ytturbed's comments

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: A man who studies everyday evil

'No doubt' is a figure of speech. But in species where there aren't any pain signals at all, my case is strengthened. I've skimmed the page you link: doesn't it just assume that 'pain experience' implies suffering? But this is contradicted by the testimony of cancer patients on opiates or Hindu saints undergoing surgery without anaesthesia. They feel the pain but it doesn't bother them.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: A man who studies everyday evil

Oh I agree, I'm the same, but I do acknowledge that there's an unsolved philosophical/scientific problem here, with no good explanations in sight.

And thus I can't equate indifference to the death of insects with sadism.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: A man who studies everyday evil

Yeah. Another questionable assumption:

>If you had the opportunity to feed harmless bugs into a coffee grinder, would you enjoy the experience? Even if the bugs had names, and you could hear their shells painfully crunching?

No doubt their nervous systems transmit pain signals but whether bugs experience suffering seems like an open question to me.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: I don’t know what to do, you guys

>shame has become a central tool for trying to create positive social change

Yet it doesn't. It creates fear and reduces communication. The motive for shaming people, for trying to make people feel guilty, is to increase the power of the one who does the shaming. To cement their position in the in-group. Because deep inside they feel weak and powerless.

Whereas truly good people make you feel stronger and they inspire you by their example of virtue.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: On Artificial Intelligence

I don't expect professional philosophers will contribute much either. But it's plausible that a philosophical advance (a new way of thinking) within an existing field such as computer science will lead to the breakthrough. Deutsch has claimed elsewhere that all great advances in science are like this. For example, Darwin's Theory of Evolution represented a fundamentally new mode of explanation.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: On Artificial Intelligence

>In fact anything computers ever do is not real intelligence

No, he doesn't say that. On the contrary he names the principle ('Universality of Computation'; see paragraph 4) which guarantees that computers are capable of true intelligence, since, if programmed correctly, they can simulate the behaviour of any physical object, including human brains.

>there is some divine truth and wisdom that only humans possess.

He also explicitly repudiates supernatural explanations (see para immediately before the one mentioning John Searle).

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: To Be More Creative, Cheer Up

One thing the article gets right I believe is that highly creative people are annoying, almost psychotic individuals. It can't be otherwise. If they cared what other people thought as much as the rest of us do they'd self-censor their ideas.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: Choose your reading carefully

I have to agree. Sometimes I think I'm not disciplined enough. But every now and then I start a book which is so interesting and vital that I'm compelled to go all the way through at top speed, with later re-reads. I'm thrilled and altered as a result. That's what reading is like for me now. Unfinished books no less than unordered books are part of the search and nothing to be ashamed of.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: The Science and Art of Practicing

Yes. There's something about walking isn't there? Returning attention back to the body and the senses amounts to relaxing after hard concentration. Perhaps petting the dog enhances that, the body being where emotions are felt. Scientists seem to suspect that walking or just standing occasionally is important for health.

To complete the argument about learning: you play the tough section, correcting a few errors. Then you go away for a bit, and during that period the brain updates its hardware to include those corrections. The mistake is to hammer/saw away repeatedly and interfere with what you have already achieved, wasting time and effort. I think the OP kinda acknowledged this by recommending switching at whim between different tasks within a practice session.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: The Science and Art of Practicing

Sleep is a given. The brain is learning continuously, not just during sleep. Go back to a section of a piece after 15 minutes doing something else and notice it has become easier.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: The Science and Art of Practicing

>When she does this with students, she asks them afterwards, “Was anything fuzzy?” It’s usually the part that they were messing up that’s fuzzy.

This is genius. Reminds me of the rule that if something feels fuzzy at the instrument it's always a conceptual error about the piece rather than poor coordination or poor finger strength.

>Why is it better to practice every day for an hour, instead of seven hours on one day of the week?

For the same reason that it's better to practice for 10 minutes several times per day instead of one hour straight.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: Should Surgeons Keep Score?

Perhaps would-be surgeons ought to have their manual coordination assessed before they commence years of expensive training. The irony is that for my father's generation, in England, prowess on the rugby field was considered important in getting into medical school. (And that might actually have been a good thing. I suspect top athletes, musicians and surgeons all possess the same talent which would cease to be a 'talent' if only we could explain it.)

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: What Doesn’t Kill Me Makes Me Stronger

>If animals eat all the food that is available to them and reproduce as fast is they are physically capable, then the environment will be denuded, the next generation will starve, and the species will face extinction. All animal species are evolved to avoid this

Isn't this a Tragedy of the Commons? Won't genes that cause individuals to eat more and reproduce more quickly than fellow members of their species confer a relative advantage causing those genes to spread through the gene pool?

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: The golden quarter

Why can't recovering from WW2 have been the cause? Re-building institutions and cities from scratch causes people to think more creatively.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: The Loneliest Genius

I would say that by and large it's actually the social people who get lonely. They need the acceptance of others in order to feel good about themselves. Newton had his God and his work. Sure, there's 'more to life' but bear in mind that by any reasonable measure his work was full of life and, logically, every choice he made precluded other choices. We're all the beneficiaries of those choices and I expect they were intensely meaningful to him.

ytturbed | 11 years ago | on: The Loneliest Genius

If you have a creative personality, a source of income, and an internal source of validation then, yes, social time is time wasted.
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