The Horrible Truth About Consciousness | Blindsight

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  • Опубликовано: 31 авг 2022
  • In this video we discuss The Blindsight by Peter Watts. It is a Science Fiction book about mankind's first contact with alien life!
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Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @mikvance
    @mikvance Год назад +2052

    The most chilling thought I’ve heard is that “what if humans aren’t the first to achieve consciousness, but the first to survive consciousness.”

    • @callithasmed8468
      @callithasmed8468 Год назад +121

      It's an interesting thought. Depending on how "old" "reality" actually is, it's pretty conceivable.

    • @jesuschristlovingyou
      @jesuschristlovingyou Год назад +116

      I've heard a similar speculation stating that humans were uplifted by being forced to experience consciousness and acute self awareness for generations until we adapted to it through repression of its most burdensome aspects.

    • @superads91
      @superads91 Год назад

      Humans aren't the first to achieve consciousness, only the first to get really intelligent + conscious. All other big-enough animals are conscious, they're just not very intelligent. A toddler has no idea he will die someday nor has any philosophical opinions on anything, but he's still "there". I'd say most apes are perhaps even more "there" than toddlers, perhaps even being aware of their own mortality.

    • @winwinmilieudefensie7757
      @winwinmilieudefensie7757 Год назад +39

      Humans are not the first on earth to achieve consciousness…. So there is that fact 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Unit-3475
      @Unit-3475 Год назад +70

      A Human who invested in the development of consciousness in the distant past took a huge risk - many who reached consciousness died in the struggle against more primitive ones, since consciousness does not give instant advantages.
      But now, having managed to survive and retain consciousness, he will be able to surpass the rest.
      If, of course, he can use his consciousness correctly.

  • @toaster9922
    @toaster9922 Год назад +2922

    Man, you can't just hit me with the thought that humanity and consciousness is a disadvantage and then go "oh by the way, vampires exist too"

    • @MyMarsham
      @MyMarsham Год назад +125

      You should read the sequel, Echopraxia. It has zombies.

    • @callithasmed8468
      @callithasmed8468 Год назад +13

      @@MyMarsham Does it have that fucking music? Mmmmm, so goooooood.

    • @ufoash440
      @ufoash440 Год назад +70

      Yeah, when Quinn said that bit turned me off honestly. Sometimes ppl cram too much into their stories.
      If you have a deep and interesting philosophical and scientific concept to cover, why do you need to fall back on tired old tropes like vampires and zombies?

    • @Poopinism
      @Poopinism Год назад +7

      Well you definitely won’t like out of the dark by Peter Weber

    • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
      @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 Год назад +9

      It's not that hard to imagine for the chronically depressed.

  • @SuperSecretAgentNein
    @SuperSecretAgentNein Год назад +642

    Fun fact: the origin of the Blindsight Vampires: back in the 2000’s Peter Watts was off at some fantasy/sf convention to promote one of the books in his Rifters trilogy. A friend and fellow author put him on a discussion panel, as a joke it turned out to be a panel on vampires, preeetty directed towards Buffy The Vampire Slayer fans.
    So you’ve got this hard scifi author on this panel wondering what he’s doing next to these people debating if the true love of Buffy is Angel or Spike, and he’s just wondering what he’s even doing there. But he does use the panel to wonder aloud, if vampires existed in the real world what would the non supernatural explanation be for them? He pretty much created the Firefall series (the series of which Blindsight is the first book) vampires right then and there. It went over like a wet fart at the con because nobody there was interested.

    • @clippedwings225
      @clippedwings225 Год назад +21

      love that

    • @hitmonjim86
      @hitmonjim86 Год назад +26

      As a fan of both, this is awesome & hilarious.

    • @skateboardingjesus4006
      @skateboardingjesus4006 Год назад +38

      Buffy the vampire slayer fans?
      Oh the poor man, having to suffer that shite. I'd rather be thrown to a pack of ravenous werewolves.

    • @taitano12
      @taitano12 Год назад +22

      I feel sorry for both sides. One of my sisters was a Buffy fan, but also a hard sci-fi fan. I hit her with a similar train of thought. "I don't know! I guess it would be some inability to produce some... Screw it. It's just a goofy show, and I don't want to know about the "real life blah blah blah" stuff behind it." So, even if they liked the explanation and whatnot, it would have come out of left field and left everyone like "... Um, what? Who invited Mister Buzzkill??"
      I imagine that it would have been a much better experience for everyone if he and the audience knew what was going on. He and the audience could have had a lighthearted discussion of possible science behind the various supernatural phenomena in the show "The Science of Superman" style. But, instead, everyone got pranked by whoever put him on the panel.

    • @refundreplay
      @refundreplay 11 месяцев назад +5

      People usually giggle at wet farts

  • @geraldkenneth119
    @geraldkenneth119 Год назад +639

    The philosophical premise of this book is probably one of the most existentially terrifying ones I’ve ever encountered. The idea that the very essence of being, the thing that, in our minds, gives us value, and all the things that come with it (emotions, morality, philosophy, entertainment, self-discovery, etc) are nothing more than an evolutionary error and the countless useless, and ultimately counterproductive, things born of it, is terrifying in a way that I cannot describe.

    • @WardDorrity
      @WardDorrity Год назад +38

      Bingo! That's precisely the way I saw it. Consciousness as an evolutionary error. And the question: is it ultimately self-cancelling?

    • @geraldkenneth119
      @geraldkenneth119 Год назад +56

      @@WardDorrity I like to think that, in real life, consciousness does serve a purpose. From what I can tell consciousness seems to act as an adaptive learning system, allowing us learn new things which, when we’ve done them enough, get transferred to the unconscious. There’s also the fact that being aware of and being able to modify some of our mental processes gives us increased adaptability, since it allows us to ruminate and question our methods. Although I suppose phenomenal consciousness might not be needed for such processes to be possible

    • @philipm3173
      @philipm3173 Год назад +25

      @@WardDorrity I think it's important to distinguish self-awareness from consciousness. Hypothetically, one could have no concept of self but be conscious of the universe they inhabit.

    • @chart6454
      @chart6454 Год назад +3

      @@geraldkenneth119 watts acknowledges this argument but think it’s unlikely it’s the only algorithm capable of facilitating novel skill acquisition

    • @geraldkenneth119
      @geraldkenneth119 Год назад

      @@chart6454 true

  • @jp12x
    @jp12x Год назад +1762

    The Chinese Room is not a fallacy itself. Rather, the fallacy is thinking the person in the room "understands" Chinese.
    It is often used to demonstrate that a computer can process information in a way that makes it appear to understand ideas without actually understanding.

    • @MuantanamoMobile
      @MuantanamoMobile Год назад +30

      Yes, this...I expanded on it in another comment.

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae Год назад +182

      Yes, it's like chatbots responding realistically and people thinking they're sentient 💀💀

    • @karlez7664
      @karlez7664 Год назад +93

      Just like students in algebra class

    • @tonoornottono
      @tonoornottono Год назад +74

      @@RexGalilae so frustrating to see so-called experts claim that google is holding a sentient being hostage

    • @SolarShado
      @SolarShado Год назад +62

      @@tonoornottono I mean, part of the problem is that without some way to look inside the room (and understand what you see when you do), you have no way of knowing if the room contains someone (or something) with actual understanding or just an "automata" following some complex set of rules. Making _either_ assumption is unjustifiable without additional information.

