Aug. 3rd, 2010

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There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old's life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves hobbits.
— Kung Fu Monkey

For the record, as with all things, I went a third way, and read Illuminatus! instead.
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It's so cute when theists basically pat their audience on the head and say, "There, there, thinking machines aren't a threat. We won't have to treat them any better than we do a dog."

David Gelernter throws out words like "consciousness" and "awareness" and even the hoary "free will" without ever acknowledging that none of these terms have any serious definition. The assumption is always the same: thinking is irreducible to brain activity, which is as incorrect as saying a video game were somehow irreducible to electrons passing through silicon.

And Gelernter refuses to acknowledge what Wittgenstein pointed out over a century ago: when things start acting as if they acted indistinguishable from those we accorded the label "ensouled," then we are morally obligated to treat them as if they, too, had souls. Anything else is repugnant.

Gelernter's fantasy of "human-like machines" doesn't really deal with the future at all. We don't worry about human-like machines: those are actually quite boring from a researcher's point of view. (As a writer, of course, I have other reasons for delving into the topic.) Our big worries are in targetted intelligences for acheiving specific intellectual or scientific aims, the results of which involve so much intellectual capacity that one ordinary human mind cannot encompass the result: we're left to using the recipes left by our vast, cool, and unsympathetic engines of thought, and explaining them to each other by a process indistinguishable from hermeneutics. At that point, we had better have tight reins on our intellectual progeny, because these vastly smarter but still unconscious, technological but unself-aware machines, will have incidental agendas built into them about which we may be completely mistaken.

And then there will be real trouble.
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Inception is everything the Matrix series wanted to be. You can see director Christopher Nolan sitting down with a pencil and saying, "I'm gonna fix everything that went wrong with the Wachowski Brothers," and he succeeded. Inception is an amazing movie, from start to end visually and intellectually appealing.

Go with no expectations. Don't bother with 3D, but do see it in Imax if available. Really, trust me on this: Inception is both awe-inspiring and talented filmmaking. At one point, Nolan has us aware of not just two but five different levels of reality are at work, and somehow keeps us completely informed of what we need to know at every level to keep up with his script. Omaha and I are gonna go see it again.

What else is beautiful about this film? Not a laptop or computer in sight. Hell, I don't remember people using a goddamn cell phone. The technology is never explained, and its origin glossed over in a single line of dialogue. Like that classic of mind invasion, Brainstorm, Inception cares little about explaining the technology and much about explaining what it means. The people both behind and before the camera do so with panache and style, and have created a beauty of filmmaking to behold.

Oh, and you learn why you hire a guy like Oliver Arthur[*].

[*] Must not blog after midnight, followed by going out of town for two days...

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Elf Sternberg

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