Didn't someone prove at some point that to understand the brain would take something more complicated than the brain - a system cannot understand itself using that system alone?
Help, please...
Help, please...
Originally posted by: itachi
"... Because the complexity of the brain lies beyond the full grasp of human understanding, it seems complex enough to embody a mind. Indeed, if a single person could fully understand a brain, this would make the brain less complex than that person's mind. If all Earth's billions of people could cooperate in simply watching the activity of one human brain, each person would have to monitor tens of thousands of active synapses simultaneously - clearly an impossible task. For a person to try to understand the flickering patterns of the brain as a whole would be five billion times more absurd. Since our brain's mechanism so massively overwhelms our mind's ability to grasp it, that mechanism seems complex enough to embody the mind itself."
taken from http://www.foresight.org/EOC/EOC_Chapter_5.html
dunno if thats what you were looking for..
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Didn't someone prove at some point that to understand the brain would take something more complicated than the brain
Originally posted by: ThatWasFat
I don't see why there would be a limit on our understanding. Thousands of years ago the stars were just a distant fantasy, unreachable by mortal men. But now we are getting closer and closer. To assume that we'll never understand consciousness is too hasty. That's assuming that there is nothing more complex than consciousness, that consciousness is the end of questions. If we understood what makes us human and why we are the way we are we could move on to other problems and questions, and then the next generation would take consciousness for granted just like we take physics and computers for granted.
you tell me then.. how would you define understanding? if we knew what synapses fire and in which sequence they fire for every action, reaction, thought, etc.. how would that not be understanding the brain? (ps.. interpreting)Originally posted by: Hardcore
That's a little dumb. What is 'understanding' the brain? That we can see all the neurons that is activating and know what it's exactly doing? That's not what i would call 'understanding' the brain, but interpretating. But even then, we have something that seperates us from all the other things in nature, and that's to trascend nature. We'll be 'inrepretating' the brain with computers when the time comes.
define consciousness.Originally posted by: ThatWasFat
Well I think what I said was more valid than it got credit for. People many many many years ago all have the same hardware (the brain) but the amount of information that we know and take for granted allows us to focus on different, more complicated problems with ease. We can do Calculus because we know math well. We can build a fMRI because we understand electronics and computer science. The things that we know and take for granted are what creates our intelligence. How smart you are is defined by what you take as obvious compared to someone else. We will understand alot more about the brain in the next 50-100 years and the generations after that might discover the secret of consciousness.
i agree.One smart persons brain could probably understand the lesser-smart persons brain, since it's not the same. Or could it? I honestly think humanity is better off not understanding all things. It's not "meant to be".
Originally posted by: itachi
you tell me then.. how would you define understanding? if we knew what synapses fire and in which sequence they fire for every action, reaction, thought, etc.. how would that not be understanding the brain? (ps.. interpreting)Originally posted by: Hardcore
That's a little dumb. What is 'understanding' the brain? That we can see all the neurons that is activating and know what it's exactly doing? That's not what i would call 'understanding' the brain, but interpretating. But even then, we have something that seperates us from all the other things in nature, and that's to trascend nature. We'll be 'inrepretating' the brain with computers when the time comes.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Didn't someone prove at some point that to understand the brain would take something more complicated than the brain - a system cannot understand itself using that system alone?
Help, please...
if you're working out a math problem.. and you have problems at first, then you realize the solution to the problem.. there's something going on inside your head that allows you to realize that solution. if someone were looking inside your brain and realized that a pattern of activity x is what occured when you realized the solution.. then something inside that persons brain had to have occured to have allowed them to realize such a pattern. and that's the limit.. "i don't know what i don't know".Originally posted by: Hardcore
Understanding to me is understanding how it mechanically works. What you describe, is just that. If we know the relative sequence of what is being fired when we're thinking of cooked bacon (which we do btw), we're understanding how the brain works, and there's no limit to that. Where would the limit be?
The limitation that might come into play is what i said earlier... if we as humans are suppose to look at the billions of synapses that are activating and are supposed to tell exactly what is happening through visual observation only, then no, that's impossible, and i wouldn't call that understanding the brain. We can understand the brain and not need this level of detail. And even if our definition did come down to this, it's still possible... we just let computers do all the work for us, and we'll have the result.
Originally posted by: ThatWasFat
Well I think what I said was more valid than it got credit for. People many many many years ago all have the same hardware (the brain) but the amount of information that we know and take for granted allows us to focus on different, more complicated problems with ease. We can do Calculus because we know math well. We can build a fMRI because we understand electronics and computer science. The things that we know and take for granted are what creates our intelligence. How smart you are is defined by what you take as obvious compared to someone else. We will understand alot more about the brain in the next 50-100 years and the generations after that might discover the secret of consciousness.
"Obviously, humans have come a great way in being able to describe how the brain functions"
"Take for instance a simple minded creature like a dog. Their brain power is exponentially lower than ours, so their ability to understand concepts is proportionally low"
"That's a little dumb. What is 'understanding' the brain? That we can see all the neurons that is activating and know what it's exactly doing? That's not what I would call 'understanding' the brain, but interpretating. But even then, we have something that separates us from all the other things in nature, and that's to transcend nature. We'll be 'inrepretating' the brain with computers when the time comes"
"Even if it was true that a human brain can't understand itself entirely, I believe it's only a matter of time before we create machines superior to the brain in every respect. (we're probably talking about a "very" long time from now). In which case it should be able to explain things clearly. This would be a roundabout way of doing it. I still don't see why not directly though, I think it's just some "profound" theory that sounds good in academia as long as it can't be proven wrong for the time being. "
"I honestly think humanity is better off not understanding all things. It's not "meant to be".