelligence-4) Shapiro: 40 years experience as a bacterial geneticist have taught me that bacteria possess many cognitive, computational and evolutionary capabilities unimaginable in the first six decades of the 20th Century. Analysis of cellular processes such as metabolism, regulation of protein synthesis, and DNA repair established that bacteria continually monitor their external and internal environments and compute functional outputs based on information provided by their sensory apparatus. Studies of genetic recombination, lysogeny, antibiotic resistance and my own work on transposable elements revealed multiple widespread bacterial systems for mobilizing and engineering DNA molecules. Examination of colony development and organization led me to appreciate how extensive multicellular collaboration is among the majority of bacterial species. Contemporary research in many laboratories on cell-cell signaling, symbiosis and pathogenesis show that bacteria utilize sophisticated mechanisms for intercellular communication and even have the ability to commandeer the basic cell biology of "higher" plants and animals to meet their own needs. This remarkable series of observations requires us to revise basic ideas about biological information processing and recognize that even the smallest cells are sentient beings.
http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/2006.ExeterMeeting.pdf
http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/bacteria.html-You might also care to google Guenther Albrecht-Buehler, who has written a book on the subject.

Tags:
For Tony

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 24, 2013, 01:18 (3805 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: I have gone back over the various threads to repeat the scientific support for the concept of the intelligent cell. Here are four quotes from different sources that suggest this is far from being a house of cards:
> 
> 1) "While the number of bacteria in a colony can be more than 100 times the number of people on Earth, bacteria are twittering (" bacterial twittering" or "chemical tweeting") to make sure they all know what they all doing (by exchanging "chemical tweets"); each cell is both an actor and a spectator in the bacterial Game of Life. Acting jointly, these tiny organisms can sense the environment, process information, solve problems and make decisions so as to thrive in harsh environments. In better times, when exposed to an environment containing abundant nutrients, instead of rushing to exhaust the available resources, as human communities often do, bacteria save for the future and make sure to be prepared for hard times that might befall them in the future."
> www.tamar.tau.ac.il/~eshel/html/intelligence_of_Bacteria-html
> (I've had trouble getting back to this one.)-All this is done by chemical tweets!~!!!! All automatic reactions according to the information they operate on.
> 
> 2) "So how does a colony of bacteria decide which genetic mutations afford the greatest chance of survival and expansion? .....Though the researchers do not understand the process(es) by which bacteria code messages and send them, Jacob, Becker, Shapira, and Levine do conceive that bacteria have shared social communicative abilities, which, because of the nature of language, implies a shared knowledge of the semantic meanings of their codes (371). Based on these speculations, it would indeed appear that not only are bacteria sentient (by choosing), and intelligent (by communicating), but that they are also socially organized (but civilized?)."
> www.justburrus.blogspot.com/2010/03/bacterial-sentience-intelligence.html-'Semantics' means a study of meanings, and they can chemically sense what they need to know. Sentient simply means responsive to or conscious of sense impressions, to quote the dictionary. All of this can be accomplished by programmed chemical reactions following or guided by the information in a plan of action.--> 
> 3) MARGULIS: People think that if you can't talk, you can't be intelligent. But you know that's not true if you have a dog. You can communicate with them without talking. ..if you define it in the much more broad sense of behaviors that are modified on the individual level, that involve choice and change and response to the environment, there's every bit of evidence that intelligence is a property of life from the very beginning. ... it's an intrinsic property of cells.
> www.astrobio.net/interview/211/bacterial-intelligence-Yes operating by chemical twittering
> 
> 4) Shapiro: 40 years experience as a bacterial geneticist have taught me that bacteria possess many cognitive, computational and evolutionary capabilities unimaginable in the first six decades of the 20th Century. ..... This remarkable series of observations requires us to revise basic ideas about biological information processing and recognize that even the smallest cells are sentient beings.
> http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/2006.ExeterMeeting.pdf
> http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/bacteria.html-
Same use of sentient. I know what he means from his book.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Sunday, November 24, 2013, 18:08 (3804 days ago) @ David Turell

