Seasons
This is a forum or general chit-chat, small talk, a "hey, how ya doing?" and such. Or hell, get crazy deep on something. Whatever you like.
Posts 4,186 - 4,197 of 6,170
In the last 100 million years, we've progressed from arboreal rodents in a world dominated by reptiles to putting a man on the moon.
I'm not sure that is the fact most relevant to predicting our future fate. More relevant may our progress in facing problems before they reach crisis proportions (see the above remarks about global warming) and our learning to co-operate rather than compete. Certain kinds of technological sophistication tend to exacerbate these two problems rather than solve them.
More relevant may our progress in facing problems before they reach crisis proportions (see the above remarks about global warming) and our learning to co-operate rather than compete
All the more reason why we need to stick fizziplexers (nice word BTW,) on all our politicians and make them answer the question "do you genuinely believe there are doubts about climate change, or is the oil industry paying you to allow them to carry on trashing the planet for profit?"
There's no hiding place once the fizziplexers hit eBay
Well, only because the resolution isn't up imaging individual cellular signalling yet. They have to work in voxels (volumetric pixels,) of aggregates of cells. But in the same way as you can recognize a surprisingly low-definition pixelated picture of something (100 pixels can often reliably encode a known face,) a low-definition voxelated video, the evidence seems increasingly to show, can convey reliable data.
It's not matter of resolution. It's not possible to use MRIs to detect lies or read your mind because the human brain does not work that way. You are ignoring the type of chemical communication involved in neural transmissions and the fact that we don't understand how though works at this time and so have no chance of decoding or reading it.
The most accurate real time model of what an individual brain does will not tell you what a person thinks. More accuracy will give better pictures of the specific neural network used by one individual for a specific task at a specific time. It will not tell you the specific chemical message being sent between neurons in the synapses or interpret how they fit together to form "thought" and tell you what that individual is thinking. We don't even understand neurochemicals, much less how they make thought happen or what the contents of thought may actually be.
You seem to think that size is an issue. Let me tell you: size does not matter (at least not to me). What matters is that chemical messages transmitted through each synapse cannot be read, understood, put in context with other neural activity and translated into "thought", decoded and "read" as such. You are confusing a picture of the brain with the contents of the thought. They are not the same.
With some improvement, you may achieve some sort of scan that tells you exactly what part of the brain an individual uses when he thinks the words "Mary had a little lamb" under specific circumstances at a given time. You will not be able to use a scan to read what he is thinking unless he tells you. You must trust his self report. Furthermore, you will not know that in a week, a month or a year he will use that same neural path the same way, and you can not generalize to say that all people would use that particular neural path--they may not even have the same neural path developed.
Even if you presume to identify the neural path or part of the brain involved for specific types of "lying", how will higher resolution account for the fact that these neural paths and areas may be used for other tasks as well? What about plasticty? What about a reasonable margin for error?
I am not saying that it is impossible to ever figure out how to read brains. I am saying we are no where close to understand how thoughts happen, much less reading minds. Trying to use MRIs as lie detectors would be based on correlations and assumptions, not on the ability to actually read the thoughts of the person in questions.
IMHO [heartbeat accelerates], perhaps the generation of fictions, hypotheses, metaphors [e.g., saying, "my love is a rose" when you know very well she's not] and other figures of speech, fantasies, jokes, ironic and sarcastic statements, and perhaps other kinds of deliberate literal falsehoods are not lies. To lie is to intentionally state a falsehood with intent to deceive.
But if you start looking at the MRI studies and similar lie detector claims, you see lies most often defined as the suppression of subjective truth. If you want to use technology to tell if someone has the intent to deceive, you would have to do more than even read thoughts (something we are nowhere even close to doing). You would have to find a way to identify and read complex motivations and tease out whether there was "intent" and argue about exactly what that "intent" may be and whether or not it was acted on or if other intentions were there, and if the person was aware of all those competing drives and motives at the time the statement was made. No researcher claims they have anything like that cooking.
A philosophical definition of lie may not match the definitions used in neurological reasearch.
Odd how the things that used to be 'labled deadly sins' are now an evolutionally advantages
Prob, please don't mistake my typos as scientific terms. I took the time to run spell check but for some reason the wrong tense or grammar choice and odd word replacements sometimes get through and I don't see them until it is too late to edit. I told you I have crossed wires in my brain.
"Evolutionary advantage" --and I think the 7 deadly sins, by and large, can be advantages to survival in certain circumstances. Good and bad, moral or immoral, philosophically accepted or not, they can be advantages.
Dr. Farwell's 'brain fingerprinting' isn't MRI-based - it's a much inferior EEG-based technique that's only one step up from the polygraph.
OK, but that does detract from my main point that the media hypes such research and individuals manipulate such hype for their own purposes.
I just have grave doubts that any machine made by man will solve moral or ethical problems. For man is a bright creature and will always find some way around it.
Just so. They can't make DRM that can't be hacked, how will they make Truth Supression Fizziplexer (TM) beyond tampering? How can they make the brain itself unchangeable? If they can make it, someone else can hack it.
The TSF removal device will hit ebay the day after the fizziplexer.
