Wednesday, May 24, 2023

Cyberethics

Norbert Wiener

In 1948, Norbert Wiener created the term Cybernetics, applicable to a new technology, which he defined as follows:

The study of control and communication in the animal and the machine

Cybernetics has a lot to do with Robotics and with the use of computers and microprocessors to control and communicate; in other words, to do almost everything we use them for.

But what is being talked about right now, rather than Cybernetics, is Cyberethics: ethical issues related to the use of computers, social networks, and most tools that modern technology puts within our reach.

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Roger Penrose versus William Craig

Roger Penrose

I thank Plácido Doménech Espí for drawing my attention to this debate held in 2019 between Roger Penrose and William Craig, entitled The Universe: How did it get here & why are we part of it?

Roger Penrose rose to fame as a cosmologist in 1970 when he proved, with Stephen Hawking, a theorem stating that the application of Einstein’s theory of General Relativity to the entire universe requires the existence of at least one singular point in the universe (a point where all the geodesics of the universe meet). In other words, the Big Bang.

In 1989, Penrose became one of the most famous scientific popularizers with The emperor’s new mind, a book with deep philosophical implications. Among other things, he proposed the following question, inspired by Gödel’s theorem: how is it possible that we can prove that a theorem is true, if it cannot be proved mathematically from a reasonable set of axioms? According to Penrose, this would indicate that human intelligence is qualitatively different from computing machines.

In 2004 he published a book of extremely hard popularization, The Road to Reality, which is full of equations, where he proposes a unification of Einstein’s general relativity with quantum mechanics (a theory of quantum gravity). Then came his own cosmological theory, Conformal cyclical cosmology (CCC), according to which the universe did not begin with the Big Bang, which would only be the beginning of the current aeon, but there would be an infinite succession of previous eons, each beginning with a Big Bang and evolving to global heat death, when all that would remain in the entire universe would be photons. At that moment, (no one knows how) the entropy would suddenly drop to a minimum value again, to start a new cycle.

William Craig has proposed the kalam cosmological argument, which can be summarized thus:

  1. Whatever begins to exist, has a cause of its existence.
  2. The universe began to exist.
  3. Therefore, the universe has a cause.

William Lane Craig

Craig argues that the Big Bang was the beginning of the existence of the universe, so there must be a cause for that existence: an uncaused Creator, existing without beginning, changeless, immaterial, timeless, spaceless, enormously powerful, and omniscient, to be the author of the abstract world. In other word: God.

In the debate, Penrose began by arguing that there are three components of reality: an abstract or Platonic world (mathematics); a physical world (the material world); and a mental world (the world of consciousness). In addition, he points out the existence of three mysteries, which refer to the relationships between these three worlds:

  1. The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics (Eugene Paul Wigner): Why does the abstract world describe so well the workings of the physical world?
  2. The origin of consciousness: How can consciousness arise from the physical world?
  3. The mind’s ability to understand the abstract world: Why can we understand mathematics and apply it to describe counterintuitive phenomena?

Craig agreed with Penrose’s analysis, and added this consideration:

The abstract world cannot be the cause of the other two worlds, the physical and the mental, because it has no causal power and cannot make decisions. It is not clear that the physical world is the cause of the mental world: Penrose himself admits that this is a mystery. Can the mental world be the cause of the physical and the abstract worlds? It appears it can: we have the experience that our minds can produce physical changes through human intentionality. Could there not be an omniscient mind who is the author of the physical and the abstract worlds? That would solve the problem of the origin of the three worlds.

To this, Penrose could only reply that he does not like this idea (he declares himself an atheist) and would rather think that the abstract world is primordial, although he does not know how the other two worlds could proceed from the abstract world.

The second part of the discussion dealt with the fine-tuning problem. Craig indicated that there are three solutions to the problem:

  1. Universal constants must have the value they have.
  2. Our existence in such a fine-tuned universe may be due to chance in a multiverse.
  3. Our universe has been designed by a Creator.

Penrose began by denying that fine-tuning is a fact, although he ultimately declared himself agnostic about this question. He proposed his CCC theory as an explanation of the origin of our universe. Craig pointed out that this theory is just another multiverse theory, in time rather than in space, (most multiverses are supposed to exist in space). Penrose, for whom this idea seemed to be new, embraced it happily and asserted that his theory has been experimentally confirmed, an assertion most current cosmologists would not accept.

My conclusion from this debate: Penrose was mostly on the defensive, and he was unable to offer one convincing argument in favor of his atheism.

The same post in Spanish

Thematic Thread on Science and Atheism: Previous Next

Thematic Thread about Science and Faith: Previous Next

Manuel Alfonseca

Thursday, May 11, 2023

An Evolving Universe: PopulScience in Book Form

CEU Ediciones has published in book form, under the title Un universo en evolución (An evolving universe), a compilation of about a hundred posts published in this blog and its Spanish version, Divulciencia, over nine years, thematically arranged. Currently this book is only available in Spanish. These are the titles of the fifteen chapters:

  1. Introduction (3 posts)
  2. The beginning (5 posts)
  3. The standard cosmological model (9 posts)
  4. The fine-tuning problem and the theories of the multiverse (7 posts)
  5. The problem of time (7 posts)
  6. Life on Earth and on other worlds (3 posts)
  7. The evolution of life (7 posts)
  8. Man (5 posts)
  9. Natural and artificial intelligence (7 posts)
  10. Synthetic life and artificial life (3 posts)
  11. The future of man (8 posts)
  12. The end of man and of the universe (4 posts)
  13. Science, faith, and atheism (14 posts)
  14. About science in general (17 posts)
  15. Conclusion (1 article)

Julio A. Gonzalo

The book starts by a presentation by Javier Pérez Castells, and a prologue by Julio A. Gonzalo. This is a paragraph from the presentation, which has been highlighted on the back cover of the book:

Manuel Alfonseca presents us in this book with a selection of posts from his blogs arranged by topic. The guiding thread is the story of creation. Beginning with the start of the universe (where he expands more, given his experience and knowledge on this subject), going through the origin of life and evolution, ending with anthropological conceptions of the human being. After that, he turns towards the supposed conflict between science and faith, grouping together a set of posts where he answers to this false tirade. Along the way, he stops to deal with the issue of artificial intelligence, the author’s favorite subject, and devotes a good number of chapters to an optimistical look at the future, albeit not forgetting that everything, together with the story of creation, will have an end. The book concludes with a few pertinent reflections on the limits of science, today considered by many as the only source of knowledge, in the exacerbation of what we call scientism.

Most of the posts (about one hundred) that have become part of the book have been previously published on the blogs Divulciencia and PopulScience, although a few are completely new, others have been built from several consecutive original posts or from those that dealt with the same topics, and the rest, those who have passed directly from the blogs to the book, have been updated.

The same post in Spanish

Thematic Thread on Anniversaries and Organization: Previous Next

Manuel Alfonseca

Thursday, May 4, 2023

The brain and consciousness

Canadian psychologist Barry Beyerstein published an article with the same title as this post, and an additional subheading that indicates that he is opposing extrasensory perception (ESP), telekinesis (TK) and other supposedly paranormal phenomena. However, he takes the opportunity to attack the existence of the human soul and the existence of God (although he never names God), and launchs a confession of faith in the identity of mind and brain (Psychoneural Identity, PNI); i.e., the monist theory, although he does not say whether he prefers the reductionist or the emergentist version of monism. In support of this, he offers the following arguments: