Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Interview announcing ""One Magisterium" book with review by Stuart Kauffman and consciousness course;



see: http://consciousnesscourse.blogspot.com/  for course details and to register online at: http://foundationsofmind.org/register.html




 Stuart Kauffman’s review of One Magisterium is now online at http://www.interaliamag.org/imagining-possibilities/one-magisterium-review-by-stuart-kauffman/

Stuart calls the book a "masterpiece"



I think this paper might be of interest as a prologue to the book as it explores emanation and eschatology from a standpoint that I realize only now is neoplatonic;

http://cosmosandhistory.org/index.php/journal/article/view/262

So is this more technical article;

 http://cosmosandhistory.org/index.php/journal/article/view/403

All these are free as is this extract;

 http://www.cambridgescholars.com/download/sample/61898




INTERVIEW is at http://consciouslifenews.com/search-consciousness-cynthia-sue-larson-interviews-sean-o-nuallain/


Cynthia: First, I'd love to thank you for organizing the Foundations of Mind conference and seminars that I've so greatly enjoyed attending this year. There's something truly extraordinary happening at this time in history, that I most keenly sense when reading your books and attending the Foundations of Mind events you've sponsored. I get a sense that we're on the verge of a great intellectual revolution having to do with a whole new way of comprehending consciousness. What most inspires you to explore the subject of consciousness, and how do you feel this subject is important at this time?




Seán:  About the times we live in, Jacob Needleman put it very well in his blurb for my new book, "one Magisterium" (CSP, Sept 2014); "From first page to the last, a sustained and dazzling burst of light illuminating the fundamental questions and the presumed “answers” within the scientific, philosophical and spiritual world now radically changing before our eyes." Consciousness is one way into this phenomenon of the "scientific, philosophical and spiritual world now radically changing before our eyes." Scientists in general are naturally uncomfortable with the subjective world; there is indeed a case that it is best left to artists and spiritual guides. Yet we can say some coherent and responsible things while remaining responsible scientifically.

Cynthia: You raise an important point that many scientists are reticent to publicly discuss subjective experience, even though their own subjective experiences are primary motivators behind the scientific research they do. There seems to be a difference of opinion by many people that if there is to be but "one Magisterium," or primary way of comprehending reality, it will be based on science, while others feel it should be primarily spiritual. Do you sense humanity is on the verge of finding a way to reconcile these differences, perhaps starting with saying some coherent, responsible things about consciousness?


Seán:Great question!

Of course, historically the magisterium is church teaching. The
Galileo incident put paid to that; not so much Galileo’s  contemporary
clerical opponents, who were actually quite sophisticated, but the
retards who were pushing biblical geocentrism well into the 19th
century.

After SJ Gould, there is a consensus that Galileo’s  contemporary
clerical opponents are correct; the magisterium of the Church is faith
and morals (“how to go to heaven”), and that of science external
reality (“how the heavens go”). As an Irish recovering Catholic, I was
particularly engaged in this debate; the fact that it still goes on is
attested by the recent movie “Cavalry” with Brendan Gleeson as a rural
Irish priest with nothing to offer eventually except his willingness
to die as an expiation for the rape of children by his church.

Ironically, it was a Belgian Priest (George le Maitre) who invented
modern cosmology with his notion of the singularity/ “primeval atom”.
Yet he vociferously protested against the Vatican’s adopting this as
proving the biblical account of creation………

On  the other side, we have “thinkers” like Dawkins and Harris who
argue that science has advanced enough to come to moral conclusions.
Dawkins’ autobiography is interesting; it looks like he had the
makings of a decent computational biologist before the “selfish gene”.
On the other hand, there are too many kludges in his early
experimental apparatus for his results to be credible. The Harris case
is simpler; after Ed Vul, who spoke at foM, we frankly do not have to
believe any fmri results of the kind Harris adduces.