"While the number of bacteria in a colony can be more than 100 times the number of people on Earth, bacteria are twittering (" bacterial twittering" or "chemical tweeting") to make sure they all know what they all doing (by exchanging "chemical tweets")" www.tamar.tau.ac.il/~eshel/html/intelligence_of_Bacteria-html-DAVID: All that is done by chemical tweets!~!!! All automatic reactions according to the information they operate on.-You are determined to ignore the context of each statement and the conclusions these scientists draw. Chemical tweets are the bacterial equivalent of our language. "To make sure they all know what they are doing" = communication. "Act jointly", "process information", "solve problems", "make decisions", "save for the future"...You could hardly wish for clearer signs of intelligence.-DAVID: (referring to:) www.justburrus.blogspot.com/2010/03/bacterial-sentience-intelligence.html "Semantics" means a study of meanings, and they [bacteria] can chemically sense what they need to know.-That is not the point. Chemical sensing does not require "shared social communicative abilities". Humans also sense things chemically, but we need language to communicate our knowledge to others, we need semantics to ensure that the correct meaning is communicated, and we need efficient communication to ensure successful cooperation. All of these are signs of intelligence.-DAVID: "Sentient" simply means responsive to or conscious of sense impressions." -True. We are also sentient. And we are also able to process those impressions, and share them with others of our kind, so we are "intelligent (by communicating)" and "socially organized". If you insist that all the qualities our scientists have listed are automatic, you may as well tell us that all organisms including humans are automatons.-MARGULIS: "...intelligence is a property of life from the very beginning...it's an intrinsic property of cells." www.astrobio.net/interview/211/bacterial-intelligence
DAVID: Yes operating by chemical twittering.-That's right - cells are intelligent and communicate by chemical twittering.-SHAPIRO: This remarkable series of observations requires us to revise basic ideas about biological information processing and recognize that even the smallest cells are sentient beings.-http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/2006.ExeterMeeting.pdf
http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/bacteria.html -DAVID: Same use of sentient. I know what he means from his book.-Perhaps you should read the article instead.
QUOTE: "[...] recognition of sophisticated information processing capacities in prokaryotic cells represents another step away from the anthropocentric view of the universe that dominated pre-scientific thinking. Not only are we no longer at the physical center of the universe; our status as the only sentient beings on the planet is dissolving as we learn more about how smart even the smallest living cells can be." -"Sentient" and "smart", as the rest of this article makes very clear with numerous examples of bacterial sophistication and cognitive abilities. He calls bacteria "cognitive entities", and concludes: 
"The selected examples of bacterial "smarts" I have given show convincingly that these small cells are incredibly sophisticated at coordinating processes involving millions of individual events and at making them precise and reliable. In addition, the astonishing versatility and mastery bacteria display in managing the biosphere's geochemical and thermodynamic transformations indicates that we have a great deal to learn about chemistry, physics and evolution from our small, but very intelligent, prokaryotic relatives."-Not just intelligent, but "very intelligent". Nowhere in this article have I found a single mention of the word automaton. The nearest is the following: "......conventional wisdom is an extension of the mechanistic views that came to dominate biological thought in the early years of the 20th Century." His article is opposed to this conventional wisdom. Another of your supporters letting you down?