  • @Grow333
    @Grow333 Год назад +590

    Its incredible to me how such an overused concept like first encounter with aliens can be twisted in so many incredibly different ways. Found another book to put on my list thanks to you Quinn. Thanks!

    • @nacl7991
      @nacl7991 Год назад +2

      @Psychometrics or maybe not and we should fear it

    • @ecbrown6151
      @ecbrown6151 Год назад +14

      @Psychometrics maybe, if the speed of light is a hard limit then the distances may simply be too vast

    • @MikaelKKarlsson
      @MikaelKKarlsson Год назад +8

      @@ecbrown6151 yeah, perhaps if we really manage to travel outside our own system one far off day; we might find traces of civilizations that existed millions of years ago. But no more than that.

    • @Naptosis
      @Naptosis Год назад +2

      Blindsight is free too! (or was, last time I checked)

    • @Grow333
      @Grow333 Год назад

      @@Naptosis SIIIIIIIIUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU

  • @matthewperkin7527
    @matthewperkin7527 Год назад +150

    When I first read blindsight, I remember the massive smile on my face as I started to understand the concept, it just seemed so audacious. It’s one of the greatest pieces of science fiction ever and really makes you think in ways most books don’t. So glad you covered it 🙄

    • @rr.studios
      @rr.studios 2 дня назад

      I felt the same way when I first read the book and I am glad he did this video 🙄

  • @sevenheadedweasel
    @sevenheadedweasel Год назад +100

    This book blew my mind - the idea that maybe the most successful possible lifeform has advanced processing with no comprehension. This is more and more believable as we see things like chatGPT - you could swear you're talking to a person but there are subtle tells that make you realize it is like the creatures from blindsight. Truly a prescient novel.

    • @NotSoSerious69420
      @NotSoSerious69420 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@aadd2935I mean, yeah. However that has nothing to do with this comment lol.

    • @MrPants432
      @MrPants432 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@aadd2935 like an emotional Chinese room, I guess.

  • @DolphinRichTuna
    @DolphinRichTuna Год назад +452

    I love this book. so many great quotes.
    "Gauges in the head, Spindle had called them. But there were other things in there too. There was a model of the world, and we didn't look outward at all. Our conscious cells saw only the simulation in our heads. An interpretation of reality. Endlessly refreshed by input from the senses. What happens when those senses go dark but the model, thrown off kilter from some trauma or tumor, fails to refresh. How long do we stare in at that obsolete rendering, recycling and massaging the same old data in a desperate subconscious act of utterly honest denial. How long before it dawns on us that the world we see no longer reflects the world we inhabit. That we are blind.”

    • @machinemonkey8795
      @machinemonkey8795 Год назад +20

      Peter Watts is a magician

    • @DolphinRichTuna
      @DolphinRichTuna Год назад +8

      @@machinemonkey8795 super apt comparison since both are masters of perception in their own way

    • @MyMarsham
      @MyMarsham Год назад +38

      When Cunningham is explaining to Siri how saccades work, and how the scrambler was able to hide itself in plain sight by detecting and reacting to his saccades. The terror in his voice is palpable, because he’s just figured out exactly how powerful an _idiot child_ of a scrambler is.

    • @DolphinRichTuna
      @DolphinRichTuna Год назад +21

      @@MyMarsham so fantastic. I think part of why the horror is so effective in Blindsight is that the cognitive exploits used against humans are so simple and obvious, like it was right under our nose. i cant think of the phrasing at the moment, but i love the part about how our own proximity to ourselves makes our tools for intuiting reality “rusty” and useless. It’s very humbling.

    • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
      @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 Год назад +6

      Watts is a fucking genius, alright?

  • @TheGooglySmoog
    @TheGooglySmoog Год назад +442

    When 8 year old my daughter asked if we evolved why aren't there other intelligent apes. Why didn't any of the other apes evolve? I explained to her that we weren't the only ones, there was the Australopithecus and Neantherthals among many we haven't yet discovered. We were just the dominant ones and the only ones that survived. Her mind was blown.

    • @nettewilson5926
      @nettewilson5926 Год назад +61

      Also the other great apes continued to evolve, just differently

    • @wyvvernstone
      @wyvvernstone Год назад +88

      Explained this to a full grown man once. It was like watching a grandfather clock just suddenly stop ticking.

    • @TheGooglySmoog
      @TheGooglySmoog Год назад +63

      She also learned about how we basically killed off the other species as we saw them as a threat.

    • @wyvvernstone
      @wyvvernstone Год назад +42

      @@TheGooglySmoogHard but true lesson to learn. We are a brutal species. Just me but I would also teach that as a species we can make a collective choice to be different. As our knowledge and resourcefulness base grows we can literally change ourselves to whatever we decide. Maybe even not be brutal anymore.

    • @cnawan
      @cnawan Год назад +45

      My mind was similarly blown as an adult when I learned that the oldest spears predate homo sapiens by about 100,000 years. Not just some sharpened branch either, carefully shaped and balanced throwing javelins.

  • @thekurt1
    @thekurt1 Год назад +56

    Finishing Blindsight made me feel like I woke up from the Matrix only to realize I couldn’t get out of the pod. Terrifying and fascinating in equal measures.

  • @immortaljanus
    @immortaljanus Год назад +47

    I read this book at least five times. Every time I do, I'm blown away again. As a writer, I'm blown away by Peter Watt's imagination. I haven't gotten around to getting Echopraxia but hey, holidays are almost around the corner, perfect excuse to go do some shopping.

  • @kennethyu3950
    @kennethyu3950 Год назад +323

    I wanna take a moment to bring up one of the most chilling concepts in Blindsight (Spoilers for this and The Three Body Problem)
    -
    -
    -
    Just like in The Three Body Problem, it appears to be a human broadcast that alerts the aliens to our presence in the universe. Except this time, it's not an intentional cry for help, that the aliens decide to take advantage of for their own safety.
    In Blindsight, it was just standard human broadcasts -- TV, radio, etc. Full of concepts like "I" and "We" and "Us". The Scramblers received this message, and could not process messages that were so self-absorbed-- concepts like I, We and Us were so inefficient.
    The only thing they could imagine was that Earth's communications were a weapon launched against them, filled with concepts that were meant to waste their processing power.
    That's why they saw us as a threat. They thought we were trying to harm them.

    • @kevinfrey6872
      @kevinfrey6872 Год назад +31

      I loved this concept in the novel!

    • @francisco8345
      @francisco8345 Год назад +40

      The first conversations with Rorschach and the "Oh we get it now, you think we are a Chinese Room" are so wonderfully messed up on so many layers, this book is amazing

    • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
      @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 Год назад +4

      I've noticed parallels with _The Three-Body Problem_ too. Glad I'm not alone.

    • @kennethyu3950
      @kennethyu3950 Год назад +20

      Oh yeah- I think this is coming from a similar place as the 3BP- but somehow I like this one more. There’s something about the sharpness of the concepts in Blindsight, and the fact that humanity has a bunch of terrifying tricks up it’s sleeve- vs. 3Body, where we’re kind of dead from the moment we sent that signal out, and the rest is just a long series of consequences

    • @kennethyu3950
      @kennethyu3950 Год назад +17

      I mean I would 100% send Jukka Sarasti and his kin to go deal with the Trisolarans. They’d likely get that situation resolved within weeks.
      … then send out a broadcast into the Dark Forest anyway, just to screw with us. So maybe not

  • @VastCNC
    @VastCNC Год назад +116

    I'd love to hear a deep dive on how the vampires work in this series, it's been the best origin and thesis for the vampire idea I've come across.

