Epistemology #5
Paradox and Wisdom
Human
intelligence is built around the paradox that Maturana and Fell attribute to
our biology. We are always already
connected and autonomous. What we ‘know’
is never just what we experience as individuals (including the intelligence of
our bodies), and it is never simply a cultural reaction. We are constantly balancing the two. Epistemology has traditionally focused on the
autonomous side of the equation, but intelligence is always a product of both
of these realities. In that sense,
paradox is a constant feature of human thought.
Paradox
has played a pivotal role in a lot of traditions. It was central to early Greek thought, and
can be found in both early Daoist teaching and later Zen kaons. In Christianity the Trinity presents a
paradox that most current Christians just skip over. Even modern physics revolves around the
paradox that both quantum mechanics and relativity are both ‘true’ but
incompatible. As Heisenberg famously
said about that paradox. “the opposite of a small truth is false, but the
opposite of a great truth is also true.”
Some have argued that poetry revolves around the paradox of ambiguity and
the vatic implications of that kind of interpretation. Keats once called that ‘negative capability,’
the ability to hold two opposite and competing ideas at once. It is obvious that paradox has been a
constant in human thought and language.
The
same might not apply to machine intelligence.
The algorithmic view of the world revolves not around paradox but
simulation. Algorithms work because they
can run variable simulations of the same conditions to determine what is or is
not likely to occur. Every video game
player understands that she has to ‘die’ a few times to reach the next
level. Simulation optimizes some options
over others to provide a ‘right’ or ‘best’ option. One of the great advantages of machine
intelligence is that by using simulation it can find patterns that human
calculation is too slow to uncover.
Computer programs can roll millions of dice to reveal an intricate
pattern that no one roll or limited set of rolls can replicate. In doing so, however, simulation renders any
particular moment, including this one, insignificant. I can ‘die’ as many times as I need to in a
video game to get to the next level, but that’s not an option for me in daily
live. Here, I only get one chance. One of the axioms of chaos theory is that the
next roll of the dice or the shape of the next vortex in a tub of water when
the plug is pulled is unpredictable.
That doesn’t mean it’s entirely random – it will fall within a range of
limited options, but it’s exact shape is unknowable until you pull the plug.
The difference
between paradox and simulation defines the role of wisdom. As cyborgs we live with both. We have greatly benefited from the
introduction of super fast simulation made possible by machine
intelligence. At the same time, the biological
couplings that sustain us as organisms are continually presenting us with
paradox. We might be able to simulate
many actions, but we can only take one. When we take that one action, it is
indeterminable how it will turn out in the moment. We can know how it will turn out 99 times out
of 100, but we can’t know about this time in advance. I think that paradox is connected to wisdom
because we have to make – and feel – the choice in the moment. Paradox creates a pause – a mindfulness if
you will – that deepens and enriches the moment we are in. An epistemology for cyborgs has to entertain the
possibilities of simulation without neglecting the need for wisdom. That is, cyborgs have to possibility in both
terms and develop an intelligence that uses both without confusing them.
Thinking about the paradox of autonomy and connectedness, I did a double-take on the title of your blog. I'm happy to join your one man band.
ReplyDelete"Never simply a cultural reaction" sounds to me like to show the limitations of many manifestations of postmodernism and some liberal politics as well as identity politics done the wrong way.
ReplyDeleteThe paradox is so important to where you are headed with this on cyborgs. Maybe the Christian mystics got into this but you are so right that the Trinity was always just presented as "take it on faith" (in other words absolutist." This seems so like what Thicht Nanh calls "big mind"Do you think Enlightenment Understanding as Power as also been a culprit? Blake's Urizen.
Love the blog!