Monday, 24 December 2018

genius



“Elizabeth Gilbert muses on the impossible things we expect from artists and geniuses -- and shares the radical idea that, instead of the rare person "being" a genius, all of us "have" a genius. It's a funny, personal and surprisingly moving talk.”

Her story matches mine. There is mental churn which, in genii, gives the subjective impression of somebody who has got ‘it’ fixed. But there is too strong a flavour of magic. In essence the churn  rearranges the knowledge, feelings and moods (KFM) that are interactive in real time). 

The only constant thing is change. Fingernails need clipping, corpses need burying, mountains erode, galaxies flash in and out of ‘existence’.

It takes genius to see that the world is round, that heavier than air machines can fly, and that a woman’s place is in the home.

One of Shakespeare’s characters reckons “that man thinks too much, such men are dangerous”. This goes along with the idea of “keeping the peasants in ignorance”; because ignorance is “bliss”.

Monday, 10 December 2018

knowing the endless one

"In the solitary place, at rest, passionless, with senses well controlled, let a man bring the one Self into his being, thinking of nothing but that endless One." Shankara

Tuesday, 4 December 2018

Cabbages for lions


John Donne (1572-1631) reckoned that “No man is an island unto himself”. There is the African saying that “it takes a village to grow a child”. Confucius and the Jesuits reckon that if they have control of a child for its first five years they will give us the man. It is self-evident that newly born human beings are dependent on family and community. However, recent work in the brain sciences suggests that the human brain does not fully mature till about 25.

Our ancestors spent millions of years as hunters and gatherers. There were not many divisions of labour so it was possible for individuals, especially the older ones, to have accumulated all the knowledge needed to survive and prosper.   

Then, about 150,000 years ago, language began to evolve  and it contributed to the development of settled agriculture and many new divisions of labour. Some types of labour came to be of higher status than others – especially rulers.

Language advanced through metaphor and analogy.  (The unknown is like the known.) The developers included philosophers, poets, craftspeople, tax collectors, soldiers, and entertainers. The early mindbrain saw patterns, and assumed intentional agents. The pattern in the house was deference to the father; in the village to the tribal chief; in the city to the king and in the heavens to omniscient gods who worked in mysterious ways.

The hierarchical system is still alive. I am ruled and regulated by family, by  community council, by Aberdeenshire council, by the Church of Scotland (declining), by the Scottish government, the UK government, the media, (increasing), the EU, the UN and God (declining).

It might be the case that there is a gene for religion. It could operate the same way as with language. There is a hard wired module to learn a language (nature) but the particular language depends on the culture into which the child has been cast (nurture).

Scientific students of the Abrahamic religions tend to view God as an unpredictable,  grouch, and father figure. That at least is my somewhat  old testament impression. 

There is the notion of the elders and betters who are the good and great. There is papal infallibility and the divine right of kings. Those at the bottom of the hierarchy are instructed about god’s will by those further up. And this has included the drowning of witches and the burning at the stake of those who question the authority of the ruling elite. Thus arose  the Spanish inquisition and  varieties of thought police.

I became an atheist before I was 25. I am presently 69.   It  became obvious that, after the big bang,  nothing comes from nothing: but  an enormous amount evolves unplanned by natural selection. Watch  the videos by David Attenborough to have jaw dropping insights into what it takes to be a living thing – find food and avoid being eaten so as to raise a large family. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Attenborough

Nature is often red in tooth and claw, especially amongst carnivorous predators that have evolved as killing machines. As a human being I have the teeth and guts of an omnivore. When I was a child I visited the local slaughter house with my father who was a butcher to trade. The cows that were being slaughtered gave the impression of being terrified but this was quickly ended by a stun gun which was  referred to as a humane killer.

As a Zoology student I was responsible for the death of many animals, and as a Biology teacher for many more. These days I have vague  leanings towards being a vegetarian because I can always find plant food in the Coop. I also seem picky about the animals that I do sometimes choose. It is something to do with consciousness. 

Most invertebrates and fish lack self awareness. We humans do not eat amphibians and reptiles – other than frog’s legs. We do not eat predators  and seem to prefer domesticated herbivores (eg cows and sheep). 

Pigs are omnivores like us.

Aha – a matrix that needs working
Living – non living
Self aware- robotic
Domesticated - wild

MORE ON FEEDING

Thursday, 29 November 2018

thinking about thought

There was an inkling to gather thoughts about thinking: so I set up the laptop in the warm kitchen.

'Metacognition’ was quick to appear and I followed it up in the MSWord ‘smart lookup’ tool which put a link to Wikipedia –

‘Metacognition is "cognition about cognition", "thinking about thinking", "knowing about knowing", becoming "aware of one's awareness" and higher-order thinking skills'.

The higher-order thinking skills are dealt with in the pre-frontal cortex where they are labelled as executive functions. They parallel the stages of the project planning cycle - situation analysis, policy formation, planning, implementing, monitoring and evaluating.

Khaneman recognises two types of thinking -fast and emotional and slow and rational. The fast type is useful in situations of clear and present danger - escape from predators. The slow type is useful for being creative and thinking new thoughts.

Neither type of thinking presents an abiding truth and reality. Ideas and words are memes that evolve. Languages are forever developing with some ideas passing their sell-bye date and others catching on.

Babies learn their local language with great ease. Guidance comes from family, community, school, the workplace and the media.

Most of the young ones come to embody their parochial natal language.This is good so long as it 'keeps the peasants in ignorance' and prepared to die for king and country. Absorb the propaganda and demonise the enemy.Them and Us - and we are the precious ones.

"I like tomatoes and I don't like potatoes."
"Who is the -i- who likes and dislikes and why?"

Meditators can be good TFM watchers in that they detach from the cognitive churn which has no abiding reality.

It is never too late to change your mind but it can be difficult to remember to do so. Difficult but not impossible. It is like training a lively dog.Patience.

SO - be still and know.Let the churn of TFM settle such that there is peace in every step

Wednesday, 14 November 2018

Thursday, 1 November 2018

cognitive memes


My mantra is ‘changing minds’ aka training, education, enlightenment - with or without overtones of brainwashing, enculturation and propaganda. 

Each human being is influenced by nature (genes), nurture (memes) and stupendent levels of serendipity (chance).