I leave this answer with a few more trends the book addresses;

-       Why is it that the people who believe in a religious basis (from
Mother Teresa to Matthieu Richard to Fr Greg Boyle (G-Dog) toyes, Michelle Bachman) tend to
work hardest for others? The notion of an objective realm of morality
seems vital
-       What of subjectivism in the arts? Currently, young  Americans are
deserting the only sophisticated arts form created here ie jazz
-       What of the mess Google and others are making of natural language processing?


The book and course put a lot of these issues together

Cynthia: I am very much looking forward to reading your new book, "One Magisterium"! What I find personally most significant about your previous books, including "The Search for Mind" and "Being Human: The Search for Order" is the apparent ease with which you bring ideas together from a multitude of disciplines to create a cohesive holistic presentation of consciousness at a level that I've seen few other authors match. There appears to be a larger picture view of "how the heavens go" than some more narrowly focused scientists and authors recognize. How would you advise those interested in getting caught up to speed with new findings about the nature of consciousness to begin?


Seán Cognitive Science and the circle of explanation in the sciences

Cognitive Science completes the circle of explanation in the sciences.
It can also hint at solutions to moral and aesthetic dilemmas, often
explained away through postmodernism/subjectivism. It must obey laws
of inheritance of facts and constraints; just as biology inherits
facts and constraints from physics, so must Cognitive Science inherits
facts and constraints from biology. These include conservation laws
(physics), chaotic dynamics (both biology and physics); it is likely
therefore that concepts like harmonic oscillators and bifurcations
should be pervasive in Cognitive Science.

Yet the situation is more complex. For example, the concept
“information” in physics has an energetic dimension (Landauer), a
spatial dimension (Susskind) and, as quantum theory teaches us, it
determines to some extent what we considered objective reality.
Likewise, it is arguably impossible to continue discourse about
biology without granting that codes/syntax are intrinsic to the
subject. Cognitive Science also inherits these constraints.

We must go deeper still. We find that mathematics, the most elliptical
and precise language with which we describe reality, constrains us in
certain ways. Tensors of various orders, from scalars through vectors
to the Riemann and Ricci tensors, are distinct with the latter two not
describable in terms of the former. Our explanation patterns in
Cognitive Science must honour this. So fmri, which specifies a scalar,
cannot be an explanation of mind, nor can vectors; it is a category
error to suggest they can.

Our explanation patterns in Cognitive Science  must also honour what
we learned in the 20th century from Gödel, Church et al about the
limits of formal systems. This can paradoxically leave us open to
non-deterministic thought. So we can indeed, following Gödel,
Schrodinger and other greats, assert the existence of the spiritual
while remaining completely scientifically responsible. However, we are
not going to get a “solution” to the so-called “hard problem”, an
algorithm mapping all neural data to experience; that is also a
category error. We are going to be able to argue for a substratum of
subjectivity and indeed free will  in conscious experience while
remaining scientific.  The job of eliciting subjective states belongs
to great artists and spiritual leaders, of whom we have a decreasing
number.

Cynthia: I can see that you've accurately identified some rather serious shortcomings currently being made by many researchers and authors--that they are making category errors at critical junctures. I love the work you've been doing with your Foundations of Mind conference series and your new book, "One Magisterium" to help people realize the importance of building upon sturdy foundations of knowledge in philosophy, math, physics, biology, linguistics, and computer science. Clearly there is no need for a high-tech new-fangled version of phrenology to provide a solution to the so-called "hard problem" of why people have subjective experiences of consciousness using fMRI. And clearly there is a need to create and test scientific hypotheses for how free will and other cognitive functions operate. How important do you feel it to be that cognitive science and consciousness researchers adopt a common language, and how would you envision such a shared common language being formed?

Seán:  

In 1997 I published  the book "Two Sciences of Mind" (it precedes
Shambala's use of this phrase) to indicate the necessaity for a
distinction between what Needleman called "inner" and "outer"
(cognitive science ) empiricism

In my course, you'll find certain intersections; the
Noe/O'Regan/Freeman work on sensorimotor behavior, which is common to
cognitive science and
 consciousness research. Yet that does not extend into domains like
the arts, where artists are using a much larger palette precisely to
specify inner states.

