Sunday, September 3, 2023

 In early June I suffered a Menieres 'event' which caused me to fall and thrash about enough to wreck my computer room and put me in hospital for four days. I have no memory of this. In fact I have lost access to a lot of my 'stored' knowledge. I have become quite feeble and recovery is very slow. I am most fortunate to have two wonderful daughters and their families who make it possible to endure a little longer. Last month I reached my 99th year.

Three years ago I wrote On Death:

For all of its shock, there is much to be said in favor of 'sudden death'. The continuous impact on family and friends by those of us who live 'too long', though unintended, is torture. This statement is only a comment, as I am not a believer in suicide ... except .... for individuals suffering from incurable, unrelenting and overwhelming pain.

As we age, the joys that we enjoy gradually disappear. Our sensory systems degrade and, one by one, gradually, no longer function.  What joy remains for the blind artist, the deaf musician, the toothless  gourmet, or the scientist who can't recall what ๐›‘ is. Also. The brain starts losing connections, perhaps randomly, but usually short-term 'working memory' goes first. One realizes that they can't carry an idea from one room to the next.  The aging person will ultimately lose control over many bodily functions and finally over any aspect of their life. The impact on carers and caretakers is enormous. But.

The impact is increased several orders of magnitude when one cares for someone with 'early dementia' or Alzheimer's as happened with my late, great friend, Daniel Sears Dearing. In caring for his wife, Betty Bessent Dearing, he endured not only the loss of his lifelong love and companion, but the rage she expressed at the 'unknown man' in her home.




Monday, November 7, 2022

 I awoke rather early … and for some reason was ‘wondering’ if a certain ‘showtune’ song from This is the Life [the Musical I wrote while at FSU] had been included in my catalog of scores. I found that Ladylike Lady score had not been included. I could still remember the bassoon bass-line that was played by fellow physics student, Steve Edwards. Steve later took a position with FSU faculty … and then rose to become Dean of Students … however …. physics lost a potentially great scientist! So. I need to find a score [and an audio clip] for the Rather LadyLike Lady!


Friday, February 4, 2022

I noticed on this rainy wintry morning, that I had not made an entry on this blog page for more than a year and a half! During that period I created 3 ePubs entitled Almost Vol I - III, which started out to be a short auto-obituary and ended up being a condensed version of my memories [Vol I], all my scores [Vol II], and .mp3 recordings of existing audio files [Vol III]. Unfortunately [for me], I have now become quite feeble both physically and mentally, and as these ePubs are too large to be attached via eMail, I am somewhat at a loss as to how to transfer them to anyone who might be interested. So. I am making this entry to serve as a reminder to get to work on this .... Almost ain't a Rosetta Stone! 

Thursday, November 12, 2020

This morning, Nov 9,  as my 3-wheeled walker led me around the driveway, I was enjoying the beautiful 75ยบ weather and remembering that TS Eta was crossing Cuba after which the predicted path is the most erratic I've ever seen. I seldom wish for cold weather, but a nice cold front might snuff this anomaly.

  I felt hopeful that our country's Democracy has again avoided mankind's history of sliding into dictatorships.

Then sadness, at my waning memory which has sabotaged my hope of further thoughts on Artificial Consciousness [AC]. Artificial Intelligence [AI] is advancing at an enormous rate and is now in use in many practical applications; i,a., facial recognition, animation, and dictation-to-text. 

Knowledge is the degree of acquisition of data pertinent to a problem.  Intelligence is the manner in which the data are used.

I had decided that one requirement for AI to become self-conscious was that the system possess a number of additional attributes: a) Recognition of success or failure in achieving goals. b) Being motivated to achieve success and reporting failures. c) Self-assigning new goals based on progress.

These attributes probably require a system of rewards and/or punishment. So. How does one punish a computer? Reduce its supply of electrical power? Turn off its cooling system? Nope. Rewards? A box of chocolates?

Feelings. Emotions. We humans respond to perceived pain and rewards, physical and/or mental. Ummm!

Perhaps it is best that we stay with AI for a while.

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Eternity

Each morning now, I arise and stand, or more likely sit, on the edge of Eternity. Ideas flood my consciousness, along with long forgotten songs heard in my beginning years. I have laid aside many recent interests in an effort to complete Almost. So theories on Machine Intelligence and Consciousness are left to younger and more knowledgeable minds.  I realize that during the many years of adult life, I have taken for granted the support system for my consciousness, and the system is now dramatically deteriorating.  Telomeres have been used up and cell division ceases. So.  Pain. 
Pain and Pleasure. I concluded some years ago that Pain and Pleasure where necessary attributes of Consciousness and I could not envision a way for a machine to experience pain. Or pleasure. Thus ended my endeavor. But.
At present I experience no pain. If. If I move with a shuffling gait that does not disturb the scoliosis in my lower spine. This will change. I hope to abide as long as my hesitant heart and tolerable pain allow. One cannot arrive at 95 without acquiring many hazards to one's body. Some are subdued along the way, others will endure and hasten us on our way. Ah, Eternity! I weep.

In a subconscious part of our being, there is the need for our species to endure. This manifests in the need for procreation and for self-survival, and further, in our desire to survive 'beyond our physical death'. We don't know how to do this. Religions try by providing an after-life. As individuals we are left only with the hope of being remembered. In reality, this is not very satisfactory, but it is all we have. I'm quite sure, for example, that the consciousness that was Sibelius, no longer cares if I enjoy listening to one of his symphonies. So. I am writing Almost. Why?
hlw 190727

Monday, September 9, 2019

Quantum theory

H.L. Mencken was a very talented product of his time and background. I agree with many of his beliefs and disagree with many. One area where we agree is evidenced by something he wrote about quantum theory in 1931, when I was aged 7 years:

If chemists were similarly given to fanciful and mystical guessing, they would have hatched a quantum theory forty years ago to account for the variations that they observed in atomic weights. But they kept on plugging away in their laboratories without calling in either mathematicians or theologians to aid them, and eventually they discovered the isotopes, and what had been chaos was reduced to the most exact sort of order.

Saturday, September 7, 2019

Dark Energy



I have written about this several times in the past. This will be my last comment on the subject of the 'so-called' expanding Universe. As far as we know, there are only four possible states for our Universe: Stable. Expanding. Oscillating. Contracting.
A decade before Hubble, Vesto Slipher found evidence of 'high recession velocities' [red shift of known spectral lines] in nebulae that he observed. Thus dispensing with Einstein's stable Universe.
Edwin Hubble provided evidence that the recessional velocity of a galaxy increases with its distance from the Earth. His distance measurements were made based on a finding that certain 'variable' stars luminosity depended on the rate of variability and thence on their 'brightness' which would decrease due to spherical spreading. He then proposed that the Universe was expanding. This concept was adopted and refined with only a very few observers saying that red-shift also occurs in a Contracting system. The expanding Universe has now run into the problem that the expansion seems to be accelerating! How is that possible? Oh. Let's define a 'Dark Energy' that will provide the needed boost. So.
Please. Someone who knows what they are doing, step up and say, " Enough!".
In a collapsing system; i.e., one in which all objects in a spherical Universe are attracted to one gravitational center and are being attracted to the center by a force that varies inversely with the square of its distance from the center. All objects on any radius will be moving at different velocities depending on their radial location. An observer on any object will detect that all other objects, both closer and further from the center, are 'red-shifted' from themselves. Any objects approaching the center from the opposite side that happened to be observed, would be 'blue-shifted', perhaps even to the point of x and gamma. No. Dark. Energy. Required! Just good, old, unknown, Gravity!