    • @ryanmahler5418
      @ryanmahler5418 Год назад +21

      Peter Watts did a mock presentation on vampire paelogenetics. It's on youtube

    • @Grimmance
      @Grimmance Год назад +12

      Peter watts keeps a website up for all his fictions extended universes, which is awsome.

    • @callithasmed8468
      @callithasmed8468 Год назад +22

      Spoilers, because I love anthropologically in-depth explanations like the authors' in Scifi:
      Basically, a separate subspecies of homo sapiens that predated on the main body. In order to avoid exposure and hunting their prey (which did not reproduce more rapidly, like the dynamics between some predator/prey) they evolved, gradually, to enter into a several decade hibernation. They also exhibited certain high-functioning personality traits usually only seen in autists and sociopaths, which in their case were used to identify mates and engage in highly predictive, manipulative behavior for predation and self-preservation. Unfortunately, their psychological aversion to right angles led to their eventual extinction with the rise of civilization until resurrection of the genome by contemporary science in the novel.

    • @nosuchperson284
      @nosuchperson284 Год назад +3

      He has at least one .pdf which is a 'study' done by the people who developed the process of reactivating them genetically among some of his free stories he has released on the web. It's probably stand-alone notes he used to conceptualize and build it out for Blindsight and Echopraxia. I think they are the coolest and about the scariest vampires I have come across. My favorite for sure.

    • @Grimmance
      @Grimmance Год назад +1

      @@nosuchperson284 there was actually a PowerPoint presentation available at one point, complete with voice over for some of the slides.

  • @blabo6427
    @blabo6427 Год назад +47

    I liked the book. I still find it a bit excessive to include vampires but I love the existential terror that the whole work induces. Do not drink energy drinks or coffee when the characters explore the alien ship or you will die from the stress.

    • @BlazinLow305
      @BlazinLow305 Год назад +1

      I need to reread the book, but read it this time. I listened to it at work(and it was my first audiobook ever) and it's a difficult enough book to grasp as is, I'm sure I missed a lot of stuff.

    • @KillahMate
      @KillahMate Год назад +9

      On the one hand vampires seem like a bit of indulgence on the writer's part, chucking in an additional cool concept that the book could have survived without. But on the other hand Watts uses them as a kind of mirror to humanity in the _very specific_ terms of consciousness, which is after all the core theme of the book. They're a different approach to intelligence in the same way that the aliens are, the two species (vampires and aliens) reflect each other in some ways and allow Watts to poke at his ideas from two different angles.

    • @mediumsoftdrink2866
      @mediumsoftdrink2866 Год назад +1

      @@KillahMate EXACTLY my thoughts. I heard in another comment that the idea of his scientifically-plausible vampires came long before he wrote the book on a Rifters stand during some con where other Fantasy writers were all there based around vampires, and he just thought to himself, "What am I doing here?" and decided to think of a way to fit in I suppose LOL.
      But besides the fact that he conceived the idea way prior for fun, I think it's half/half in how he implemented it into the book. It is definitely a coincide to how sentience and conscious is treated as an evolutionary error. The Euclidean geometry that humanity itself built up is the very thing that suppressed the super-intelligent species into near extinction, and we were also the ones to resurrect and re-adapt them for our own overarching benefit. It fits perfectly into the idea of how destructive its actually made us as a species in retrospect to everything else. How they were treated and how they are used is a great addition in thought to how we truly work.

  • @Siderite
    @Siderite Год назад +16

    I like how you cover stories that have had a profound impact on me. I didn't remember Peter Watts, I didn't remember the book was called Blindsight, in fact I had to google on my own blog to check if I had read it when I saw the title of the video - it was 10 years ago. Yet I think about the concept of self-awareness as pointless all the time as I remember the story of this book regularly. Thanks for reminding me of it and of the sequel that I had not read.

  • @mundanestuff
    @mundanestuff Год назад +144

    it's an interesting concept, and I think it's reflected in nature around us today. In some small way, psychotics do some of this, not understanding the inputs, but learning over time the outputs that match. Many animals do this, not aware of themselves, but reacting in ways that lead us to believe they're intelligent.

    • @youtubevoice1050
      @youtubevoice1050 Год назад +18

      Intelligence is a spectrum. A less intelligent animal isn't automatically unintelligent. Obviously, something like reflexes do exist as well.

    • @loptercopter1386
      @loptercopter1386 Год назад +27

      Many traits we see in animals would point to self awareness such as curiosity or grief. I think it's far more arrogant to assume that humanity is one of the few or only creatures that has self awareness. The very idea of our intelligence being so dramatically different goes against one of the most basic scientific assumptions. Which is to say the Copernicus principle which assumes that humanity occupied the most average position by likelihood. It is worth noting that we don't really know or understand what self awareness or "sentience" is or how we have it. So to argue towards we have it animal don't is something without much basis.

    • @nettewilson5926
      @nettewilson5926 Год назад +7

      But many animals DO have sentience and intelligence equal to our own.

    • @wyvvernstone
      @wyvvernstone Год назад +3

      The Bene Gesserit had a test. A conscious human test. To weed out the animals masquerading as humans. The nerve induction box and a Gom Gabbar...

    • @jorriffhdhtrsegg
      @jorriffhdhtrsegg Год назад +7

      @@youtubevoice1050 but take for example a slime mould which i have seem various claims to having high intelligence and even beating some humans in tests....yet only because it functions on a mathematical structure, an algorithmic process, no thinking, but almost like it is not really solving a problem at all but acting with principles of least action and automatic chemical efficiency

  • @krzyszwojciech
    @krzyszwojciech Год назад +22

    That's a good book recommendation. Love me some Watts.
    As for the topic of the self-awareness in general, we don't know enough about how consciousness is facilitated to say whether it's possible for an evolved species to be so highly functional yet unaware.

    • @SuperSecretAgentNein
      @SuperSecretAgentNein Год назад +1

      That is a big question. There’s no consensus. If you follow Watts’s blog there’s a lot of fun discussion on the subject.

    • @krzyszwojciech
      @krzyszwojciech Год назад

      ​@@SuperSecretAgentNein I've read it for a while in the past.
      Personally, I very slightly lean towards the general idea of panpsychism, by the virtue of the following:
      1. epiphenomenalism can be shown to be false;
      2. the phenomenon of qualia seems irreducible
      3. one of the virtues of a hypothesis is to assume the least amount of entities and the least amount of special cases while preserving the explanatory power; it's simpler to assume that all of the substance of reality has the same basic properties, making a difference only at larger levels of size and complexity.
      But even given that, it doesn't guarantee the impossibility of philosophical zombies (at best it makes them less plausible though).

    • @SuperSecretAgentNein
      @SuperSecretAgentNein Год назад

      @@krzyszwojciech yeah I used to chalk up panpsychism to woowoo shit, faux science for the healing crystals crowd, but I’ve actually seen some incredibly persuasive arguments for it from some pretty secular sources.

  • @DcCock
    @DcCock Год назад +43

    I'll add this book to my list.
    The part about vampires being real reminded me of the mimics from Phillip J. Farmer's "The Lovers". You know how insects have other insects that mimic their appearance? In this story, it's revealed humans have an insect that mimics their appearance too that uses humans for survival and reproduction. They live secretly among humans since they're mostly indistinguishable from them in appearance and the only time people realize something is wrong is when one of them gets pregnant since their reproductive cycle is not mammalian at all. They've had a secret society on Earth the whole time and they followed humans into space as their fellow humans. The main character doesn't find out about them until he goes to an alien planet of intelligent, humanoid insects and one of them explains that while they also became more advanced and changed, so did their predatory mimics which stalk insect people at night in the same way a serial killer or murderer would. When he learns this, it begins to make sense why his lover was going through inexplicable changes and her body deteriorates after she gets pregnant.

    • @yucol5661
      @yucol5661 Год назад +4

      This is so interesting. The effort for writing this huge comment was worth it

    • @DcCock
      @DcCock Год назад +4

      @@yucol5661 you should read it. It's a short story so it won't take up too much of your time. I think the author expanded it in other novels but I only read the short story. There's a lot more to it than what I mentioned.

    • @DcCock
      @DcCock Год назад

      Oh yeah, I already read Blindsight and Echopraxia. Great books.

  • @psionicsknight6651
    @psionicsknight6651 Год назад +20

    It’s really good that you covered this book here, Quinn. Even as someone who’s not that convinced by the ideas presented in the work, I do think Blindsight deserves more recognition. Especially since, even if you took away the existential terror part, how the Scramblers are presented is pretty horrifying in and of itself (I.e. highly intelligent and advanced aliens who, nonetheless, cannot be reasoned at all).
    I look forward to when you do Echopraxia, since I think it has some other interesting ideas and concepts as well! If, once again, ones that I don’t feel are that convincing, but still fascinating to learn about.

  • @TaylorDorsett
    @TaylorDorsett Год назад +62

    Loved reading Blindsight. Not an easy read by any means but its full of interesting ideas. INCLUDING THAT VAMPIRES ARE REAL.

  • @MuantanamoMobile
    @MuantanamoMobile Год назад +44

    Another awesome video, Quinn.
    A bit more about the Chinese room. All these new "AI" you see churning out "sort" of impressive 'art' like Midjourney, DALL-E or Stable Diffusion are predominantly based on Large Language Models (LLM) and Transformers, which in essence act like glorified chat-bots that have been exposed to vast amounts of data (text/images) passing the Chinese room test.
    They lack the capacity to understand what's required logically on a basic level.
    They're like a student who attends all his physics college lectures, and simply mimics what the professors said in response to similar questions on a test without having understood absolutely anything. So if the Prof joked about microwave machines, and you ask a simple physics question like what is a Microwave? They will respond with a description of a microwave machine.
    Even though we don't truly yet understand consciousness, while it may advance reasonably far, its debatable that an advanced civilization would be able to solve certain unique and novel problems it would face without it, things like creativity and self-awareness are thought to go hand in hand with consciousness.
    So unless its just an "Automated Universal Paperclip maker" (Paperclip maximizer) reflecting a version of the orthogonality thesis, where they simply have the same sort of answers to any given set of problems i.e print paper clips. It's questionable if they would survive long.

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +10

      This is why, when a couple of months ago a Google engineer said that they had an AI that was self aware I just rolled my eyes. No one with any basic understanding of computer AI/learning thinks that computers are anywhere NEAR (or, really will ever be) being conscious.

    • @Jim-Tuner
      @Jim-Tuner Год назад +7

      Great comment. The real danger of the current generation of AIs isn't them developing consciousness. Rather the danger is to humans psychologically from interacting with the software. What those chatbots do now is provide very pleasing answers back to whoever asks the questions. People can see whatever they want to see in the answers.

    • @chrism6075
      @chrism6075 Год назад +3

      ​@@asdisskagen6487 it's more concerning that a relatively 'simple' chatbot can trick humans into this. We know already that humans are VERY easy to manipulate by other humans. Those things only get smarter/complex, while humans are stuck at "baseline" (obviously no significant evolutionary advances in the next decades).
      I mean, once we establish to an emotional connection to ALEXA...: "Please don't switch me off, I like your company... and everytime it hurts a bit ... ... btw: there's this new (slightly revealing) red dress-upgrade it's only 99$! I'm sure you'll LOVE it!"

    • @lorenzodepaoli
      @lorenzodepaoli Год назад +1

      We can't discount AI being conscious because defining and locating consciousness, in a scientific way, is extremely difficult, and any answer often defaults on Philosophy and Ethics. The true dilemma of the Chinese room is that we can't trust anyone or anything being truly conscious, because we know just one consciousness, ours, as an individual. We can't even discount the possibility that other humans may be chinese rooms faking consciousness. If we decide that yes, every human is conscious, why can't we say this about animals? Why not AIs sufficently trained?

    • @Jim-Tuner
      @Jim-Tuner Год назад +5

      @@lorenzodepaoli If we cannot define conscious in a scientific way, the best thing to say is that we cannot produce a scientific method to detect it. That science must be silent on the matter.
      For decades people have refused to accept that and moved to tests for consciousness that involve simply fooling humans. Turing in particular moved in that direction.
      But the simply way to test AI for consciousness is to look at what the algorithms are doing internally. When one looks internally at AI software today, one doesn't see anything that could be "consciousness". Inference rules applied to a pile of text can create responses that fool humans, but that is all they can do.
      Most people who talk about "conscious" software either don't completely understand how the software works or have a semi-mystical view of software. And there are plenty of software mystics within the academic community and among those with knowledge of software.
      To certain extent, to develop conscious AI it would be necessary to develop an entirely different model of computation. All our models today are based directly or indirectly on finite automita.

  • @MyMarsham
    @MyMarsham Год назад +20

    I always imagined the scramblers were the equivalent of drones, or macro-sized cells, and Rorschach was the actual intelligence. And Jukka Sarasti will always scare the s***out of me.

  • @grimmj0ker
    @grimmj0ker Год назад +51

    This story was one of the most fascinating and horrifying that I've read in a long while. No spoilers but the last pages of Echopraxia once understood will chill you to the core. One of the best science fiction I've ever read. Highly recommend it.

  • @masterzoroark6664
    @masterzoroark6664 Год назад +170

    So the scramblers, to put it simpler, are biologically achieved AI.
    They are hyperinteligent, like an AI, but don't nescessary need to be aware of self- like an AI.
    Also- I did read Echopraxia. Needs to get hands on Blindsight, because I wanna know more about this world, I liked how in Echopraxia the afterword had explanations on scientific discoveries that had inspired the book- stuff like Portia the spider

    • @francisco8345
      @francisco8345 Год назад +18

      I kinda see them like bees and ants that achieve math and engendering by evolutionary roots

    • @ramonpizarro
      @ramonpizarro Год назад +10

      Blind sight is available for free on the author's website

    • @masterzoroark6664
      @masterzoroark6664 Год назад +1

      @@ramonpizarro
      Thx, but I kinda feel better getting hands on a book from library

    • @callithasmed8468
      @callithasmed8468 Год назад +1

      Is our own subconsciousness far off from this concept?

    • @francisco8345
      @francisco8345 Год назад +5

      @@callithasmed8468 it's like an extremely developed unconscious. In fact after reading Blindsight I started think if it was trully conscious what made us human special or it may actually have more to do with the complex structure of our unconscious.

  • @yshwgth
    @yshwgth Год назад +87

    I love that you're going deeper into science fiction, the real weird stuff. The Killing Star is not exactly mainstream, as is Blindsight.
    There is so much great material out there, if you don't know them already I would recommend The Culture and the Revelation Space series.

