[FOM] mathematics as formal
Steven Ericsson-Zenith
steven at semeiosis.org
Thu Mar 27 17:14:50 EDT 2008
On Mar 25, 2008, at 2:00 PM, Timothy Y. Chow wrote:
> Here is a way to approach the question of the "mathematics of
> aliens" that
> is (perhaps) not entirely speculative.
>
> ... it seems to me that if there is
> extraterrestrial life, it will more likely resemble bacteria or
> plants or
> possibly insects than humans.
>
> The fact that terrestrial bacteria/plants/insects are not
> "intelligent"
> according to our usual notion of the term shouldn't, in my mind,
> preclude
> us from imagining that there might be extraterrestrial life that is
> "structurally" similar to bacteria/plants/insects but that is still
> "intelligent" in the sense of having the ability to manipulate the
> environment in sophisticated ways in order to promote its own
> existence.
Yet our species has a clear structural advantage given the opposable
thumb. We are able to place detailed records in the world that are
identifiable and accessible to future generations. We construct vast
legacies of these records. I will argue that this is not simply
because we are "intelligent" in the sense that we have an
extraordinary brain.
Dolphins, for example, have brains that seem much more sophisticated
than ours, yet they lack the structural capacity to record and
preserve for future generations. With our new technological capacity
we could actually put this to the test by providing a community of
dolphins with that capacity.
So there does appear to be a structural requirement that would forbid
the type of intelligence that our species manifests in species without
that structure, aside from any requirement to actually develop a
nervous system.
> It seems intuitively to me that some form of *memory* would be
> necessary
> for advanced technology. (By using the word "memory" I don't want to
> imply that the aliens are necessarily "conscious" (whatever that
> means);
> the storage medium could take on any of a wide variety of forms.)
Memory of some kind seems an obvious requirement (and some form of it
may be pervasive). However, I have come to believe that our own
physiological capacity for memory is really very primitive/poor (and
ultimately inadequate for our intellectual goals) and should likely be
something that is improved upon in more advanced species.
It is feasible, perhaps, that a species could develop such an extreme
and vivid memory capacity and the mechanisms to transmit such memory
to others (in ways different from our own) under pressure of natural
selection. Those circumstances do not exist here but may elsewhere,
and if they existed could circumvent the structural requirement I
mention above.
> But
> whether the aliens would necessarily have "mathematics" is less
> clear to
> me.
Arithmetic and Geometry seem to be necessary precursors to a broader
"mathematics" and they are the necessary product of reference.
Assuming that all communications among species members require an
increasingly refined response to the questions "Where?" and "How
many?" I do expect mathematics to be a universal characteristic of
higher forms of intelligence.
Now whether or not they find prime numbers at all interesting really
depends upon how useful it is perceived to be to investigate the
matter. We have discovered, it seems, that apparently idle pursuits
(such as deep inquiry) occasionally produce remarkable insights into
the world, and that the discovery of these insights provides the
species with some equally remarkable benefits.
> The reason I believe that these questions are not entirely
> speculative is
> that one might, in principle, be able to build such "alien life forms"
> here on earth. The question of whether "aliens" with advanced
> technological capabilities could be constructed without slavishly
> mimicking human (or for that matter, any known biological) systems
> then
> becomes an empirical question.
I agree.
With respect,
Steven
--
Dr. Steven Ericsson-Zenith
Institute for Advanced Science & Engineering
http://iase.info
http://senses.info
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