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Michael Levin: Hidden Reality of Alien Intelligence & Biological Life | Lex Fridman Podcast #486

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- The following is a conversation with Michael Levin, his second time on the

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podcast. He is one of the most fascinating and brilliant

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biologists and scientists I've ever had the pleasure of speaking

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with. He and his labs at Tufts University study and build

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biological systems that help us understand the nature of intelligence,

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agency, memory, consciousness, and life in all of its forms here on Earth, and

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beyond. This is the Lex Fridman Podcast. To support it,

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please check out our sponsors in the description, where you can also find

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links to contact me, ask questions, give feedback, and so

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on. And now, dear friends, here's Michael Levin.

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You write that the central question at the heart of your work from

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biological systems to computational ones is, "How do

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embodied minds arise in the physical world, and what

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determines the capabilities and properties of those minds?" Can you

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unpack that question for us, and maybe begin to answer it?

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- Well, the fundamental tension is in both the first-person,

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the second-person, and third-person descriptions of mind.

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So, in third-person, we want to understand how do we recognize

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them, and how do we know, looking out into the world, what degree of agency there

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is, and how best to relate to the different systems that we find.

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And are our intuitions any good when we look at something and it looks

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really stupid and mechanical, versus it really looks like there's

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something cognitive going on there? How do we get good at recognizing them?

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Then there's the second-person, which is the control, and that's both for

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engineering but also for regenerative medicine, when you want to tell the system to do

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something, right? What kind of tools are you going to use? And this is a major

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part of my framework, is that all of these kinds of things are operational claims.

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Are you going to use the tools of hardware rewiring, of control

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theory and cybernetics, of behavior science, of

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psychoanalysis and love and friendship? Like, what are the interaction protocols that you

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bring, right? And then in first-person, it's this notion of having an inner

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perspective and being a system that has valence and cares about the

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outcome of things. Makes decisions and has memories and tells a story about

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itself and the outside world. And how can all of that exist and

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still be consistent with the laws of physics and chemistry and various other things that we

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see around us? So that, that I find to be maybe the most interesting and the

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most important mystery for all of us to both on the science

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and also on the personal level. So that's what I'm interested in.

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- So your work is focused on

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starting at the physics, going all the way to friendship and love and

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psychoanalysis.

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- Yeah, although, actually I would turn that upside down. I think that pyramid is backwards,

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and I think it's behavior science at the bottom. I think it's behavior science all the

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way. I think in certain ways, even math is the behavior of

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a certain kind of being that lives in a latent space, and

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physics is what we call systems that at least look to be

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amenable to a very simple, low agency kind of model, and so

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on. But that's what I'm interested in, is understanding that and

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developing applications. Because it's very important to me

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that what we do is transition deep ideas and

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philosophy into actual practical applications that not only make it

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clear whether we're making any progress or not, but also allow us to relieve

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suffering and make life better for all sentient beings, and enable

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to, you know, enable us and others to reach their full potential. So these are very

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practical things, I think.

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- Behavioral science, I suppose, is more subjective, and mathematics and physics

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is more objective? Would that be the clear difference?

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- The idea basically is that where something is on that

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spectrum, and I've called it the spectrum of persuadability. You could call it the

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spectrum of intelligence or agency or something like that. I like the notion of the spectrum of

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of the spectrum of persuadability, because it's an engineering approach. It means

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that these are not things you can

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decide or have feelings about from a philosophical armchair. You have

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to make a hypothesis about which tools, which interaction

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protocols you're going to bring to a given system, and then we all get to find out how that worked out for

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you, right? So you could be wrong in many ways, in both directions. You can

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guess too high or too low, or wrong in various ways, and then we can all find out

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how that's working out. And so, I do think that the behavior of certain

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objects is well-described by specific formal rules,

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and we call those things the subject of mathematics. And then there are some other

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things whose behavior really requires the kinds of

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tools that we use in behavioral cognitive neuroscience, and those

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are other kinds of minds that we think we study in

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biology or in psychology or other sciences.

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- Why are you using the term persuadability? Who are you persuading, and of what?

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- Well-

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- In this context.

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- Yeah, the beginning of my work is very much in regenerative

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medicine, in bioengineering, things like that. So

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for those kinds of systems, the question is always, how do you get the

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system to do what you want it to do? So there are cells, there are molecular

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networks, there are materials, there are organs and tissues and synthetic

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beings and biobots and whatever. So the idea is, if I want your

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cells to regrow a limb, for example, if you're injured and I want your cells to regrow a

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limb, I have many options. Some of those options are I'm going to

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micromanage all of the molecular events that have to happen, right? And

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there's an incredible number of those. Or maybe I just have to micromanage the

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cells and the stem cell kinds of signaling factors.

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Or maybe actually I can give the cells a very high-level

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prompt that says, "You really should build a limb," and convince them to do

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it, right? And so which of those is

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possible? I mean, clearly people have a lot of intuitions about that. If you ask

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standard people in regenerative medicine and molecular biology, they're going to say, "Well, that

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convincing thing is crazy. What we really should be doing is talking to the cells, or better

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yet, the molecular networks." And in fact, all the excitement of the

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biological sciences today are at single molecule approaches and

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big data and genomics and all of that. The assumption is that,

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going down is where the action's going to be, going down in scale,

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and... I think that's wrong. But the thing that we can say

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for sure is that you can't guess that. You have to do

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experiments and you have to see because you don't know where any given system is on

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that spectrum of persuadability. And it turns out that every time we look and we

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take tools from behavioral science, so learning different kinds of

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training, different kinds of models that are used in active

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inference and surprise minimization and perceptual multi-stability

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and visual illusions and all these kinds of interesting things. Stress

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perception and memory, active memory reconstruction.