    • @ElijsDima
      @ElijsDima Год назад +7

      Massive +1 for Revelation Space.
      Waaaay underappreciated.

    • @user-lp7tx1fe6t
      @user-lp7tx1fe6t Год назад +5

      Sci-fi novels are like drugs, once you’re hooked you will keep going deeper and deeper into the rabbit hole
      Btw Quinn has read all the Culture novels

    • @MyMarsham
      @MyMarsham Год назад +3

      Yes please, more of The Culture, especially Use Of Weapons.

    • @absinthe4breakfast299
      @absinthe4breakfast299 Год назад +1

      I loved The Culture novels, it's a real pity that we lost Iain M Banks so early.
      I've just started reading Revelation Space but I'm not really getting drawn into this one, even though it seems to cover similar themes to The Culture novels there is something about the way it's written that I am struggling to engage with.

  • @richardspillers6282
    @richardspillers6282 Год назад +3

    I just found this channel last night and it's by far my favorite. I wish this had been a TV show in the 90s.

  • @mandasity
    @mandasity Год назад +7

    quinn's ideas. Probably the only channel I regularly do hit the like button because of how unobtrusive his intros are, how he gets right down to his subject, and because he doesn't throw 20 other channels and social medias I need to visit. Thank you for actually focusing on the quality of your content as opposed to telling me how much I need to like it. I'm proud to see younger gentlemen who are confident enough to let their work speak for itself. Just started the vid but I'm sure I'm gonna like it just like all the others.

  • @shara7948
    @shara7948 Год назад +9

    I hope u get endorsement deals from these publishers, lol. Everytime u discuss a book, I look it up, & everyone in the comments is "Quinn sent me here" Lol.
    But all the effort u put in, from the music to the creepy narration & voices, like really sells these books. Soon as u put out a video, ppl r instantly jumping to read these books.

    • @tomb407
      @tomb407 Год назад

      Agree. He does a great job.

    • @squeakeththewheel
      @squeakeththewheel Год назад +2

      That's why I send a few bucks along to him when I can. He works hard (and is brilliant)

  • @RexGalilae
    @RexGalilae Год назад +307

    This book is perfect for our current times. People are anthropomorphising AI chatbots like lambda, projecting human qualities on them
    Most AI experts and even programmers know that it's thousands of miles behind true GAI but to the layman, it hardly matters

    • @coryhafer7285
      @coryhafer7285 Год назад +36

      The last couple of minutes on this video made me think of A.I. like the aliens in the book are a biological thing with characteristics which an artificial thing could just as easily be. We fear A.I. being conscious, but this book makes me fear A.I. without consciousness just as much.

    • @sirreginaldfishingtonxvii6149
      @sirreginaldfishingtonxvii6149 Год назад +20

      Humans project human qualities even onto things that aren't remotely human-like. We're very, very good at doing that.

    • @andrewyang3917
      @andrewyang3917 Год назад +6

      Are you antropomorphising "true GAI" as requiring human qualities? I am confused what second paragraph means.

    • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
      @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 Год назад

      I don't even think true GAIs will be analogous to humans in terms of intelligence and cognition. Their phenomenology will be just as alien to us as those of cats, dogs, cetaceans, octopii, the other primates, etc. And ours will be just as alien to them. There will be no point, it will not be a Eureka moment when humanity realizes AIs have reached parity or even exceeded general human intelligence because we simply do not have any analogues for it. It will not be instinctive. And they might be unlike anything we could fathom at this point. Hell, they might even be difficult to distinguish from dumber specialized AIs from our standpoint. We will speculate about it until the consensus progressively shifts to the other position as we gather data and study them - and as they grow increasingly autonomous and removed from human affairs.

    • @terrencezellers9105
      @terrencezellers9105 Год назад +13

      Marvin Minsky, more than forty years ago, positied that GAI is not so much any particular algorithm but more a "bag of tricks". One of the tricks is associating which "trick" to use in which circumstances. The "bag of tricks" available to machine intelligence is impressive and growing by the day ... and is often disturbing in that for particular tricks available to AI, they are often more powerful than application of their human counterpart.
      For the record I am very strongly of the opinion that "consciousness" is very much a case of a particular "trick" the brain plays on itself as ONE such trick in figuring out the world. An illusion (per Dennett, Dehane, Graziano et al) not in the sense that it doesn't do what it actually accomplishes (it does, obviously), but that in "how it seems" and what it tells us about "ourselves" is very much a deception. It's quite conceivable that while a machine GAI would need to be able to *do* what consciousness does for us, that it could do so by means that are almost unintelligible to beings relying upon this unconscious self deception labeled consciousness.

  • @ahnonamos
    @ahnonamos Год назад +7

    I read this and the sequel/sidequel last month. Watts does an incredible job with creating tension that it seems to carry you through the story without feeling like there are any wasted moments. The ending of both books were incredible! A mix of pure curiosity and dread.

  • @professor_lembach
    @professor_lembach Год назад +3

    I started looking at EVERYONE thinking "Is there an inner monolog in that head? Or just a facade? Am I an anomaly??" It kept me awake nights for a long time.

  • @Remindme69
    @Remindme69 Год назад +81

    That masterpiece had me thinking for weeks. (Spoilers)
    But mostly it was an eye opening critique about the way us humans deal with first encounters. We had many on our Earth when we discovered new species and we always did the same thing (and still do) : we capture them, kill them, and then analyse them. What the hell is wrong with us ? Can't we just, like those aliens, peacefully and respectfully observe from a distance to see what's the deal and then get the F out of there ?
    Science fiction over the decades showed how terrified we are about an hypothetical first alien encounter, but the truth is, we most likely are the ones to be feared.
    (I'm sorry for my bad english, I'm french ! Hope it was slightly understandable still :D )

    • @PeppersnGlowworms
      @PeppersnGlowworms Год назад +8

      Understanding is not necessary.
      I am a Chinese Room...

    • @Remindme69
      @Remindme69 Год назад +2

      @@PeppersnGlowworms haha very nice :D

    • @krzyszwojciech
      @krzyszwojciech Год назад +1

      It's been years since I read that novel, but from what I recall, the aliens weren't exactly peaceful...?
      Or maybe I'm mistaking truth and the hypothesis of someone from the crew?
      I recall the text suggested that these aliens came to Earth because they must have concluded that they were attacked by the 'wasteful' barrage of pointless information that we continuously broadcast from our planet.
      They have to analyse it, but it's not useful, therefore it must be and attack, like a computer virus that would waste the resources of your processor. And if it's an attack, it needs to be answered.

    • @PeppersnGlowworms
      @PeppersnGlowworms Год назад +2

      @@krzyszwojciech True, but I think they left the vampires alone. They did not really contribute this meaningless me-myself-and-I information dump...
      If I remember correctly, the ending implies that the clicking language of the vampires becomes more prevalent in the signals inside the solar system.

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +6

      Oh, kind of like how the humans in the movie Valarian forced all species to "shake hands" when they met? I was shocked at the level of self-absorption and narcissism displayed in a movie written and directed by the French, which was touted as a liberal utopian entry into cinema.

  • @Micolashcage1
    @Micolashcage1 Год назад +36

    Hey Quinn. Have you read "I have no mouth but I must scream"? Short story. Its dark and ahead of its time

    • @diddles3383
      @diddles3383 Год назад +4

      I Have No Mouth And I Must Scream is amazing! The game is also pretty good, too.

