211 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
211 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
From: kalki33!system@lakes.trenton.sc.us
|
|
Newsgroups: talk.origins
|
|
Subject: LIFE: Real & Artificial
|
|
Message-ID: <ZHH1uB2w165w@kalki33>
|
|
Date: Sun, 29 Nov 92 12:37:58 EST
|
|
Organization: Kalki's Infoline BBS, Aiken, SC, USA
|
|
|
|
|
|
From Back to Godhead magazine, January/February 1991
|
|
|
|
LIFE: REAL AND ARTIFICIAL
|
|
by Sadaputa Dasa
|
|
|
|
(c) 1991 The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust
|
|
Used by permission.
|
|
|
|
In Santa Fe, New Mexico, a group of scientists, mainly from the Los
|
|
Alamos National Laboratories, recently held a conference on "Artificial
|
|
Life." The theme of the conference, which I attended, was that the
|
|
essence of life lies not in biological substance but in patterned
|
|
organization.
|
|
|
|
If this idea is valid, the thinking goes, life forms should be able to
|
|
set themselves up through many different types of material stuff. In
|
|
particular, life should be able to exist as a pattern of electronic
|
|
activity in a computer.
|
|
|
|
The conference organizers, casually dressed, long-haired men in their
|
|
thirties and early forties, say that artificial, computer-based life
|
|
forms are developing even now -- and may evolve to dominate the earth.
|
|
|
|
According to this view, the evolutionary role of man is to give birth to
|
|
silicon-based life patterns that will eventually look back on him as a
|
|
primitive ancestor. The conference sponsors counseled a broad-minded
|
|
attitude toward such evolutionary progress: we should transcend
|
|
parochial anthropocentrism and welcome advanced life in whatever form it
|
|
may emerge.
|
|
|
|
But some attending scientists doubted whether a program running on a
|
|
computer could properly be thought of as alive. Philosopher Elliot Sober
|
|
argued that when engineers make a computer simulation of a bridge, no
|
|
one would think of it as a real bridge: the simulation merely shows a
|
|
picture in which computations tell us something about bridges. In the
|
|
same way, when a computer simulates an organism, we see a picture in
|
|
which computations tell us something about life -- we're not seeing life
|
|
itself.
|
|
|
|
Tommaso Toffoli, a computer scientist from Massachusets Institute of
|
|
Technology, responded to this argument. Suppose, he said, that simulated
|
|
people were driving cars on a simulated bridge. If the bridge were to
|
|
collapse, the people would fall to their simulated deaths.
|
|
|
|
The patterns in a faithful simulation match the patterns found in
|
|
reality: the simulated people cross the simulated bridge just as real
|
|
people cross a real bridge. And since these patterns, Dr. Toffoli
|
|
proposed, are the essence of what is happening, we can think of the
|
|
simulation the same way we think of the original.
|
|
|
|
In principle, then, if a real material scene can exhibit life, so can a
|
|
simulation.
|
|
|
|
In practice, of course, present computers, operating with a single
|
|
processor, are weak at matching the patterns of reality.
|
|
|
|
But Toffoli suggested that the powerful computers of the future will
|
|
consist of crystallike arrays of many thousands of microminiature
|
|
processors, nearly atomic in size, all computing at once. Toffoli
|
|
described such computers as "programmable matter."
|
|
|
|
Indeed (though Toffoli didn't say so), we might regard matter itself,
|
|
with its interacting atomic subunits, as such a computer. According to
|
|
this idea, life is already a computer simulation running on the
|
|
"programmable matter" of the universe itself.
|
|
|
|
Now, if life is but a computer simulation, a series of computational
|
|
states, then life too must be essentially unreal. Words such as
|
|
"flower," "dog," and "human" are simply names, symbols we attach to
|
|
patterns of matter. This, in fact, is the Vedic understanding not of
|
|
life but of the material body. In the eleventh canto of Srimad
|
|
Bhagavatam, Krsna says to Uddhava that the gross and subtle forms of
|
|
material bodies have no existence of their own; they are only temporary
|
|
patterns manifested by the eternally existing reality, the Absolute
|
|
Truth.
|
|
|
|
Krsna illustrates this idea with an example: "Gold exists before it is
|
|
made into gold products, and the gold remains when the products have
|
|
been destroyed. The gold alone is the reality while used under various
|
|
names. Similarly, I alone exist before the universe is created and after
|
|
it is destroyed, and I alone exist while it is maintained....That which
|
|
did not exist in the past and will not exist in the future has no
|
|
existence of its own while it lasts....Whatever is created and revealed
|
|
by something else is ultimately only that other thing." (Bhagavatam
|
|
11.28.19,21)
|
|
|
|
So we can look at the temporary forms of the material universe as
|
|
patterns in Krsna's energy to which various names have been assigned. In
|
|
essence these patterns in Krsna's material energy (bahiranga-sakti) are
|
|
the same as the patterns of electrons that form and disappear in the
|
|
circuitry of a computer during a simulation. So we can view the material
|
|
universe as the ultimate computer simulation, and Krsna as the ultimate
|
|
simulator.
