Quantifying Learning at the Synapse: Has the “Gold Standard” Been Set for Understanding Consciousness?
From Walter Donway (wdonway) the author: "The psychologist to which this article refers was Allen Blumenthal, one of the original circle around Ayn Rand that included his future wife, Joan Mitchell, Alan Greenspan, Nathaniel and Barbara Branden, and a few others. When I first came to NYC, Dr. Blumenthal was very, very active in the practice of psychotherapy.and holding therapy groups to discuss the Objectivist theory of psychology...Highlight of the week for dozens of people."
"Jump, for a moment, from learning in the fruit fly to the most complex mental process known: “free will.” There is a theory in psychology that our volition is genuinely undetermined and that introspection—a valid level of observation of learning—suggests that this free will is to be found in the human choice to “turn on,” or “focus,” or elevate the level of conscious activity in response to challenge. Obviously, there is no evidence that this capability exists in species other than man because either they cannot introspect or cannot report their introspection—still the chief evidence for free will."
Edited to include the Rand context
"Jump, for a moment, from learning in the fruit fly to the most complex mental process known: “free will.” There is a theory in psychology that our volition is genuinely undetermined and that introspection—a valid level of observation of learning—suggests that this free will is to be found in the human choice to “turn on,” or “focus,” or elevate the level of conscious activity in response to challenge. Obviously, there is no evidence that this capability exists in species other than man because either they cannot introspect or cannot report their introspection—still the chief evidence for free will."
Edited to include the Rand context
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
All this trivia aside, and as interesting as it is to learn how the brain functions, the issue of free will is established in that any attempt to disprove free will requires the use of free will, thus qualifying it as an axiom.
In signal theory we talk about the maximum amount of information that can be contained in a given 'channel', and I compare this to the ability of a single human mind to understand everything about itself. In essence, "where would you store the information?" and it becomes an unsolvable divergently recursive problem.
We are interacting via computers and the internet which relies on very low level hardware steps just as simple and yields incredibly complex activities. Such complex activity can make it seem disconnected from the underlying simple operations, but it CAN be reduced to them -- a very very large number of them.
So may it be with the brain. The key question, of course, is whether we are mechanistic, with incredibly complex but entirely physical characteristics or if there is something non-physical in the mind. Here we move into the realm of spirituality, an area that I'm uncomfortable relying on.
I suspect it all can be reduced to the individual steps -- or at least we must assume that it can until we have proof otherwise.
As to free will, my old boxer who finally died this last summer and I would go out for walks every night. We had two courses we followed, one slightly shorter and one slightly longer -- the longer one with a hill. On pleasant nights when I wasn't in a rush I would let him decide. He would sometimes sit at the corner and look both ways for several seconds before deciding which way to go. It sure looked like free will to me.