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 24, 2013, 19:29 (3804 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: SHAPIRO: This remarkable series of observations requires us to revise basic ideas about biological information processing and recognize that even the smallest cells are sentient beings.
> 
> http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/2006.ExeterMeeting.pdf
> http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/bacteria.html 
> 
> DAVID: Same use of sentient. I know what he means from his book.
> 
> Perhaps you should read the article instead.-I looked at his abstract:-"bacteria continually monitor their external and internal environments and compute functional outputs based on information provided by their sensory apparatus. Studies of genetic recombination, lysogeny, antibiotic resistance and my own work on transposable elements revealed multiple widespread bacterial systems for mobilizing and engineering DNA molecules."-You are cherry-picking. This clearly shows thre are a multiplicity of organized systems to be used by the plans in DNA.-> dhw: "The selected examples of bacterial "smarts" I have given show convincingly that these small cells are incredibly sophisticated at coordinating processes involving millions of individual events and at making them precise and reliable. In addition, the astonishing versatility and mastery bacteria display in managing the biosphere's geochemical and thermodynamic transformations indicates that we have a great deal to learn about chemistry, physics and evolution from our small, but very intelligent, prokaryotic relatives."-Supports me!!! It is all chemistry and physics!!!
> 
> dhw: Nowhere in this article have I found a single mention of the word automaton. The nearest is the following: "......conventional wisdom is an extension of the mechanistic views that came to dominate biological thought in the early years of the 20th Century." His article is opposed to this conventional wisdom. Another of your supporters letting you down?-Not at all. What he is describing are the epigentic mechanisms that push evolution as described in his book. His statement is exactly on the money, based on my knoweldge of the material in his book. The ID folks love him.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Monday, November 25, 2013, 14:24 (3803 days ago) @ David Turell

SHAPIRO: This remarkable series of observations requires us to revise basic ideas about biological information processing and recognize that even the smallest cells are sentient beings.-DAVID: I looked at his abstract:
"bacteria continually monitor their external and internal environments and compute functional outputs based on information provided by their sensory apparatus. Studies of genetic recombination, lysogeny, antibiotic resistance and my own work on transposable elements revealed multiple widespread bacterial systems for mobilizing and engineering DNA molecules."
DAVID: You are cherry-picking. This clearly shows thre are a multiplicity of organized systems to be used by the plans in DNA.-Where does he say that the monitoring and computing are carried out automatically by plans that God had already planted in DNA? It's clear from the next quote that he sees these as intelligent actions:-SHAPIRO: "The selected examples of bacterial "smarts" I have given show convincingly that these small cells are incredibly sophisticated at coordinating processes involving millions of individual events and at making them precise and reliable. In addition, the astonishing versatility and mastery bacteria display in managing the biosphere's geochemical and thermodynamic transformations indicates that we have a great deal to learn about chemistry, physics and evolution from our small, but very intelligent, prokaryotic relatives."-DAVID: Supports me!!! It is all chemistry and physics!!!-You can use as many exclamation marks as you like, but they won't alter the fact that bacteria USE chemistry and physics to coordinate sophisticated processes involving millions of individual events. You seem to think that any mention of chemistry makes the user of that chemistry an automaton!
 
dhw: Nowhere in this article have I found a single mention of the word automaton. The nearest is the following: "......conventional wisdom is an extension of the mechanistic views that came to dominate biological thought in the early years of the 20th Century." His article is opposed to this conventional wisdom. Another of your supporters letting you down?-DAVID: Not at all. What he is describing are the epigentic mechanisms that push evolution as described in his book. His statement is exactly on the money, based on my knoweldge of the material in his book. The ID folks love him.-So he is opposed to the mechanistic view but supports your view that cells are automatons, which apparently he defines as very intelligent, sentient beings. Some ID folks may love him, but Dembski doesn't. He attacks Shapiro's theory of Natural Genetic Engineering, and interestingly he writes: "Shapiro believes that cooperative behavior is a fundamental organizing concept for biological activity at all levels of complexity." http://evolutionnews.org/2012/01/is_james_shapir_2055551.html 
This ties in neatly with a description of Shapiro's book which I found elsewhere: 
"Cells, according to Shapiro, are intelligent in that they do their own natural genetic engineering, taking existing structures through horizontal DNA transfer or symbiogenesis, say, and reworking them in new contexts for new uses." 
Just in case you might think "natural" refers to your God preprogramming these cell-mediated processes, read this from an article in the Huffington Post (can't give you the reference, as it eventually froze my computer!): -"In order to be truthful, we must acknowledge that certain questions, like the origins of the first living cells, currently have no credible scientific answer. However, given the historical record of science and technology in achieving the "impossible" (e.g., space flight, telecommunications, electronic computation and robotics), there is no reason to believe that unsolved problems will remain without naturalistic explanations indefinitely."-He certainly isn't pushing divine design, is he? And in view of his repeated and absolutely explicit comments about cellular intelligence, I'd suggest that his view of evolution is considerably closer to my hypothesis than to yours. But my main aim in quoting all these different scientists is to show that there is plenty of scientific support for the concept of the intelligent cell, which you claimed ran counter to our knowledge of biochemistry. Conversely, you still haven't come up with any scientific support for a theory you yourself have described as being entirely of your own making.