|
|
|
|
But seeing the material body as a succession of flickering patterns
|
|
doesn't mean we should view life the same way. Krsna says in
|
|
Bhagavad-gita (2.20) that the soul, the individual conscious self,
|
|
eternally exists: "For the soul there is never birth or death. He has
|
|
not come into being, does not come into being, and will not come into
|
|
being. He is unborn, ever-existing, and primeval. He is not slain when
|
|
the body is slain."
|
|
|
|
Tommaso Toffoli's simulated people on the simulated bridge lack one main
|
|
element: consciousness. A series of computations might simulate the
|
|
changes a person's body undergoes, including those in the brain. But why
|
|
should patterns of electric current generate the conscious experience of
|
|
these changes?
|
|
|
|
We may easily imagine that the patterns of current making up a machine's
|
|
computations may flow without conscious awareness. This suggests that if
|
|
consciousness of the results of these computations exists in the
|
|
computer, this must be due to some element that our understanding of
|
|
computers has not yet taken into account.
|
|
|
|
Here's how some might reply: It may be hard to understand how patterns
|
|
of computer states could generate consciousness, but we already know
|
|
that similar patterns generate consciousness in human brains. So why
|
|
can't this take place in a computer?
|
|
|
|
The answer is that we don't know in any scientific sense that patterns
|
|
of brain states do generate consciousness. Resolving how such patterns
|
|
might do this in brains would be just as hard as figuring out how they
|
|
might do it in computers.
|
|
|
|
Bhagavad-gita provides a simple solution by postulating that
|
|
consciousness in the material body is due to the presence of an entity
|
|
fundamentally different from matter. Given the difficulties philosophers
|
|
and scientists have run into in trying to understand consciousness as
|
|
patterns of material elements, they should think about this solution.
|
|
|
|
If we tentatively adopt this solution, then we may ask: How would the
|
|
nonmaterial conscious entity be linked to the material body? We can
|
|
understand how this link might work by returning to Toffoli's story of
|
|
the simulated bridge.
|
|
|
|
How could we introduce consciousness into the simulation? One way would
|
|
be to make a "real-time" simulation, one in which the simulated events
|
|
take place at the same pace as corresponding events in the real world.
|
|
(One would simply need a fast enough computer.) Then one could put
|
|
consciousness into the simulation by electronically linking the senses
|
|
of real, conscious people with the senses of the simulated people. The
|
|
intentions of the conscious people would move the bodies of the people
|
|
in the simulated world, and the conscious people would have the
|
|
experiences the simulated people would have.
|
|
|
|
Far-fetched? Some people in computer science are already working on it.
|
|
VPL Research in California is experimenting with "virtual realities" in
|
|
which a person's eyes, ears, and one hand are hooked up electronically
|
|
with virtual eyes and ears and a virtual hand in a simulated world. The
|
|
person looks through "eyephones," small TV screens placed directly in
|
|
front of his eyes, and sees as though in the simulated world.
|
|
|
|
A "data glove" electronically senses his hand movements, and another
|
|
device the movements of his head; the resulting data control the
|
|
movements of his simulated hand and head.
|
|
|
|
Thus the person experiences the simulated world through a simulated
|
|
body, moves about in that body, and handles simulated objects in that
|
|
world.
|
|
|
|
If it is possible to link human consciousness with an unreal, virtual
|
|
body in a simulated world, why shouldn't it be possible to link
|
|
spiritual consciousness with similarly unreal bodies in the "real"
|
|
material world?
|
|
|
|
The Vedic philosophy known as Sankhya describes the workings of such a
|
|
communications link. The third canto of Srimad Bhagavatam describes
|
|
Krsna's material energy as including an element called "false ego," or
|
|
ahankara, which serves as the interface between the nonmaterial soul and
|
|
the material energy. This false ego serves like the eyephones and data
|
|
gloves that link a human being with a computer running a virtual-reality
|
|
program.
|
|
|
|
Both the material body as understood in Vedic literature and the
|
|
simulated body in a computer-generated world are merely temporary
|
|
patterns in an underlying substrate. But the conscious self --the real
|
|
essence of the living being-- has a substantial reality outside the
|
|
realm of transient patterns.
|
|
|
|
In the computer-generated reality this conscious self is a human being
|
|
not part of the computer system, and in the Vedic philosophy this self
|
|
is a transcendental entity distinct from matter.
|
|
|
|
One lesson we can learn from the thoughts and experiments of computer
|
|
scientists is that such a relationship between the self and the material
|
|
world is possible. And it just might be our actual situation.
|
|
|
|
END OF ARTICLE
|
|
|
|
Posted by Kalki Dasa for Back to Godhead.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------
|
|
| Don't forget to chant: Hare Krishna Hare Krishna |
|
|
| Krishna Krishna Hare Hare |
|
|
| Hare Rama Hare Rama |
|
|
| Rama Rama Hare Hare |
|
|
| |
|
|
| Kalki's Infoline BBS Aiken, South Carolina, USA |
|
|
| (kalki33!kalki@lakes.trenton.sc.us) |
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------
|