Cognitive science  can tell us that jazz uses much more complex
computations than rap; in fact we can specify the stack in say
Beethoven's 5th, whose opening has a fractal structure. That may lead
us to suspect there is something more going on, the opening to
objective  reality that Beethoven felt he was doing. And at that note
of opening to reality of I'd like to end this interview; it is
precisely this sense of an objective world to which we must conform
and which can edify us that we in the west have lost. To regain the
respect of fundamentalists like ISIS, we might consider this instead
of just bombs

Cynthia: Thank you, Seán, for making time for this interview, and for sharing news of your new book and your course on consciousness, Neuroscience and Philosophy of Mind.  I’m glad to announce that this online course is available to students anywhere in the world, and it starts this September 2nd. For a cost of $75 US, this course is a bargain, since this is the same course taught for credit at Stanford University by the same instructor, and students who complete this course will receive certificates of completion. It includes video presentations from the entire proceedings of the 2014 Foundations of Mind conference, and  I encourage all interested to learn more at: http://consciousnesscourse.blogspot.com/  and to register online at: http://foundationsofmind.org/register.html

Friday, March 14, 2014

Welcome and conclusions; announcement nest year's conference


Themes for next year can be found at


http://cosmosandhistory.org/index.php/journal/announcement/view/11

Thanks and welcome 

The theme of this year’s conference is “Foundations of Mind: Cognition & Consciousness”. There is a clear implication that these two can be distinguished, an implication that puts clear blue water between this conference and others apparently on the same theme.



This distinction can be found as far back as 200 AD with Alexander's interpretation of Aristotle's “common sense” as “that which perceives”, an interpretation echoed in Plotinus with his theory of the “inner sense”. While this move at first sight might seem to remove the magic from mental function, in fact it seems to me to be salutary. In particular, splitting the act of awareness from the contents presented to awareness allows a more detailed examination of these contents per se.



And so the panels we have examine this. We will learn in the first panel about the reconstruction of this distinction in thinkers such as Gurdjieff; we will also hear about the notion of “fine tuning” in modern cosmology, an area in many ways invented by the Belgian priest and physicist Georges Le Maitre. We then go on to examine which neuroscience methods can in fact characterize content in ways that are formally sufficient. This leads to the issue of whether there is not a propoer way to “reduce” one discipline to an other.



The dichotomy between content and perception continues in language, where clearly attention has a valuable information-processing role to play. At the ultimate metaphysical and indeed ontological level of analysis, we find that there is an as yet unresolved issue about how the act of observation can affect an apparently objective state of affairs.



Of course, decoherence theory has established that observation may not be necessary, and the epistemological interpretation of QM withholds belief in our ability cognitively to penetrate nature at this level. Yet that interpretation of QM is precisely the “weasel words” with which Osiander introduced “De Revoltionibis” by Copernicus.



Consequently, among the many fine submissions we got for review, we will include in the program here speculative interpretations of Q entanglement and the links with subjective experience.



We have an extremely diverse group of presenters, diverse not just in the range of subjects in which they are expert but in their ethnic and political affiliation. I am glad to say that we have Irish people from both sides of the main religious divide there.(1) In the old story, at the summit of the mountain we are all wearing the same kit, and we are all mountaineers as we scale the highest heights. I wish everybody here a great conference.
(1) The person from the unionist tradition was the only speaker who failed to show up; three of those who did are over 75 years of age


Conclusions

1.Neuroscience has fared at least as badly as philosophy in explaining
the mind. We have no credible account of any symbols emerging from
neural impulse; we have not developed tools to monitor electrical
junctions; indeed the current gargantuan Markram/Koch efforts are
doomed as they look at chemical synapses in the absence of theory
2.There is a way out here; dynamical systems theory, modulation of
carrier waves, the harmonic oscillator as central, honouring the
in-principle arguments that exist about tensors
3.Von Neumann's arguments in his "Grundlagen" still hold up.
4.Linguistics and other symbol systems need to be honoured
5.We need physicists!
6.Absent any input from extravagantly-funded Neuroscience, it is
intellectually responsible to attend to psychological and indeed
spiritual accounts that are rooted in best practise from other
sciences
7.The so-called "hard problem" (considered as linking neural event and
subjective experience a la John Locke) is simply nonsense and has
retarded the area
8.Finally, we must find a way of funding and organizing courses and
research away from the current PI model. As it happens, I paid for
this conference myself (and, given the reaction, do not regret doing
so). 

