20071023
Thinking and Virtual Reality
It seems strange to juxtapose philosophy and computing, for how can the journey of self understanding progress by contemplating electronic computing technology? How can this pursuit be anything but a distraction from the Socratic task to know thyself? Curiously, the history of science reveals the reasonableness of their convergence striving to understand human beings as natural automata. If Plato's methodology for a science of rhetoric (leading the soul with words), as presented in Phaedrus, the history of modern philosophy in its struggle to understand the logic of intention, through Freud's investigation of dreams and slips of the tongue are any indication of the extent to which scientific philosophical production seeks to understand natural automata, whether they are referred to as soul, mind, cognition, neural activity, then we are a short step away from getting a green light to conjoin the study of ancient texts to the philosophy of everyday digital electronic computing. A brief meditation upon the metaphysics of information helps make this relation by revealing that the concept of representation implies computation, so too does information require a means to exist, if not a consumer to become informed. Once opened, this undiscovered territory lends itself to the nascent TCP/IP based worldwide virtual reality we call the Internet, for such texts contain a minimum of pictures and no sounds at all, and they are mostly static objects. What I am saying is that ancient written knowledge is the easiest for virtual reality generation machinery to process today for the very reason that it was for ancient virtual reality generation machinery to process when the invention of alphabetic writing caused a qualitative information processing performance increase over vase painting. The philosophy of computing can readily incorporate the long tradition of western thought, which it has shunned believing it began with the recent proliferation of electronic machinery. Let ancient texts be read by technologists. Ease resistance to the suggestion that thinking is virtual reality, and the mind is a computer.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment