Monday, March 25, 2024

Human Consciousness in Understanding the Suprareality of Artificial Intelligence (AI)

 




Physics always attracted me - on this blog I have numerous essays about the intriguing parallels between quantum physics, the interactions at molecular level, to human behaviour with the world around us, or at the macro level.

Among these is our characteristic of having perceptions albeit not  always knowing how they translate to our understanding of our environment. More importantly, it is our “unknowing” how to translate these perceptions into evaluating our present and future behaviours.

In fact, this very topics has puzzled scientists for more than a century, especially when exploring the role of the brain vis à vis our perceptions in interpreting our sensory experiences. The scientific formulation of this inquiry was in the 19th century by a German physician and physicist Hermann von Hemholtz. He proposed that while our brain interprets sensory signals/stimulations , many of us perceive and interpret that same signal in different ways. After all, visual arts, even written poetry send the same signal to everyone’s brain but we perceive what we experience differently, making art a platform where our individual past experiences  bypass the wiring circuits of our brain and transform the predictability of the  interpretation fluid, different and personal.

Present day scientific research has expanded Von Hemboltz’s framework of brain and perception to brain-mind perception. The intervening dimension in the new framework is that of consciousness when the mind translates what the brain analyses into perception. Thus, the brain records facets of an observation or experience, and the mind/consciousness interprets them within the parameters of perception that are influenced by the past experiences of the “brain owner.”  Such experiences range from feelings, passing through pragmatic decision making, to actions taken based on superstition. In this context, it has been proposed that the relationship between quantum physics, perception and effect on behaviour becomes more scientifically tenable.

Why?

In the observation of micro, molecular level interactions, quantum mechanics has demonstrated a fundamental effect of the observation on the behaviour of the observed. In the early 19th century, the German physicist and Nobel Prize recipient Werner Heisenberg discovered that when atoms are observed, the very act of observing them affects their behaviour. It is called the “observer effect” and has influenced scientific research beyond physics, including psychology and medicine. And that is where the molecular world of quantum physics has guided our understanding of our own behaviour in, and interaction with the macro world.

How?

Any creature, including us humans, interacts with its “world” by interpreting the observed and reacting to it.  That reaction can be appreciation, rejection, fear, fight, flight as well new understanding leading to future reactions when similar observations are interpreted.  As such through the initial observation, the observed becomes real, and it shapes our own self. Further, through our actions post interpretation, we change the behaviour of that original observed which will now take a new “form” when encountered again. But through this new experience of observation and interpretation, we are also changed by understanding the process.

That is the essence of what is called “Quantum Leap” in psychology. Specifically that through the observer effect of daily life, we become multiple versions of our own selves – that we acquire different abilities to interact with our reality. And those multiple versions of us are like the particles observed in quantum physics – they will be affected and changed through observation. Thus the “Leap” we develop is like particles – going from version of ourselves to another, never at the same time, every time we are faced with a new interpretation of reality.

In a funny way, the quantum mechanics contribution to psychology, and the field of consciousness in the interpretation of reality, seems a mirror image of the observer effect – it is we who change when reality looks back at us!

… Today we face a new challenge – that of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Simply put, AI would act as a brain by processing all available “knowledge” about an observation of topic, and synthesizes a signal of that composite for us to run through our consciousness and perceptions. In traditional human terms, the composite signal the AI offers us is not reality as our brain is built to record, but a “Suprarealty” (my terminology)where “Supra” stands for “beyond and outside the limits”.  No doubt, this new reality is one that we have to learn to adopt, but with a caveat – our past experiences and knowledge will not be able to fully analyse that new reality through our present consciousness, hence perceive its meaning. We may not know wrong from right, real from fiction, and thus be unable to dissociate our known reality from the AI generated Suprareality.

The fundamental challenge may be because our reality and the Suprareality do and will coexist. Perhaps the human brain will evolve to accommodate such duality, but for now our old brains are not designed to guide our consciousness to evaluate the two realities in tandem.

As a simplistic experiment, I ran the photo at the top of this page through a rudimentary AI function on my phone. It is a photo I took in Mumbai during a passing summer rain.  The goal of my experiment was to see how that photo would be modified using the synthesis of drawing techniques and result in a product that would qualify as artistic. Here is the result:

 


As a street photographer, I aim at capturing reality as it happens. I do not alter what I observe, and my past 50 years of people photography have shaped my consciousness to predict the next behavior based on an initial one and get ready to take a photo when that predicted moment happens.

Looking at the “drawing” of my photo, I cannot hear the rain, the brouhaha of the busy street, and almost smell the humid air in Mumbai.

Maybe I will, one day, learn how to have those feelings when looking at a Suprareality photo. And that would not be a quantum leap, but rather a paradigm shift.

 

Sample from my previous posts about the role of physics beyond scientific research

1.    https://vahezen.blogspot.com/2013/11/paradox-and-uncertainty.html

2.    https://vahezen.blogspot.com/2015/06/yin-yang-and-st-augustine.html

3.    https://vahezen.blogspot.com/2017/11/the-oak-sleeps-in-acorn-james-allen.html

 

March 25, 2024

© Vahé A. Kazandjian, 2024


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