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title, date, layout, tags, permalink
| title | date | layout | tags | permalink |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Do ~~Machines~~ People Think? | 2026-04-02 | column.njk | column | /columns/2026/do-people-think/ |
Rough Notes
- Thinking:
- Can we flip this around, and define it by reduction? What isn't thinking?
- Reaction
- Reflex
- Conditioned behavior
- But what part of thinking isn't grounded in some conditioned behavior? Some reflex triggered by a problem to solve?
- But thinking seems to involve "modeling," and for our purposes, we mean a mental model.
- This mental model gets tested, calibrated, exercised.
- So how is this different than a program?
- Digital vs. Analog?
- Inputs, the decisions, are much fuzzier for organic mental models (and thinking)
- Computers are (seemingly) deterministic
- But, if we shed this assumption, what happens to our distinction?
- If computers can "approximate" the fuzziness with digital values...
- same question, what happens to our distinction?
- Thinking as a survival skill
- Thinking as communication
- Socialization
- Connecting with neighbors and "vibing."
- Thinking as an emergent behavior, among a pool of people
- Maybe the mob mentality is the purest expression of thought.
- Without self, or ego.
- What does it map to, in the scheme of things?
- I keep thinking about connections
- And how stifling it is to exist in isolation
- But to become ingrained in something
- And to connect with the people, the pieces
- To have an exchange, that's the essence of thinking
- Some kind of transformation, born from the coordination and interaction of many players
- Bottling it within youself, just as senses, impressions without a voice, with no expression or transformation
- We form groups, we organize, and we process together. That's thinking
- Can we flip this around, and define it by reduction? What isn't thinking?
Quotes
"[he thinks] that the idealistic creations of his mind... also represent reality." - Claude Bernard
"Much thinking is done in completely personal, idiosyncratic terms, so much so that how it is done is incommunicable." - Gerald Weinberg
Questions
-
Who is Claude Bernard?
- Famous French Physiologist (1813-78).
-
How would I define "thinking?"
-
Is "thinking" in isolation really thinking? Or, is thinking in a social / anthropological sense a connector?
Links
[1] - Hamming, R. (1997). The art of doing science and engineering: Learning to learn. CRC. https://archive.org/details/artofdoingscienc0000rich [2] - Weinberg, Gerald M. An Introduction to General Systems Thinking. Wiley, 1975. Internet Archive, https://archive.org/details/introductiontoge00gera.