- Series
- ACO Distinguished Lecture
- Time
- Saturday, October 24, 2009 - 5:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- LeCraw Auditorium, College of Management
- Speaker
- Manuel Blum – Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
- Organizer
- Robin Thomas
Please Note: Preceded with a reception at 4:10pm.
To come to grips with consciousness, I postulate that living entities in
general, and human beings in particular, are mechanisms... marvelous
mechanisms to be sure but not magical ones... just mechanisms. On this
basis, I look to explain some of the paradoxes of consciousness such as
Samuel Johnson's "All theory is against the freedom of the will; all
experience is for it."
I will explain concepts of self-awareness and free will from a mechanistic
view. My explanations make use of computer science and suggest why these
phenomena would exist even in a completely deterministic world. This is
particularly striking for free will.
The impressions of our senses, like the sense of the color blue, the sound
of a tone, etc. are to be expected of a mechanism with enormously many
inputs categorized into similarity classes of sight, sound, etc. Other
phenomena such as the "bite" of pain are works in progress. I show the
direction that my thinking takes and say something about what I've found and
what I'm still looking for. Fortunately, the sciences are discovering a
great deal about the brain, and their discoveries help enormously in guiding
and verifying the results of this work.