NullRad
NullRad t1_ja9jdqh wrote
Reply to comment by ErisWheel in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
How’s that working out for you… your dopamine bound to winning low risk arguments?
NullRad t1_ja9i11x wrote
Reply to comment by ErisWheel in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
What do you get when you Hitchens a Diogenes? Behold, a chicken.
NullRad t1_ja9fned wrote
Reply to comment by ErisWheel in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
How’s throwing ad homonyms & snuck premise at people who don’t care working out for you?
NullRad t1_ja9dxjm wrote
Reply to comment by ErisWheel in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
Evidence? I don’t need shit to make a tongue in cheek comment on r/philosophy.
NullRad t1_ja6ynrp wrote
There is a 10:1 ratio of bacteria to human cells in any given body. We’re arguably planet ships for colonies of microbiota. The brain/gut neural vector is an example that gives gut microbiota a direct connection to our brains.
Ever have a craving to eat something? Ever want to do chores and end up procrastinating? Ever decide to do anything (or stop doing anything) only to fail?
The microbiota control the body, consciousness is just there for suggestions & future planning so that the microbiota don’t die.
NullRad t1_j5rzaxz wrote
>In 2002, three decades after Hawking’s result, the physicists Roberto Emparan and Harvey Reall — now at the University of Barcelona and the University of Cambridge, respectively — found a highly symmetrical black hole solution to the Einstein equations in five dimensions (four of space plus one of time). Emparan and Reall called this object a “black ring” — a three-dimensional surface with the general contours of a doughnut.
A hypersphere, or a sphere in 5 dimensions, would render in our frame of reference as a Kerr (ring) black hole.
Unsure about those infinite configurations and their stability in a spacetime frame of reference. Most probably rapidly decay.
NullRad t1_je16427 wrote
Reply to comment by muskratboy in Charlie Sheen in "The Arrival" (1996) by Yeeslander