Sean O Nuallain

Friday, February 7, 2014

Foundations of Mind, UC Berkeley mar 6-7 2014; call for participation

Foundations of Mind: Cognition & Consciousness

Conference
The world’s top scholars and neuroscientists discuss cutting-edge issues related to cognition and consciousness

At
Sproul Room, International house at UC Berkeley, 2299 Piedmont Ave ,  Berkeley
March 6 – 7 ,  2014


Preliminary schedule


 Registration details for "Foundations of mind"  are at
http://foundationsofmind.org/

It also includes details of *Free* on-line courses in  consciousness
studies and cognitive science for suitably qualified applicants

Early bird rate for conference lasts until Feb 15 2014

 
We already have offers to publish the
proceedings both from a peer-reviewed journal and an academic book
publisher.



Confirmed plenary speakers/panelists include:-

Stuart Kauffman (U Vermont)
Terry Deacon (UC Berkeley)
Henry Stapp (LBNL, UC Berkeley)
Ed Vul (UCSD)
Jacob Needleman (SFSU)
Jerome Feldman (ICSI, UC Berkeley)
Kathryn Blackmun Laskey (George Mason)
Robert Campbell (Clemson U)
Mike Cole (UCSD)
José Acacio de Barros (SFSU/Stanford)
Mike Cole ( UCSD)
Ellen Thompson (FIU)
Sean O Nuallain (UoI)
Fr. Robert Spitzer (Magis institute)
Tony Bell (UC Berkeley)
Len Talmy (U Buffalo)






Conference chair; Sean O Nuallain (UoI)
Inquiries/ further suggestions for panellists to 
president@universityofireland.com




Thursday 6 March; schedule for “cognition” day
8-30 am registration
9am  Jacob Needleman and Robert Spitzer will give 30-minute keynotes,
followed by a discussion

It is now accepted that the Abrahamic religions, focused as they are
on community solidarity based on the sacred and with it the
supernatural, are inappropriate for environmental preservation even
without their licensing of exploitation of the earth. Yet spiritual
expressions based on emphasizing the unity of subject and object, self
and environment, fail to give an adequate account of acts of mind that
stress this difference. The ideal would be a spiritual system wherein
both the extraordinarily unlikely nature of life and earth as well as
the moral imperative to protect it would emerge as consequences from
its ontology and metaphysics. Does  such a system exist or can it be
created?

10-45 tea/coffee

Panel 1  for Mar 6
In general, each panelist will speak for 15 minutes; then the panel
as a whole will discuss the issues for 30 minutes before opening
matters up to the audience

11 am - 1pm Panel 1 Linearity, psychologism, and voodoo correlations

Speakers/panelists; Ed Vul (UCSD - session chair), James Blackmun,Tony Bell (UC Berkeley) Sean O Nuallain (UoI), Robert Campbell (respondent - Clemson)

Gottlieb Frege famously excoriated the attempt to reduce
logico-mathematical reasoning to a description of the psychological
processes underpinning it as " psychologism". But, the response goes,
these logico-mathematical entities are indeed processed in the brain,
so surely it is neither quixotic nor formally incorrect to seek an
appropriate psychological explanation for them. One such candidate
explanation is a faculty psychology based on assignment of these
faculties to the cerebral locations that fmri has been celebrated for
finding.


Neo-Fregeans might have two responses. In the first place, the fmri
results perhaps evince premature closure in their statistical
analysis. Secondly, fmri's localizations are scalar entities in a
cerebral system clearly capable of operating with vectors and even
higher-order tensors .In fact, neo-Fregeans might argue, fmri
implicitly makes extraordinary claims about the nature of scientific
explanation, claims that are hard to justify.