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Monday, November 25, 2013, 15:51 (3803 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Supports me!!! It is all chemistry and physics!!!
> 
> dhw: You can use as many exclamation marks as you like, but they won't alter the fact that bacteria USE chemistry and physics to coordinate sophisticated processes involving millions of individual events. You seem to think that any mention of chemistry makes the user of that chemistry an automaton!-Because all of their responses are chemical and physical reactions according to the plan they follow, a plan within them from the beginning. You keep implying thought when none exists.-> dhw: Some ID folks may love him, but Dembski doesn't. He attacks Shapiro's theory of Natural Genetic Engineering, and interestingly he writes: "Shapiro believes that cooperative behavior is a fundamental organizing concept for biological activity at all levels of complexity." http://evolutionnews.org/2012/01/is_james_shapir_2055551.html
 
You don't know Dembski well enough to understand the comment. He is primarily a theologan and is critical of Shapiro coming so close to the ID concepts and then leaving out the attendant theism Dembski requires.
 
> dhw: This ties in neatly with a description of Shapiro's book which I found elsewhere: 
> "Cells, according to Shapiro, are intelligent in that they do their own natural genetic engineering, taking existing structures through horizontal DNA transfer or symbiogenesis, say, and reworking them in new contexts for new uses." -Exactly what he says. But it is just as easy and plausible to interpret his findings as using intelligent information implanted. Where Dembski gets upset is Shapiro doesn't recogize theism as a possible source.
 
> dhw: "In order to be truthful, we must acknowledge that certain questions, like the origins of the first living cells, currently have no credible scientific answer. However, given the historical record of science and technology in achieving the "impossible" (e.g., space flight, telecommunications, electronic computation and robotics), there is no reason to believe that unsolved problems will remain without naturalistic explanations indefinitely."-I followed him regularly on H.Post. I actually follow H. Post daily just to see what the wooly liberals are saying.
> 
> dhw: He certainly isn't pushing divine design, is he? And in view of his repeated and absolutely explicit comments about cellular intelligence, I'd suggest that his view of evolution is considerably closer to my hypothesis than to yours. -Of course the cells act intelligently. They are intelligently planned and guided by plans. And he is not thinking about cells as you are. He is championing their epigentic abilities.

Intelligence & Evolution

by dhw, Tuesday, November 26, 2013, 18:52 (3802 days ago) @ David Turell

Dhw: You seem to think that any mention of chemistry makes the user of that chemistry an automaton!
DAVID: Because all of their responses are chemical and physical reactions according to the plan they follow, a plan within them from the beginning. You keep implying thought when none exists.-As usual, you state this as if it were a fact, although you haven't found a single scientist who backs your claim that "from the very beginning" God planted plans to cope with "millions of individual events" (not to mention billions of innovations, adaptations etc.). I'm not implying anything ... I'm suggesting quite explicitly, along with Shapiro, Margulis, Albrecht-Buehler, Jacob, Becker, Levine et al that cells are intelligent in their own right, and use physics and chemistry to organize themselves and to take and implement their own decisions.
 
