RE: the spark of creativity

From: Don Klemencic (klemencc@sgi.net)
Date: Wed Mar 01 2000 - 19:37:38 MST


Thanks for your latest post, Dan. The only thought that comes to mind in
response is that the unconscious per se is on the subjective side of the
mind / brain system, so no one will be able to look at that. But if idea
formation in the mind / brain has some physical correlate, as I think it
must, I wonder if those molecular robots that nanotechnology forecasts might
eventually give us the ability to monitor those physical correlates as they
process and give us an understanding of what's going on. Perhaps that's
asking too much even for nanotechnology-I don't know. Maybe someone can
comment on that.

After my response to your earlier post yesterday evening, your statement
about body processes and organ systems not functioning through a natural
selective process brought something to mind. Bateson made the explicit point
in Mind and Nature that embryogenesis and metabolism are not creative.
They're just the running of programs via the tools previously produced by
those programs (my paraphrase from memory). Perhaps the majority of brain
function itself is no more creative than present-day computers processing
data.

I posted a response to Matt (mjg223) around midnight and it floated around
cyberspace before landing on the list around 3:30 am, so our last postings
crossed in space. Carrying on that post, I think there is reason for an
aesthetic bias, all else being equal, toward the idea that creativity is
'one thing' and not 'several things', until evidence indicates otherwise.

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-extropians@extropy.com [mailto:owner-extropians@extropy.com] On
Behalf Of Dan Fabulich
Sent: Wednesday, March 01, 2000 12:14 AM
To: extropians@extropy.com
Subject: RE: the spark of creativity

> I was very much thinking of something beginning in the unconscious, with
> only the final phases emerging to consciousness.

Again, I'm skeptical about theories like this. How could we have concrete
evidence that this is what actually happens in the human brain?

> As to whether the mechanism operating in the unconscious to produce new
> ideas has the form of natural selection, the proof would be if AI
> researchers discovered that they needed to build structures that embodied
a
> natural selective process in order to see creativity operating in their
> systems.

This would provide *some* evidence for your theory, though it
certainly wouldn't clinch the matter. You began w/ a very strong
proposition, remember:

---
> There is a proposition that all creative processes have natural
> selection as an underlying mechanism: 1. Mutation or a random
> information source external to the system. 2. A progressive winnowing
> of the information for compatibility or usefulness. 3. Amplification
> and combination of the survivors to compete at a higher level.
---

It's one thing to say that SOME creative processes have natural selection as an underlying mechanism. I take this claim to be *fairly* uncontroversial. (Though I could easily imagine some stick in the mud insisting that if it's not a product of Free Will, then it's not really Creativity. Doesn't convince me, but it does convince a lot of anti-AI thinkers like Searle. Anyway, I find Genetic Algorithms impressive enough that I'm willing to call them "creative" processes.) But your claim is a lot stronger than that; it claims that ALL creative processes have natural selection as an underlying mechanism.

Don't forget, also, that AI researchers can't "discover" that they *need* to use a natural selection process (say, GAs) to get creativity. All AI research can ever show is that an AI which employs natural selection in a certain way can pass the Turing Test with regards to creativity, and that no other mechanism we know of will do the job. Again, this is no small bit of evidence, but this is quite far from a proof.

It's also pretty far from brain science. A lot of empirical theories have been posited for how the brain does what it does; the memetic view has been a sufficiently hard-to-map way of talking about brains that no structural parallel to memes has ever been empirically established. (Again, I welcome you to try; you'll certainly get published for it if you succeed.) Unless and until you can say "look at these data: THIS is where natural selection happens in the brain!" then your proposition will always remain "just a theory."

I don't mean to say "just a theory" the way so-called Creationists claim that evolution is "just a theory." A *number* people on this list and in the scientific world at large believe that the brain is capable of doing uncomputable stuff. (Penrose is, at present, the most popular such writer.) So even if you *could* somehow prove that a computer needs natural selection before it will yield creativity (which you can't), objectors could still point out that there might be something uncomputable going on in the brain, in which case, the brain is not a "computer" in that sense, and all bets are off.

To clarify, you might try to argue this way:

1) Natural selection works in AIs and we don't know of any other way to get creativity 2) Therefore natural selection is the only way for a computer to have creativity 3) Therefore natural selection is the only way to have creativity at all 4) Therefore the creativity present in the brain has natural selection as its mechanism

*I* think most of these lines are right, even if the moves aren't very plausible, but a lot of people would disagree with me. Worse, this argument smells like that sort of science which is called "deductive" science by its friends, "theoretical" science by neutrals, and "non-experimental" science by its polite enemies.

Anyway you look at it, you're still stuck with the problem of unverifiability at every line except the first, and possibly the last. I say "*possibly* the last" since I can't think of any good way to verify line 4 empirically, but I could imagine some experiment which would establish the point convincingly. In contrast, 2 and 3, while they agree with my intuitions, would only be a reasonable inference to me given 4; 1 is thus way way short of proving 4.

-Dan

-unless you love someone- -nothing else makes any sense- e.e. cummings



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Jul 27 2000 - 14:04:25 MDT