Where does all this leave us?

Lunch Break
Panel 2  for Mar 6
2-3-45pm Cognitive science and neuroscience

Speakers/panelists; Jerome Feldman  (ICSI, Berkeley), Robert Campbell
(Clemson - chair), Ed Vul. (Respondent) Mike Cole ( UCSD), Terry Deacon (UC Berkeley)

Science is a reductionist enterprise - we look for explanations of
phenomena at more basic levels. This does not entail "eliminative
reduction" where only the lowest level has explanatory power. Theory,
modelling, and experiment at multiple levels is important and these
should be consistent. For Cognitive Science, the ancient formulation
of knowledge as truth may be a serious barrier to understanding the
mapping of thought to neurobiology and beyond.

 3-45 tea/coffee


4pm
Symbols, thought and attention

Chair: Len Talmy
Moderator ; Ellen Thompson



Panel Olga Shurygina, Vittorio Tantucci

Two burgeoning trends in 21st century cognitive science appear at
first sight to pull in opposite directions. One is the re-emergence of
Whorfian linguistic determinism; another is the insistence that
bilingualism can retard the development of prion diseases like
Alzheimer's. One might assume that the same holds for music and other
symbolic systems. Yet a commonality is arguably to be found in the
concept of attention; can it be the case that operating between two
linguistic codes forces improved cerebral function simply because of
the monitoring necessary? If so, surely it is appropriate to survey
immigrants using languages like English which seem at first sight the
same on both sides of the Atlantic?

4-30 "Embedded I to C in Spanish-Influenced English: An Experimental
View " Ellen Thompson

5 pm  "The inner life of a joyful human being"
Olga Shurygina


  5-30 "Immediate and extended intersubjectification:
A cognitive usage-based study of the presuppositional
construction [you don't want X]" Vittorio Tantucci


6pm Keynote; Stanley Klein



6-30 pm Poster session with wine and cheese. Each poster presenter gets 5
minutes to address the plenary session before an hour of informal
conversation at a reception based around the posters

Posters are
"Nonviolent Movements As Applied Consciousness"

Jack DuVall

. "Quantum Hamiltonian MCMC: A Hypothesis  for the Mind/Brain Connection"
Kathryn Blackmond Laskey

"A grace of sense: Poetry and the architecture of consciousness" Matt Langione

."On the Relativity of Program Implementation" James Blackmun
Can Conscious Intention Bring About Meaningful Coincidence? Sky Nelson

"AN ETHICAL MODEL OF THE MORAL MIND BASED UPON A META-HIERARCHY OF
THE TRADITIONAL
GROUPINGS OF VIRTUES, VALUES, AND IDEALS"
by John E.  LaMuth


7-30pm Concert of celtic jazz to celebrate women's day; free for
conference attendees

Friday Mar 7, 2014, Sproul Room.  2nd floor, International house, UC Berkeley

Friday's schedule; consciousness, neuroscience and quantum mechanics

Keynote speakers Henry Stapp (LBNL), Tony Bell (UC Berkeley). Stuart Kauffman

9-15am  Stuart Kauffman: Answering Descartes; beyond Turing
Respondent and session chair; Terrence Deacon

10-15 "Figure-ground perception and early visual cortical processing"
Karl Zipser

10-45 am break

11am "Is the Universe a Vast, Consciousness-created Virtual Reality
Simulation?"
BERNARD HAISCH

11-30 2 "Evidence of Macroscopic Quantum Behavior andConscious Reality
Selection in a Holographic Multiverse "
Cynthia Sue Larson

noon Break

1pm Keynote; Tony Bell
1-30 "The emergence of information in mesoscopic measures of brain activity"
Gautam Agarwal, Antal Berenyi, Ian Stevenson, Kenji Mizuseki, Gyorgy
Buzsaki, Friedrich Sommer


2 pm  Panel - Quantum mind and its critics

Discussants: Henry Stapp, José Acacio de Barros (session chair),
Stanley Klein   Carlos Montemayor and others