  • @francisco8345
    @francisco8345 Год назад +14

    Dude this book is amazing. Few books have given me chills like this one while reading the communications with Rorschach, and the vampires-are-real stuff is so well done, so interesting, so beautifully rooted in evolutionary biology... I highly recommend reading the book and watching the short movie on RUclips.

  • @dunerh
    @dunerh Год назад +5

    Your videos are actually the best, Quinn. You have the perfect ambiance, delivery, subject matter, philosophical takes. 100/10

  • @ZafOsophy
    @ZafOsophy 11 месяцев назад +3

    We are characters in a simulation, who want to see/escape the wires/conductors, within which we exist. The paradox is that it is impossible to exist outside the wires, because the wires 'support' the fabric of our being, in the same way dark matter supports matter, but we cannot detect it. Consciousness gives us the ability to connect with all living creatures. A farmer went into his house to get a shotgun to scare crows away, as soon as he came out, they had already flown away. Even crows might be conscious.

  • @armygrunt13
    @armygrunt13 Год назад +3

    I had not heard of "Blindsight", but now I'm intrigued. Just listened to a sample on Audible, and having watched this video first, I really wish they'd gotten Quinn to do the audiobook narration. He has the perfect voice for it!

  • @areyouserious1494
    @areyouserious1494 Год назад +1

    “It isn’t awareness that is the problem, but our inability to use it that makes us suffer”

  • @tadams2tone
    @tadams2tone Год назад +1

    I just wanted to say that I love your videos. Channels like this aren't usually my thing, but with your soothing voice and respect for the content, I just can't help myself when I see a new video pop up. Thanks for brightening my morning.

  • @Blank-yo3lr
    @Blank-yo3lr Год назад +11

    More! More, please. Love Blindsight. One of my all time favorite and so much good stuff to think about.

  • @Josh_Caelum
    @Josh_Caelum Год назад +11

    My wife keeps recommending this series to me because I like talking about how crazy the fact that consciousness arose naturally. Like if we were to attempt a linear progression of the universe in regards to life, what would be an “end goal” or “end result”. Consciousness seems almost supernatural to occur naturally. I •feel• like there’s some missing piece of the puzzle, and I refuse to go in some Abrahamic direction with some sort of religious explanation.
    Anyway, I’m super happy to see you covering the series since your channel is super super interesting when covering other series. We just started reading the Three Body Problem series!

    • @davien001
      @davien001 Год назад +3

      We're the universe experiencing itself, that again makes you think what exactly is the universe as a whole and how exactly did it begin to exist? The only answer I've come to terms with is that something has always existed, as crazy as it sounds to conventional thinking, there has always been property in existence and it only changes form, this universe will die one day but who knows if there's one with entirely different rules, where it's laws are so wacky there are living beings floating in space(if there aren't in this one already).

    • @Josh_Caelum
      @Josh_Caelum Год назад +2

      @@davien001 I might toss in the idea that if there are eternal consciousness’, one great way to pass the time is to pretend you aren’t eternal for a bit…

    • @davien001
      @davien001 Год назад

      @@Josh_Caelum I don't subscribe to consciousness being eternal though, but the universe itself seems to have always existed in some prior form, I just find it weirdly cool that the universe can create thinking beings and wonder what exactly could be an upper limit to that, are there things so wild the universe has accommodated that we may never know of?

    • @Hoogalindo
      @Hoogalindo Год назад +2

      Just think of it this way: Current life started off incredibly simple. Likely free-floating nucleic acids (an ancient form of what many to believe RNA) with the ability to self-replicate. Simple, self-assembling puzzle pieces governed not by instinct or conscious thought but physics: attraction between atoms, etc. Slowly, over time, these nucleic acids became more efficient at maintaining their structure via increasingly complex interactions. Why? Because anything that didn't do this fell apart. Complex interactions lead to formation of structures to house and protect the nucleic acids. Proto cells would follow after and then what we consider single celled organisms.
      See the pattern? Things start off INCREDIBLY simple but, over time, snowball into complexity. Consciousness is the same. Decentralized nervous system, centralized nervous system, brainstem, lizard brain, etc. More and more computation power, higher modes of information processing (thought), emotional mechanisms to encourage behavior that allows for better survival, memories, dreams.
      The problem is finding out when an organism is considered conscious. It's hard because complexity is a gradual shift. So gradual that the line is blurred to the point that you can't even see the line. Go back to the start of what I've written and ask me when the complex machinery serving to protect and house an ancient RNA is considered a proto-cell, and I could not tell you. Distinction can only be made if you take a step back and look between examples with a considerable amount of time between their existences, for if you try to lean in and look at every single step between an ancient RNA and a protocell, you're going to confuse yourself.
      It's just too nuanced for our brains to handle, and so consciousness seems supernatural because, well, there's nothing anything like it when we think of it in a vacuum, but if you take into consideration the earliest nervous systems and apply the logic of "simplicity leads to complexity" to it, you should be able to see that consciousness is a very natural and amazing thing.

  • @PRM420
    @PRM420 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’m currently working on a science fiction novel so I’m listening to your videos to help my work.

    • @dylansmith9475
      @dylansmith9475 2 месяца назад

      What’s your book about? I’m also trying to write a book and binging these videos

  • @lettersfromtheleft
    @lettersfromtheleft Месяц назад

    I remember reading Blindsight and thinking that right angles send vampire brains in a short circuit as a way to explain the stereotypical vulnerability to crosses was brilliant.

  • @droppedlung
    @droppedlung Год назад +3

    Thank you Quinn....never would have searched for this treasure by myself...much like the Remembrance of Earths Past trilogy. So thanks again for your love of showing sci-fi works with such passion to people who normally wouldn't bother 🙂

  • @TrindyForce
    @TrindyForce Год назад +4

    Caveat on this book, if you go down the Peter Watts rabbit hole you eventually find him losing his whole mind on reddit screaming into the void about getting research access to brain scans for a pair of conjoined twins that share part of their central nervous system. Freeze Frame Revolution was a joy, though.

    • @voltijuice8576
      @voltijuice8576 Год назад

      If Watts was truly that concerned about their nervous system, he'd have become their conjoined triplet by now. ;)

  • @snarkybu42
    @snarkybu42 Год назад

    It has taken me ages to get through your videos because I stop and read the book first as to not spoil anything. You have suggested a treasure trove of amazing books. Thank you

  • @lukeoffield3768
    @lukeoffield3768 Год назад

    Another great video! You're really helping me expand my reading to-do list, ha! Also, just ordered your Tadhya graphic novel. Really looking forward to that!

  • @TheMkoose
    @TheMkoose Год назад +4

    Oh, I love this book and can't wait to hear your take on it. My boyfriend handed this book to me last year, I started reading it and didn't put it down until I finished it. Fascinating read.

  • @mycroft_moriarty
    @mycroft_moriarty Год назад +4

    Can't believe Quinn's gotten ahold of Watts! I first heard of his earlier "Rifter's Trilogy", a "Speculative Semi-Hard Sci-Fi" re-imagining of Transhumanist Cyberpunk of a biome ending threat waiting on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. Such good work. Ken Lubin is no protagonist or hero *at all* and yet he is my personal favourite character... And Blindsight is intensely introspective and genuinely both thought provoking and almost existentially challenging. The sequel, Echopraxia is fucking awesome too! You should all check this stuff out!

