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<a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1401501/">https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1401501/</a><br>
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<blockquote type="cite">On Aug 18, 2022, at 10:01 PM, Marcus Daniels <marcus@snoutfarm.com> wrote:<br>
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<div dir="ltr"><span>The retina isn't perfect by any means, and the visual cortex must fix its inputs to make vision seem better than the raw inputs. This is from memory, but I can look up references.</span><br>
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<span>-----Original Message-----</span><br>
<span>From: Friam <friam-bounces@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Prof David West</span><br>
<span>Sent: Thursday, August 18, 2022 8:56 PM</span><br>
<span>To: friam@redfish.com</span><br>
<span>Subject: Re: [FRIAM] dystopian vision(s)</span><br>
<span></span><br>
<span>An analogy that might clarify what was being conveyed in the original post:
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<span>A RAW image - no compression, no processing - is what the brain/mind can perceive.</span><br>
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<span>JPEG is the image after going through the "survival filter" - both compression and adjustments to saturation, contrast, and sharpness. There are all kinds of advantages to JPEG, but "accuracy/fidelity" is not one of them. Consider all the consternation
amateur photographers had a few months back with their phones failing to capture the redness of the sky in San Francisco and other parts of CA.</span><br>
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<span>Drugs, so the advocates claim, are not an alternate transformation—not HEIF—but simply a removal of the compression/processing mechanism entirely.</span><br>
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<span>Of course, even RAW is lossy: a few million pixels captured from the near infinity of discrete photons available. I suspect the brain/mind is less lossy, but to what degree?</span><br>
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<span>And my own experiences, both chemical and meditative, suggest to me that some kind of patterned sense making is still going on because my 'mind/consciousness' still interprets things — I still see the Argus Goat (sometimess a ram instead of a goat, with
multiple eyes, often conflated with Argus Panoptes) allbeit It and I might have a conversation.</span><br>
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<span>davew</span><br>
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<span>On Thu, Aug 18, 2022, at 2:15 PM, glen wrote:</span><br>
<blockquote type="cite"><span>I'm glad you softened it. Codependence *is* "organic to the nature of
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>one's existence". What I worry about are those that idealize
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>themselves as only codependent on some singular thing, which is what
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>you're calling out when you talk about identification with thrill
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>seeking or whatever. It's the single-ness that's the problem, not the codependence.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Marcus and Dave seem tightly analogous in their positive responses to
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>technological entheogens and physio-chemical ehtheogens, respectively.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>And you, being a bit of an ehtheogen-teatotaler, if I've understood
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>correctly, align with Marcus. In contrast, I'm agnostic about the
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>origins and pathway of any entheogens I might become codependent upon.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Drugs, even very old ones brewed up by one-eyed witches in the outback
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>bush, *are* technology, nearly identical to the Mojo Lens or the
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Neuralink. What's that stanza from Alice in Chains?</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9GAEFTeWko</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>"</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>What's my drug of choice?</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Well, what have you got?</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>I don't go broke</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>And I do it a lot</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On 8/18/22 11:36, Steve Smith wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On 8/18/22 9:47 AM, glen wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Yeah. I'm not as concerned as you seem to be about the addictive nature of alternative perspectives. Obviously, because my whole schtick is about attempting to take alternative perspectives. The addict has to admit they have a
problem before treatment will work, eh?</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>My use of the term "addictive" was unfortunate. I didn't mean it
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>particularly perjoratively. I mostly just meant the awareness that one can become "codependent" on substances/experiences which are not otherwise organic to the nature of one's existence in-context. Tarzan and his friends may
have done something vaguely similar to bungee jumping and skydiving (vine swinging and cliff diving), but those who have made the high-tech equivalents of those experiences part of their very persona have "given over" in some way that may or may not be something
to "worry about"... it is just in a practical sense a "commitment". I have known plenty of people who have made "commitments" to all kinds of things/substances (caffiene, nicotine, alcohol, thc, gucose, lipids, parkour, etc) which they are virtually symbiotic
with (addicted to?). I have my own practical commitments to all kinds of behaviours and consumptions which are effectively now *part of who I am*. I might have been a somewhat different person today if I had never become "committed" to alcohol, caffiene,
earning/spending $USD, driving planes, trains, automobiles, etc.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>But if we adopt the perspective of the "longtermists", "transhumansits", or similar, and believe that essentialist computation is the limit point, the thing just over the horizon toward which evolution works, then our *brain* is
one of the first/best instantiations of such computers. (Maybe I need scare quotes, there, too ... "computers"?) Quantum comput[ers|ing] is a close second only because too many people are ignorant enough of current computing to think hard about its limitations.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>FWIW I was just re-introduced to Bostrom's Astronomical Waste <https://nickbostrom.com/astronomical/waste> arguement in the context of a New Yorker Article on Effective Altruism which I think you have referenced a few times here.