The Quantum mind  hypothesis essentially states that quantum effects
are causative in will and cognitions, leading to an assertion of free
will. It is no longer in doubt that there is a deep mystery associated
with information, the mind, and reality, a mystery that results in
paradoxical findings with observer status in quantum mechanics. It may
be the case that our current concept of information is too
coarse-grained; it may also be the case that conscious will is
actually causative in the cosmos. Recently, the standard objections to
Quantum mind on the basis of decoherence in biological systems have
been refuted by discoveries that photosynthesis involves  quantum
superposition.  Likewise, cognition shows effects readily explicable
by quantum formalisms.  However, these effects may also be looked at
in terms of neural systems as harmonic oscillators; or is this
objection even relevant?

3-45pm Break

4-00 pm Complexity Biology-based Information Structures can explain Subjectivity,
Objective Reduction of Wave Packets, and Non-Computability
by Alex Hankey

 4-30pm 1.     "Mind/Body/Spirit Complex in Quantum Mechanics"
Author: Justin Riddle


5 Mapping The Whole in EveryOne
(An Essay on: Non-existence as the engine and axis of existence)
by  Sperry Andrews

5-30 pm "Science and Subjectivity:A Fresh Look at Phenomenology and
Deconstruction Enabling Meaning in Cognitive Studies"
 Keith Whittingslow


Final discussion and close

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Schedule Mar 6-7 2014, Sproul room, international house, UC Berkeley


Due to the overwhelming demand for the “Foundations of mind" thread, the general science themes as described on the "Cosmos and history" website  are being held over for s follow-up conference to take place in Ireland in 2015

Preliminary schedule for conference “Foundations of mind; cognition and consciousness”

Sproul room, international house, UC Berkeley 6-7 Mar 2014

 Registration details for “Foundations of mind"  are at  http://foundationsofmind.org/

Other themes may be found at  http://cssi32.blogspot.com/2013/10/first-call-for-papers-normal-0-21.html

It also includes details of *Free* on-line courses in  consciousness studies and cognitive science for suitably qualified applicants

Proposed papers/posters presenters should send a 500-word abstract to eireann@yahoo.com by Feb 7 2014. We already have offers to publish the proceedings both from a peer-reviewed journal and an academic book publisher.

31 January - please note new panel with Len Talmy on symbols, thought and attention

Confirmed plenary speakers/panellists include

Stuart Kauffman (U Vermont)
Terry Deacon (UC Berkeley)
Henry Stapp (LBNL, UC Berkeley)
Ed Vul (UCSD)
Jacob Needleman (SFSU)
Jerome Feldman (ICSI, UC Berkeley)
Tom Griffiths (UC Berkeley)
Robert Campbell (Clemson U)
Mike Cole (UCSD)
José Acacio de Barros (SFSU/Stanford)
Mike Cole ( UCSD)
Christian de Quincey (JFK)
Sean O Nuallain (UoI)
Fr. Robert Spitzer (Magis institute)
Tony Bell (UC Berkeley)
Len Talmy (U Buffalo)

Conference chair; Sean O Nuallain (UoI)
Submissions/suggestions for panellists to eireann@yahoo.com
Abstracts max 500 words, please
Deadline is Feb 7 2014

"Note new deadline*

Thursday 6 March; schedule


8-30 am registration
9am  Jacob Needleman and Robert Spitzer will give 30-minute keynotes, followed by a discussion

It is now accepted that the Abrahamic religions, focused as they are on community solidarity based on the sacred and with it the supernatural, are inappropriate for environmental preservation even without their licensing of exploitation of the earth. Yet spiritual expressions based on emphasizing the unity of subject and object, self and environment, fail to give an adequate account of acts of mind that stress this difference. The ideal would be a spiritual system wherein both the extraordinarily unlikely nature of life and earth as well as the moral imperative to protect it would emerge as consequences from its ontology and metaphysics. Does  such a system exist or can it be created?

