The mind is like a digital computer. It's like a quantum computer whatever for your metaphor The things we see in the environment like this pin it's like an icon on my desktop but if I open up my little Macbook Pro here, there's no trash can in there. This is just an icon So you're saying just in the simplest level that What I see here these are just photons of light bouncing off this thing and being transduced by the photo receptors in my retina into chemical Electrical signals they go back to the visual cortex,. But if you took popped off the back of my skull There's no nothing like this back there. It's just neurons firing and swapping neurotransmitter chemical
In his new book, The Case Against Reality: Why Evolution Hid the Truth From Our Eyes, the U.C. Irvine cognitive scientist Dr. Donald Hoffman challenges the leading scientific theories that claim that our senses report back objective reality. How can it be possible that the world we see is not objective reality? And how can our senses be useful if they are not communicating the truth? Hoffman argues that while we should take our perceptions seriously, we should not take them literally. His evolutionary model contends that natural selection has favored perception that hides the truth and guides us toward useful action, shaping our senses to keep us alive and reproducing. We observe a speeding car and do not walk in front of it; we see mold growing on bread and do not eat it. These impressions, though, are not objective reality. Just like a file icon on a desktop screen is a useful symbol rather than a genuine representation of what a computer file looks like, the objects we see every day are merely icons, allowing us to navigate the world safely and with ease. The real-world implications for this discovery are huge, even dismantling the very notion that spacetime is objective reality. The Case Against Reality dares us to question everything we thought we knew about the world we see.
In this conversation, Hoffman and Shermer get deep into the weeds of:
- the nature of reality (ontology)
- how we know anything about reality (epistemology)
- the possibility that we’re living in a simulation
- the possibility that we’re just a brain in a vat
- the problem of other minds (that I’m the only sentient conscious being while everyone else is a zombie)
- the hard problem of consciousness
- what it means to ask “what’s it like to be a bat?”
- does the moon exist if there are no conscious sentient beings anywhere in the universe?
- is spacetime doomed?
- quantum physics and consciousness
- the microtubule theory of consciousness
- the global workspace theory of consciousness, and
- how Hoffman’s Interface Theory of Perception differs from Jordan Peterson’s Archetypal Theory of Truth (Shermer’s label for Peterson’s evolutionary theory of truth).
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