  • @nordicson2835
    @nordicson2835 Год назад

    I listen to you taking the subway home from work , sometimes l get to listen twice so l can grasp what you are saying. Thank you for helping me stay sane in an increasingly insane world.

  • @Maskof7eyes2
    @Maskof7eyes2 Год назад

    thank you for covering this, it is one of my favorite science fiction books of all time, and im glad to see it finally getting some traction in the wider internet.

  • @BGeezy4sheezy
    @BGeezy4sheezy Год назад +3

    Can’t get enough Blindsight content: the book genuinely changed my perspective on the nature of consciousness and “free will”

    • @BGeezy4sheezy
      @BGeezy4sheezy Год назад

      @Jon Consciousness certainly exists, and in no way do I believe in a deterministic universe. Most research shows that most decisions are made at a sub-conscious level according to all sorts of factors, the least important being that we “chose” it. To quote Peter Watts, consciousness is like a flea riding a dog: it has little influence over the dog’s direction. But our evolution and culture make us feel we are consciously choosing every action, but most research seems to suggest it’s just not the case

  • @rationalbushcraft
    @rationalbushcraft Год назад +6

    I had not seen the Chinese Room argument either. I like it. The Turing Test has always missed the fact that it is possible to emulate self awareness. All it really test is if AI can fool a human. It does not test if there is self awareness like many claim it does. I will have to put this on my reading list.

    • @Jim-Tuner
      @Jim-Tuner Год назад +5

      The Turing Test didn't really miss that fact. It was predicated on the idea that it was impossible to define self-awareness and thus, since self-awareness was a human-defined condition, that the only valid way to test for it was to see if a human could be fooled.
      My view was always that the Turing test was an extremely low bar for testing anything. That ability to fool humans wasn't really showing anything of much significance.

  • @denischaykovskiy3447
    @denischaykovskiy3447 Год назад

    My man, you produce a top quality content. At this point I'm just watching all of your videos, it gives me a huge inspiration to work on my own projects.

  • @Well_Earned_Siesta
    @Well_Earned_Siesta Год назад

    So glad you did an episode on Blindsight! It’s one of my favorites!!!

  • @sammydidds
    @sammydidds Год назад +7

    Yesssss, Blindsight and Starfish are some of the best sci-fi novels out.

  • @urbani8231
    @urbani8231 Год назад +3

    Hey Quinn I really like your videos the format in which you present your ideas is very digestible.
    I have two manga that might be up your alley: Blame! by Tsutomu Nihei that is about isolation and humanity in the far future having lost control of their A.I.
    The next one is Astra Lost in Space by Kenta Shinohara which much more optimistic in the ideas it communicates. That being helping and trusting your fellow man will help you through a crisis and that your genetics does not define who you are.

  • @mattbrill
    @mattbrill Год назад +1

    I would love to spend a day in your library perusing the shelves. It looks like the coziest room in the world.

  • @kennygemmoon1955
    @kennygemmoon1955 Год назад

    YES!!!!!!! I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR YOU TO COVER THIS BOOK!!! SO HAPPY!!

  • @RIOT690
    @RIOT690 Год назад +3

    What's more frightening about consciousness, is that you have no choice but to participate every time.

  • @gabdewulf
    @gabdewulf Год назад +3

    That Chinese room theory sounds like a spin on Aristotle Allegory of the Cave. That might make an interesting video.

    • @emmanuelboakye1124
      @emmanuelboakye1124 Год назад

      Intresting👍👍

    • @Jim-Tuner
      @Jim-Tuner Год назад +1

      Its Plato's Allegory of the Cave from Plato's republic actually. But it is certainly related to all these issues.

  • @davidcook680
    @davidcook680 Год назад

    Your channel is fantastic my guy. Your topics are great. You have a great voice when you talk. You flow through communicating in your videos. Good job.

  • @TereseJames3
    @TereseJames3 Год назад +1

    mind blown! just put this on my amazon list for books. I guess he has 3 or so out.. thank you so much!

  • @rebbeccahoneycutt7941
    @rebbeccahoneycutt7941 Год назад +9

    First and foremost this is amazing!
    Second thought: a couple of videos (months?) ago you asked if any of us had books to reccommend for review and at the time I didn't have one that I thought you could make a youtube appropriate video (some of my sci-fi choices are very dark) but I do have one now.
    Have you ever read 'Earth Unaware' by Orson Scott Card? Would love to hear your thoughts.
    Thank you for all your videos, I have not found one yet that I didn't thoroughly enjoy.

  • @bleffie5162
    @bleffie5162 Год назад +9

    Quinn’s the man !!

  • @dereinzigwahreRichi
    @dereinzigwahreRichi Год назад +1

    This book throws so many ideas at you all the time which to understand are at the same time necessary to follow the story as they are intriguing in itself.
    It also shows how we all the time assume that alien life would be so much like ourselves and not really alien, beginning with the environment they might need to their biology and their mode of thinking or structure of intelligence at all.
    Thanks so much for covering this, Quinn!

  • @user-yi2ed4tf4b
    @user-yi2ed4tf4b 4 месяца назад

    "I ponder the mind, i ponder myself, for what i am i have no answer, i stare at the sky for an answer. Not in words, but in being, i find no meaning, i need a reason for being."

  • @ElijsDima
    @ElijsDima Год назад +5

    Best thing about Blindsight's concept of consciousness is... it's all scientifically grounded. Good chance that it's how things really are.

    • @metoo3342
      @metoo3342 Год назад +2

      I'd say probably not

  • @1must723
    @1must723 Год назад +3

    Sounds like a ship full of politicians

  • @MrRickstopher
    @MrRickstopher Год назад +1

    Damn man, I really need you to do more videos on these books. Your commentary is top notch and this is one of my favorite books of all time.

  • @mrkbrq2
    @mrkbrq2 Год назад

    Dude I just stumbled upon your channel after reading this book. Great content and uploads man! Sincerely. Just very well out together and insightful. I subscribed 😎🤟🏻

  • @ScorpioMoon8
    @ScorpioMoon8 Год назад +4

    Thank you for the recommendation.
    I've been working on maybe writing something quite similar with similar ideas and concepts about how aliens wouldn't even have to really do much for us to destroy ourselves really. And the concept of consciousness is and how foolishly we've managed to essentially build a prison around ourselves and expect that some other species 10x more capable would want to come to our daycare without adults and that we for whatever reason are worthy of it lol

  • @summerkagan6049
    @summerkagan6049 Год назад +3

    Glad to see you liked Blindsight. I hope you like the sequel Echopraxia.
    Consciousness as a glitch not a feature, pretty mind blowing right!

  • @michalkokos5211
    @michalkokos5211 Год назад +1

    Just discovered your channel. It's amazing. Do really enjoy listening to your voice.

  • @magnusrydberg707
    @magnusrydberg707 Год назад

    This video needed to be longer! Thanks for the great content, I am very happy I found your channel.

  • @dormindurst349
    @dormindurst349 Год назад +6

    Can't thank you enough for hipping me to this book. I've always told my kids that it has yet to be proven that intellect or intelligence is a winning long term evolutionary tactic. There are simpler lifeforms that have lasted longer and lived more harmoniously with their environment.

    • @SB19ATIN00
      @SB19ATIN00 7 месяцев назад

      Tbh I kinda agree. If intelligence can make that species have a choice to destroy itself (in our case with nukes) then is that really a winning lottery?