10-45 tea/coffee

Panel 1  for Mar 6
In general, each panellist will speak for 15 minutes; then the panel as a whole will discuss the issues for 30 minutes before opening matters up to the audience

11 am - 1pm Panel 1 Linearity, psychologism, and voodoo correlations

Speakers/panellists; Ed Vul (UCSD), Tom Griffiths (UC Berkeley, session chair), Tony Bell (UC Berkeley) Sean O Nuallain (UoI)

Gottlieb Frege famously excoriated the attempt to reduce logico-mathematical reasoning to a description of the psychological processes underpinning it as “ psychologism”. But, the response goes, these logico-mathematical entities are indeed processed in the brain, so surely it is neither quixotic nor formally incorrect to seek an appropriate psychological explanation for them. One such candidate explanation is a faculty psychology based on assignment of these faculties to the cerebral locations that fmri has been celebrated for finding.


Neo-Fregeans might have two responses. In the first place, the fmri results perhaps evince premature closure in their statistical analysis. Secondly, fmri's localizations are scalar entities in a cerebral system clearly capable of operating with vectors and even higher-order tensors .In fact, neo-Fregeans might argue, fmri implicitly makes extraordinary claims about the nature of scientific explanation, claims that are hard to justify.

Where does all this leave us?

Lunch

Panel 2  for Mar 6
2-3-45pm Cognitive science and neuroscience

Speakers/panellists; Jerome Feldman  (ICSI, Berkeley), Robert Campbell (Clemson), Ed Vul. Mike Cole ( UCSD), Terry Deacon (UC Berkeley)

Science is a reductionist enterprise - we look for explanations of phenomena at more basic levels. This does not entail "eliminative reduction" where only the lowest level has explanatory power. Theory, modelling, and experiment at multiple levels is important and these should be consistent. For Cognitive Science, the ancient formulation of knowledge as truth may be a serious barrier to understanding the mapping of thought to neurobiology and beyond.

 3-45 tea/coffee

4pm Keynote; Stanley Klein
 5pm Submitted papers/posters

7pm Concert of celtic jazz to celebrate women's day; free for conference attendees

Mar 7, 2014, 2nd floor, International house, UC Berkeley

Friday's schedule


Keynote speakers Henry Stapp (LBNL), Tony Bell (UC Berkeley). Stuart Kauffman
9-30 Stuart Kauffman: Answering Descartes; beyond Turing
Respondent and session chair; Terrence Deacon

10-45 am break

11am Submitted papers and posters
noon Break

1pm Keynote; Tony Bell

2 pm  Panel 2 Quantum mind and is critics

Discussants: Henry Stapp, José Acacio de Barros (session chair), Stanley Klein   Carlos Montemayor and others

The Quantum mind  hypothesis essentially states that quantum effects are causative in will and cognitions, leading to an assertion of free will. It is no longer in doubt that there is a deep mystery associated with information, the mind, and reality, a mystery that results in paradoxical findings with observer status in quantum mechanics. It may be the case that our current concept of information is too coarse-grained; it may also be the case that conscious will is actually causative in the cosmos. Recently, the standard objections to Quantum mind on the basis of decoherence in biological systems have been refuted by discoveries that photosynthesis involves  quantum superposition.  Likewise, cognition shows effects readily explicable by quantum formalisms.  However, these effects may also be looked at in terms of neural systems as harmonic oscillators; or is this objection even relevant?

3-45pm Break

4pm 
Symbols, thought and attention


Chair: Len Talmy
Moderator ; Ellen Thompson


Two burgeoning trends in 21st century cognitive science appear at first sight to pull in opposite directions. One is the re-emergence of Whorfian linguistic determinism; another is the insistence that bilingualism can retard the development of prion diseases like Alzheimer's. One might assume that the same holds for music and other symbolic systems. Yet a commonality is arguably to be found in the concept of attention; can it be the case that operating between two linguistic codes forces improved cerebral function simply because of the monitoring necessary? If so, surely it is appropriate to survey immigrants using languages like English which seem at first sight the same on both sides of the Atlantic?

5-45 final discussion
6pm close