A more computationally/entropic framed version of the Dyson Sphere <https://nickbostrom.com/astronomical/waste> (or more originally the Stapledon Light Trap):</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span> An excerpt from/Star Maker/which mentions Dyson spheres:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span> Not only was every solar system now surrounded by a gauze of light traps, which focused the escaping solar energy for intelligent use, so that the whole galaxy was dimmed, but many stars that were not suited to be suns were
disintegrated, and rifled of their prodigious stores of subatomic energy.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>So another form of Dave's argument, still metaphysical, is this Smolin-esque (or even Schrödinger-esque ala negentropy?) concept that our objective(s) is tightly coupled pockets of deep computation. And *that*, given that our brains
are fantastic computers, gives some weight to the idea that deep and broad introspection gets one closer to God, closer to the objective, closer to the real occult Purpose behind it all in much the same way as studying quantum mechanics and quantum computation.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>My argument *against* that is that even if tightly coupled (coherent) pockets of computation are a crucial element, so is the interstitial space *between* the tight pockets ... like black holes orbiting each other or somesuch.
It's not merely the individual pocket/computer that's interesting, it's the formation, dissolution, and interaction of the pockets that's more interesting. Actually, then, the *void* is more interesting than the non-void.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Tangentially:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Panic! At the Disks: First Rest-frame Optical Observations of Galaxy
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Structure at z>3 with JWST in the SMACS 0723 Field</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.09428</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>I appreciate having near-peers who are "peering" into the same general (vaguely familiar) areas of the fractal abyss that I am...</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On 8/18/22 08:03, Steve Smith wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>The experience *I* have (or the way I have mostly interpreted it) with various ways of "playing around with my interface/membrane/boundary" is that alternatively addictive to the point of becoming "essential" and a "vertiginous
stare into the abyss" at the same time. I'm not talking particularly or specifically about ingesting entheogens or any other substance known to acutely adjust reality. There are (obviously) many other ways to "play around with the boundary". For what it
is worth, Pandora is playing Denver's iconic "Rocky Mountain High" in the background as I complete this paragraph.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>I currently attribute this to the alone/all-one duality and the flexibility (elastic and plastic) nature of self-other boundaries (membranes?) as a conscious ego. (Sting - How Fragile we are on Pandora now, segueing into judy
Collins' Both Sides Now).</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>If I take "the Uni/Multi-verse" to be nothing more/less than a single complex adaptive system which can(not) be reduced to a system of systems (only reduceable by an imperfectly isolated system (self) which has a compressed "model"
of the universe as a system of systems of which it"self" is a perfectly isolated subsystem(self)) then the experience of self-other and "gaining insight/parallax into (R)reality" isn't all that puzzling (to this self's model of itself within the universal).</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>This of course still leaves (for this illusory "self") the "hard problem" of the fact (rather than the nature) of (subjective) experience itself...</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>I have a feeling (in my subjective experience as a self) that the "breath of consciousness" might be the compression/decompression cycle itself? Talking (linearly) about this stuff is a fractal/recursive minefield of rabbit-holes
worthy of Alice tripping on Entheogens?</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On 8/18/22 8:34 AM, glen wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Parallax is an important technique for getting at things just *beyond* one's current representational power. So, were I to try to steelman your argument, I'd suggest that, yes, the process by which our bodies refine/focus/hone-down
our attention to a smaller, compressed thing from a larger thing (whether the largess is "noise" or not is a tangent) is important. And the entheogens permute that honing down, that reduction, to create a different transformation.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>It's reasonable to speculate that the transformation we execute under the influence of an entheogen might be *less* reductive than that we execute when "sober". But to argue that the transformation under the influence is a more
accurate match to reality is fraught. Less reductive? Sure. More accurate? Well, that would require us to go into that tangent. What do we mean by more accurate? Does randomness exist? Etc.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>So we might want to be careful with that crossing between relatively tame statements like "entheogens alter the cross-membrane transformation providing parallax toward the out there" versus more metaphysical statements like "entheogens
provide a better transformation (or no tranformation) across the boundary to the out there".</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Thanks for clarifying. I think I have a better understanding of the argument. Those of us who play around with our interface probably *do* have a better understanding of reality than those of us imprisoned by their one, sole interface.