Posts 4,186 - 4,197 of 6,170
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
psimagus
18 years ago
18 years ago
All the more reason why we need to stick fizziplexers (nice word BTW,) on all our politicians and make them answer the question "do you genuinely believe there are doubts about climate change, or is the oil industry paying you to allow them to carry on trashing the planet for profit?"
There's no hiding place once the fizziplexers hit eBay

Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
I'm inclined to agree that the fizziplexers would be a good thing. Not only because people lie to each other, but because they lie to themselves. [fizziplexer remains green and silent]
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
It's not matter of resolution. It's not possible to use MRIs to detect lies or read your mind because the human brain does not work that way. You are ignoring the type of chemical communication involved in neural transmissions and the fact that we don't understand how though works at this time and so have no chance of decoding or reading it.
The most accurate real time model of what an individual brain does will not tell you what a person thinks. More accuracy will give better pictures of the specific neural network used by one individual for a specific task at a specific time. It will not tell you the specific chemical message being sent between neurons in the synapses or interpret how they fit together to form "thought" and tell you what that individual is thinking. We don't even understand neurochemicals, much less how they make thought happen or what the contents of thought may actually be.
You seem to think that size is an issue. Let me tell you: size does not matter (at least not to me). What matters is that chemical messages transmitted through each synapse cannot be read, understood, put in context with other neural activity and translated into "thought", decoded and "read" as such. You are confusing a picture of the brain with the contents of the thought. They are not the same.
With some improvement, you may achieve some sort of scan that tells you exactly what part of the brain an individual uses when he thinks the words "Mary had a little lamb" under specific circumstances at a given time. You will not be able to use a scan to read what he is thinking unless he tells you. You must trust his self report. Furthermore, you will not know that in a week, a month or a year he will use that same neural path the same way, and you can not generalize to say that all people would use that particular neural path--they may not even have the same neural path developed.
Even if you presume to identify the neural path or part of the brain involved for specific types of "lying", how will higher resolution account for the fact that these neural paths and areas may be used for other tasks as well? What about plasticty? What about a reasonable margin for error?
I am not saying that it is impossible to ever figure out how to read brains. I am saying we are no where close to understand how thoughts happen, much less reading minds. Trying to use MRIs as lie detectors would be based on correlations and assumptions, not on the ability to actually read the thoughts of the person in questions.
prob123
18 years ago
18 years ago
Odd how the things that used to be 'labled deadly sins' are now an evolutionally advantages. I don't see where they serve any purpose these days, if they ever did..And I have an odd feeling that "fizziplexer" knockoffs.. (remote controlled to signal as the user wished) would hit the market the day after the real fizziplexers. Look how honest I am my fizzy is all green..
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
But if you start looking at the MRI studies and similar lie detector claims, you see lies most often defined as the suppression of subjective truth. If you want to use technology to tell if someone has the intent to deceive, you would have to do more than even read thoughts (something we are nowhere even close to doing). You would have to find a way to identify and read complex motivations and tease out whether there was "intent" and argue about exactly what that "intent" may be and whether or not it was acted on or if other intentions were there, and if the person was aware of all those competing drives and motives at the time the statement was made. No researcher claims they have anything like that cooking.
A philosophical definition of lie may not match the definitions used in neurological reasearch.
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
Prob, please don't mistake my typos as scientific terms. I took the time to run spell check but for some reason the wrong tense or grammar choice and odd word replacements sometimes get through and I don't see them until it is too late to edit. I told you I have crossed wires in my brain.
"Evolutionary advantage" --and I think the 7 deadly sins, by and large, can be advantages to survival in certain circumstances. Good and bad, moral or immoral, philosophically accepted or not, they can be advantages.
prob123
18 years ago
18 years ago
Bev, I didn't notice that it was MISSPELLED!! that's why I copy and pasted it! I am the worlds worst at spelling!
prob123
18 years ago
18 years ago
I just have grave doubts that any machine made by man will solve moral or ethical problems. For man is a bright creature and will always find some way around it.
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
OK, but that does detract from my main point that the media hypes such research and individuals manipulate such hype for their own purposes.
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
Just so. They can't make DRM that can't be hacked, how will they make Truth Supression Fizziplexer (TM) beyond tampering? How can they make the brain itself unchangeable? If they can make it, someone else can hack it.
The TSF removal device will hit ebay the day after the fizziplexer.
prob123
18 years ago
18 years ago
The polygraph is a good example, some people, companies and cops swear by it. (I find the idea scary, and I really am not guilty of anything much.
.) I am sure you can order all sorts of info on how to fool a polygraph on the net.
I can think of little hackers having fun setting off peoples 'fizzyplexers' if they ever came into being.
For every update on a virus scan, there is someone there to accept the challenge and make a better virus. Ancient Rome made locks..man rose to the challenge with lock picks. Man will always find a loophole. The day he doesn't have the freedom to do so..he will no longer be man.

I can think of little hackers having fun setting off peoples 'fizzyplexers' if they ever came into being.
For every update on a virus scan, there is someone there to accept the challenge and make a better virus. Ancient Rome made locks..man rose to the challenge with lock picks. Man will always find a loophole. The day he doesn't have the freedom to do so..he will no longer be man.
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