If
the true picture of reality and our place in it is that stochastic, one begins
to wonder how we manage to get anything done. What mental models guide us to effective
action in such a scary environment? The answer lies in viewing the human mind
itself in a way that is consistent with quantum theory, namely in the Bayesian
way.
Simply
put, none of us would engage in everyday life if we did not see ourselves as
being free. In my dealings in everyday life, of course I
believe in free will. I get out of the way of oncoming buses or landslides, I
go to work to earn my pay, and I hold people responsible for their actions. I
expect other rational adults to do the same. I applaud decent actions and
reprimand mean, unethical ones. I calculate odds of both the material rightness
and the moral rightness of nearly everything I do. The Bayesian view of the
mind, combined with the quantum picture of reality, affirms and draws into
sharp focus my everyday picture of myself.
The
Bayesian model of the human mind is an appropriate one to fit inside of the
quantum model of the universe because it portrays the human mind in a way that
is consistent with quantum uncertainty. A sense-data-processing, probability-calculating,
action-planning program—refined by trial and error through centuries of
cultural evolution—is going to be more likely to enable the organism that uses
it to survive than is any other survival program we could propose.
The
mind software that runs on the brain hardware is presently defying all computer
simulations and other models we have devised to try to imitate or explain it.
In other words, the details of the programs that run on the brain’s
protoplasmic hardware are even more of a mystery than the enormously complex
neuron hardware itself. The mind, which is only an evolved variation of the
larger phenomenon of life itself, spots patterns in sense data. In fact, some
of the models of reality that the mind uses to guide its actions have been
worked out by whole societies over generations.
Finding
patterns in the flows of matter and energy around us and calculating ways to
exploit them is what our minds do. So far, we have not been able to pin down exactly
how they do this. But in spite of our difficulties with comprehending what happens
when we are comprehending, the Bayesian model of the mind is still useful and
workable. With it, we can do some serious reasoning.
So
far, this book has shown how the Bayesian model of the human mind is integrated
with the socio-cultural model of human evolution and the quantum model of the
physical universe. We are thinking creatures, learning—sometimes over
generations—by Bayesian means, individual and collective, to improve how we
deal with this probabilistic universe. With this tripartite model to support
us, we are ready to draw some further powerful conclusions.
Notes
1. C.S.
Lewis, Mere Christianity (New York,
NY: HarperOne, 1952), p. 19 of URL link. https://www.dacc.edu/assets/pdfs/PCM/merechristianitylewis.pdf.
2.
Vassilios Karakostas, “Nonseparability, Potentiality and the Context-Dependence
of Quantum Objects,” Journal for General
Philosophy of Science, Vol. 38 (2007), pp. 279–297. http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0811/0811.3696.pdf.
3. Robert
Bishop, “Chaos,” Edward N. Zalta, ed., Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall
2009 edition, first published July 2008). http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2009/entries/chaos/.
4. “Indeterminism,”
Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Accessed April 25, 2015. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indeterminism#Robert_Kane.
5. Charles
Sanders Peirce, “The Doctrine of Necessity Examined,” originally appearing in The Monist, Vol. 2, (1891–1893), pp.
321–337. http://www.cspeirce.com/menu/library/bycsp/necessity/necessity.html.
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