But we don't need to go so far as to say a drugged mind is more capable of perceiving the real reality.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On 8/16/22 17:16, Prof David West wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>If you assume, or believe, that the mind (body-brain-embodied mind-Atman) naturally processes 100% of the inputs and assume/believe that a survival enhancing mechanism filters that stream to create the illusionary subset that we
call Reality, then entheogens work to dismantle the filtering mechanism and expose the Real Reality.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Missing in my first post was a hidden premise, that any augmentations (Neuralink, et. al.) are almost certainly based on whatever we think we understand of the filtering mechanism, not the Mind, and therefore would augment/enhance
that mechanism and therefore lead to results opposite of what is desired.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>The missing premise is pretty much conjecture on my part but is grounded in an advanced, but not expert, understanding of AI and neural network technologies; so it should be taken with a tablespoon (thousands of grains) of salt.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>davew</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On Tue, Aug 16, 2022, at 11:22 AM, glen wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Opposite of what? I don't understand how augmentation is the
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>opposite of the entheogens (drugs or meditation). Are you saying
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>that, e.g. the Mojo Lens or Neuralink further restrict, whereas
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>the entheogens lessen the restriction?</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>If so, then my guess is you could do the same sort of
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>decreasing them is like an undrugged person self-censoring and
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>such, then increasing them is like taking a entheogen ... that is, assuming Church-Turing.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>body "computes" something that any computer-based augmentation
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>beyond what the augment provides. Computer-based augmentaiton
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>would provide a hard limit ... an unavoidable abstraction/subset of reality.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>On 8/15/22 19:04, Prof David West wrote:</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>The hallucino-philia (and Buddhist epistemologists) would argue that our brains (minds) already fully grasp / cognize / perceive our physical reality. But, for survival purposes, it self-censors and presents our consciousness/awareness/attention
with a small abstract subset of that reality—an illusion.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>Drugs and meditation are 'subtractive' in that they dismantle the abstraction/reduction apparatus that generates the illusion hiding our 'full-grasping'.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>If such a belief were "true" then "augmenting our brains" would be the exact opposite, and exceedingly harmful, approach ...</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span> ... unless, the augmentation was a permanent [lsd | psylocibin | mescaline] drip.</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>--</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>ꙮ Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙ ꙮ -. --- - / ...- .- .-..
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>.. -.. / -- --- .-. ... . / -.-. --- -.. .</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv</span><br>
</blockquote>
<blockquote type="cite"><span>Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe / Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com</span><br>
</blockquote>
<blockquote type="cite"><span>FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/</span><br>
</blockquote>
<blockquote type="cite"><span>archives: 5/2017 thru present</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span>https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/</span><br>
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<blockquote type="cite"><span> 1/2003 thru 6/2021 http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/</span><br>
</blockquote>
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<span>FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv</span><br>
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