dhw: Dembsky writes: "Shapiro believes that cooperative behavior is a fundamental organizing concept for biological activity at all levels of complexity." 
DAVID: [Dembski] is primarily a theologan and is critical of Shapiro coming so close to the ID concepts and then leaving out the attendant theism Dembski requires.-That is clear from the article. I repeated the comment because it mentions Shapiro's claim that cooperation was a key factor in evolution, which I linked to the next quote:
"Cells, according to Shapiro, are intelligent in that they do their own natural genetic engineering, taking existing structures through horizontal DNA transfer or symbiogenesis, say, and reworking them in new contexts for new uses."
DAVID: Exactly what he says. But it is just as easy and plausible to interpret his findings as using intelligent information implanted. -Dembski confirms that Shapiro sees cooperation between intelligent cells as a key factor in evolution. Doing their own engineering, reworking existing structures and all Shapiro's other "smart" examples take us far, far away from your theory of preprogrammed automatons.-DAVID: I followed him regularly on H.Post. I actually follow H. Post daily just to see what the wooly liberals are saying.-You have so far dismissed the findings of all these different scientists as "metaphors", "poppycock", "kooky", and "woolly liberal". Is it not possible that during their many years of research they have seen something you haven't?-DAVID: Of course the cells act intelligently. They are intelligently planned and guided by plans. And he is not thinking about cells as you are. He is championing their epigentic abilities.-More authoritative statements, as if the cells' intelligent behaviour could not possibly be the result of them actually being intelligent. What do you mean by "championing their epigenetic abilities"? Shapiro goes through a whole list of bacterial "smarts" to show how "incredibly sophisticated they are at coordinating processes involving millions of individual events" and at "managing the biosphere's geochemical and thermodynamic transformations". He concludes that they are very intelligent, sentient beings ... and I suspect you are the only person in the world who would take that to be a definition of automatons. As you say, though, your theory is entirely of your own making!

Intelligence & Evolution

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 26, 2013, 21:50 (3802 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw:I'm not implying anything ... I'm suggesting quite explicitly, along with Shapiro, Margulis, Albrecht-Buehler, Jacob, Becker, Levine et al that cells are intelligent in their own right, and use physics and chemistry to organize themselves and to take and implement their own decisions.-And I'm sticking to my interpretation that they are following and are controlled by automatic responses from the implanted intelligent information in their genomes.->dhw: Dembski confirms that Shapiro sees cooperation between intelligent cells as a key factor in evolution. Doing their own engineering, reworking existing structures and all Shapiro's other "smart" examples take us far, far away from your theory of preprogrammed automatons.-In your view. The cooperation is all planned. Do Dembski or Shapiro describe the method of cooperation? No.
> 
> dhw:You have so far dismissed the findings of all these different scientists as "metaphors", "poppycock", "kooky", and "wooly liberal". Is it not possible that during their many years of research they have seen something you haven't?-No. I've read most of their material and I still interpret your insistence on making it sould like they are really thinking and planning as overreaching.-
> shw: More authoritative statements, as if the cells' intelligent behaviour could not possibly be the result of them actually being intelligent. What do you mean by "championing their epigenetic abilities"? Shapiro goes through a whole list of bacterial "smarts" to show how "incredibly sophisticated they are at coordinating processes involving millions of individual events" and at "managing the biosphere's geochemical and thermodynamic transformations". He concludes that they are very intelligent, sentient beings ... and I suspect you are the only person in the world who would take that to be a definition of automatons. As you say, though, your theory is entirely of your own making!-The whole ID community interprets this as I do. you are misreading Dembski and Behe.

Duplicons: Intelligence & Evolution:

by David Turell @, Tuesday, January 07, 2014, 18:34 (3760 days ago) @ David Turell

We share these mainly with early ancestor great apes, not as much in chimps or bonobos. They may have pushed the big brain development:-"The core duplicon anchors an architecturally complex stretch of DNA, acting as the focal point for a larger block of duplications. Although scientists aren't sure how, the core seems to sweep up neighboring segments of DNA, duplicating the entire stretch and inserting the new copy into a new location on the chromosome. "Then it picks up again and duplicates some of the sequence around it and moves to another new location," Eichler said. "It seems to be an extremely unstable genetic element that provides a template for evolutionary change."
 
It is this process that appears to create new genes: When new duplications are inserted into the genome, they bring together two previously foreign pieces of DNA, which can lead to new functional components, such as proteins. This chaotic mix-and-match approach is different from the traditional model for the creation of a gene, in which an existing gene is duplicated and the copy is free to develop new functions.
 
"This mechanism appears to be seminal in our evolution,"-
https://www.simonsfoundation.org/quanta/20140102-a-missing-genetic-link-in-human-evolution/

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