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All these interesting things. When we apply them outside the

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brain to other kinds of living systems, we find novel discoveries

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and novel capabilities, actually being able to get the material to do new things that

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nobody had ever found before. And precisely because I think

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that people didn't look at it from those

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perspectives, they assumed that it was a low-level kind of thing. So when I say

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persuadability, I mean different types of approaches, right? And we all

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know if you want to persuade your wind-up clock to do something,

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you're not going to argue with it or make it feel guilty or anything. You're going to have to get in there with a wrench and you're gonna have

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to, you know, tune it up and do whatever. If you want to do that same thing to a

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cell or a thermostat or an animal or a human, you're going to be using

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other sets of tools that we've given other names to. And so that's... Now,

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of course, that spectrum, the important thing is that as you get to the right of that spectrum, whereas the

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agency of the system goes up, it is no longer just about persuading it to do

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things. It's a bidirectional relationship, what Richard Watson would call a mutual

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vulnerable knowing. So the idea is that on the right side of that

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spectrum, when systems reach the higher levels of agency, the idea is

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that you are willing to let that system persuade you of things as

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well. You know, in molecular biology, you do things, hopefully the system does what you want to

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do, but you haven't changed. You're still exactly the way you came in.

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But on the right side of that spectrum, if you're having interactions with even cells, but

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certainly, you know, dogs, other animals, maybe other

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creatures soon, you're not the same at the end of that interaction as you were

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going in. It's a mutual bidirectional relationship. So it's not just you persuading

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something else, it's not you pushing things. It's a mutual

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bidirectional set of persuasions, whether those are

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purely intellectual or of other kinds.

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- So in order to be effective at persuading an

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intelligent being, you yourself have to be

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persuadable. So the closer in intelligence you are to the thing you're trying

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to persuade, the more persuadable you have to become, hence the mutual

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vulnerable knowing. What a term.

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- Yeah. Richard, you should talk to Richard as well. He's an amazing guy and he's got

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some very interesting ideas about the intersection of cognition and

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evolution. But I think what you bring up is very important because,

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There has to be a kind of impedance match between what you're looking for and the tools that

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you're using. I think the reason physics always sees mechanism and

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not minds is that physics uses low agency tools. You've got

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voltmeters and rulers and things like this. And if you use those tools as your

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interface, all you're ever going to see is mechanisms and those kinds

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of things. If you want to see minds, you have to use a mind, right? You have to have

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some degree of resonance between your interface and the thing you're hoping to find.

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- You said this about physics before. Can you just linger on that and expand on it,

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what you mean, why physics is not enough to

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understand life, to understand mind, to understand intelligence? You

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make a lot of controversial statements with your work. That's one of them 'cause there's a lot of

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physicists that believe they can understand life, the emergence of life, the origin of

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life, the origin of intelligence using the tools of physics.

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In fact, all the other tools are a distraction to those

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folks. If you want to understand fundamentally anything, you have to start at

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physics to them. And you're saying, "No, physics is not enough."

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- Here's the issue. Everything here hangs on what it means to

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understand, okay? For me, because to understand doesn't just mean have some sort of

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pleasing model that seems to capture some important aspect of what's going

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on. It also means that you have to be generative and creative

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in terms of capabilities. So for me, that means if I tell you this

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is what I think about cognition in cells and tissues, it means, for example,

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that I think we're going to be able to take those ideas and use them

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to produce new regenerative medicine that actually helps people in various ways, right?

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It's just an example. So if you think as a physicist you're going to have a

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complete understanding of what's going on from that

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perspective of fields and particles, and, you know, who knows what else is

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at the bottom there.

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Does that mean then that when somebody is missing a finger or has a

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psychological problem, or you know, has these other

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high-level issues, that you have something for them, that you're going to be able to do something?

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Because my claim is that you're not going to, and even if,

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even if you have some theory of physics that is completely compatible with

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everything that's going on, that is... it's not enough. That's not specific enough to enable you

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to solve the problems you need to solve. In the end, when you need to solve those problems,

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the person you're going to go to is not a physicist. It's going to be either

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a biologist or a psychiatrist, or who knows, but it's not going to be a

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physicist. And the simple example is this. You know, let's say,

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let's say someone comes in here and tells you a beautiful mathematical proof, okay?

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It's just really, you know, deep and beautiful, and there's a physicist nearby, and he

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says, "Well, I know exactly what happened. There were some air particles that moved

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from that guy's mouth to your ear. I see what goes on. It moved

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the cilia in your ear and the electrical

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signals went up to your brain." I mean, we have a complete accounting of what happened, done and

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done. But if you want to understand what's the more important

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aspect of that interaction, it's not going to be found in the Physics Department. It's going to be found in the Math

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Department. So that's my only claim is that physics is an amazing lens with which

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to view the world, but you're capturing certain things, and if you want to

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stretch to sort of encompass these other things, it

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just, we just don't call that physics anymore, right? We call that something else.

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- Okay. But you're kind of speaking about the super

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complex organisms. Can we go to the simplest possible thing where you first

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take a step over the line, the Cartesian cut, as you've called it, from the

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non-mind to mind, from the non-living to living?

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The simplest possible thing, isn't that in the

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realm of physics to understand? How do we understand that first step where

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you're like, that thing is no mind, probably non-living, and

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here's a living thing that has a mind. That line.

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