Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Narrative space

Proceedings from the Symposium on Extraterrestrial Psychology

Dr. Latimer: Language is nothing more than a stream of symbols that signify nothing until we recognize something we might have either seen or heard before, and look up it's meaning in our mental dictionary. In a plurality of worlds, without a common store of experience that comes from shared culture, efforts at communication may be an exercise in incomprehensible gestures. Verbal communication is the manipulation of symbols to which meaning is assigned by culture. An important point to keep in mind my friends is that the events experienced by members of a culture over time are what make up the narrative thread of that culture.

Dr. Zhavern: When we look into space, we don’t see things as they are. What we see is a single narrative thread winding it’s way through the cosmos ..a cosmos that may be shared by narratives other than our own. However, to it’s participants ..each narrative looks like the only cosmic game in town. Like language, we skew space to resemble something we’ve either seen, or heard before. It’s the only way we can come to grips with it.

Dr. Orloff: I think human consciousness is a fragmented and unstable process. It creates rapid models of counterfactual worlds inside the brain for things it cannot observe ..but only infer. The brain keeps track of these different versions until only those that contribute to narrative coherence receive sufficient signal strength to survive while those leading nowhere dissolve into noise ..and disappear into non-narrative space .. in an instant.

Dr. Pangloss: I think consciousness is made up of searchlights, projected from different mental versions of the world we create. They eventually converge to form concentric circles in the brain that illuminate the focal points that contribute most to narrative events, and fade rapidly at the periphery with fewer contributing points until things go black somewhere around the edges of non-narrative space.

My feeble brain ( hasn’t got a clue ): Are you saying that the narrative threads of extraterrestrials aren’t likely to uncoil very closely to ours ..(?)

7 comments:

Mother Sharon Damnable said...

ha ha !

Which proves that communication is not all about talking, no matter what title you give yourself.

Many Americans cannot understand a brit accent (and there are many) so what hope have they got of understanding Aliens?

We are all more psychic than we know, the super salesman use his psychic abilities to persuade people to buy from him.

A baby can truly seem an alien entity, he does not speak, and will not be able to for three or four years, yet his mother understands him, loves him and there are many complexities in their relationship.

I think that with communication, as with much else in life, the desire is the key, if we desire to communicate and aliens desire to communicate with us a way forward will be found.

Interestingly, again as with much else drugs (cannabis, cocaine and alcohol) can be a key as well, certainly I remember a very entertaining holiday in Spain where I was able to function in Spanish within 24 hours and was able to translate basic concepts to my fellow travellers.

X~X

Eduardo Cantoral said...

Bill,
thanks for bringing these thoughtful exchanges.

This reminds me of Carl Sagan calculating storms in Mars, and warning us here on Earth about Nuclear Winter.

One never knows where the next clue on the meaning of consciousness will come from.

brad4d said...

consciousness IS so awareness translates...

Bill Robertson said...

Sharon, that’s certainly true ..talking is a very small part of communication. There are so many other forces at work.

I found your experience in Spain interesting.
`

Bill Robertson said...

Cantoral, Carl Sagan indeed ..! I’m also reminded of the principle of interdependent originations.

Bill Robertson said...

consciousness is ..

I like that!

Eduardo Cantoral said...

Interdependent Origination:

http://www.thebuddhadharma.com/issues/2003/summer/dharma_dict_summer03.htm