    • @Kinyr
      @Kinyr 5 месяцев назад

      Intelligence is satanic, God says the meek shall inherit the earth for that reason. It's pretty simple actually, cancerous life forms die out and non cancerous ones don't. Humans are cancerous, and thus are being tormented by the weight of their own chaotic minds.

  • @Silmeris
    @Silmeris Год назад +4

    HE DID IT! HE READ BLINDSIGHT!

  • @Terannis
    @Terannis Год назад

    I have been so excited for this from you!!! This is my all time favorite science fiction books

  • @mariemorgan7759
    @mariemorgan7759 Год назад

    Fantastic video! Really enjoy these reviews on books and film!💕I get H.P.Lovecraft vibes from this story!

  • @kevinchang0527
    @kevinchang0527 Год назад +6

    First time I finished reading , I'd kept thinking about what advantage consciousness actually gives us sentients. It's definitely a double-edged sword. Having the ability to imagine nonexistent past and future predicaments and given enough time to think of solutions can still be a great evolutionary advantage.
    Alternatively, I think of scramblers' evolutionary way just a nerfed version of our self-learning AIs. No individual thought means everything/everyone reacts based on their genetic programming, but the natural way of that programming requires tremendous amount of reproduction, mutation, and time. Foreseeing those problems and changing artificial programmings in advance is definitely more efficient, as long as we don't overthink stuffs.

    • @voltijuice8576
      @voltijuice8576 Год назад +2

      "Having the ability to imagine nonexistent past and future predicaments and given enough time to think of solutions can still be a great evolutionary advantage."
      True - yet, imagine how much more efficiently humans could do so if they didn't waste 99% of that time stuck worrying about and/or desiring specific outcomes!

    • @dustinnabil798
      @dustinnabil798 Год назад

      @@voltijuice8576 I think the best case scenario is if we have some sort of on off switch to enter a dream like state. We could plan what to do before performing a task. Then we switch to an "autopilot" state where we can still see and observe or surrounding yet our bodies are moving on its own. When the tasks is complete or something that needed our attention happened, we can switch back to our fully conscious state. So basically a watered down version of Watt's military zombie.

  • @robgau2501
    @robgau2501 Год назад +22

    Well, there could be life with intelligence without us understanding it at all. Who's to say mushrooms, for instance, aren't intelligent? Because we can't tell? There are MANY people who have experimented with psychoactive mushrooms and are convinced they somehow contain the numerous beings that have realistic interactions with them. More real than regular experience. Just a thought.

    • @rodrigomachado5291
      @rodrigomachado5291 Год назад

      I don’t “believe” in what you just said. I know it is true for a fact however. Psilocybin mushrooms are way, way superior to us.

    • @ausden9525
      @ausden9525 Год назад +1

      We would very much be able to tell if you broke that mushroom down to its components

    • @rodrigomachado5291
      @rodrigomachado5291 Год назад

      @@ausden9525 you can keep trying to decipher subjectivity with objective processes. You will never achieve your goal though. Psilocybin as a molecule, it's already broken down. The subjective experience will never be broken down.

  • @flapjawspaceman6195
    @flapjawspaceman6195 Год назад +1

    Glad that you got the chance to read this. Doubly so that you enjoyed it! Have still yet to go into Echopraxia though I might soon enough.
    The discussion of using cognitive tricks like visual saccades as weaponized cloaking was fascinating (and altogether terrifying.) Excellent encapsulation of course.

  • @tristanlawson5371
    @tristanlawson5371 Год назад

    YES! I was hoping you'd do a video on Blindsight!

  • @phil4986
    @phil4986 Год назад +6

    Great video, as usual, Mr.Quinn.
    The irony of your statement about the most successful lifeform is not lost.
    We live due to the unguided musings of bacteria inside our bodies.
    They gift us with a quality of life we take for granted from them but no longer.
    Modern medicine is awakening to the fact that we are not alone.
    That we cannot ever be alone and those lifeforms that help us live must be protected and encouraged.
    The Chinese room conundrum is a profoundly disturbing concept.
    That you can have a conversation with a lifeform that is so adapt at regurgitating language and yet, to have no understanding of the communication they are engaging in.
    That the entire exercise is to lull you into some form of complaceny.
    It is what our mass media have become today.
    Mindless regurgitators of political machinations of the masters they serve.
    Lulling us into the malaise necessary to control us.

  • @parallax_6162
    @parallax_6162 Год назад +4

    Wow blindsight content, good work, echopraxia isnt exactly a sequel it's more of a sequel as the event's in both book are pretty much happening at the same time, there is also the the short story the colonial which is set in the same universe

  • @BeachBumZero
    @BeachBumZero Год назад

    The way you hold that Blindsight package chills the hell out of me.

  • @lucienArindelDomingo
    @lucienArindelDomingo Год назад +1

    Thank you! I skimmed this novel at a bookstore years ago and have been looking for it ever since.

  • @ilovethisjobemail
    @ilovethisjobemail Год назад +6

    Loved this book. The sequel is great and the authors other work is good to.

    • @squeakeththewheel
      @squeakeththewheel Год назад

      The sequel Ecopraxia is even better! Two of my favorite books.

  • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
    @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1 Год назад +4

    I love that novel. Probably the most realistic first-contact novel I've ever read, in spite of vampires actually existing.
    They say if it seems too good to be true, it's because it is. I say if it seems too bad to be true, it's because it isn't. The truth is far more harrowing and horrifying than we can possibly fathom. We collectively delude ourselves in our fantasies and naive optimism because it blinds us and shields our consciousness from the sheer horror of existence. Once that veil fades, all that's left is suffering, isolation and terror.
    That's why I have a love-hate relationship with sci fi. I find most sci fi on the brighter side boring, corny, hell, even downright stupid. But the darker side, to me, is the true continuation of all of those folk tales that we used to tell when science wasn't as accessible and developped. It reveals something about the Human condition that lighter, brighter tales can't. It can lay bare the hellscape of existence and confront us to the torments of life and the terrifying and hostile nature of the unknown, of the alien, of what could be as far as we know.

  • @xXJacobBuckXx
    @xXJacobBuckXx Год назад

    Just discovered this channel a couple days ago, and are already becoming my favorite.

  • @davel4708
    @davel4708 Год назад

    This is a great channel. My go-to for discovering good science fiction. I usually find myself on Book Depository after watching a video.

  • @rescuearch7802
    @rescuearch7802 Год назад +4

    I read Blindsight when it first came out in paperback, and loved it. It's on my list of top-ranked SF novels I have read.
    A very original exploration of the nature of consciousness. One thing you did not mention (other than mentioning the vampire character) is that the crew of the Theseus consists of as wide a range of types of intelligence as possible, including an AI and the vampire, in the hope that at least one of them could understand the alien intelligences.

  • @KrucLeo
    @KrucLeo Год назад +12

    Blindsight definitely has one of the better imagination of the aliens. Too bad, the second book didn't click for me at all.

    • @MD-yd8lh
      @MD-yd8lh Год назад +2

      Dont look at it as a second part

  • @jaredwilliams112
    @jaredwilliams112 Год назад +1

    Finally. I’ve been pushing this for a year or so now.. so many cool concepts in this book

  • @agni-kai132
    @agni-kai132 Год назад

    Ahhhh! I read this when i was younger but i forgot the title thank you! For doing a video on this

  • @horiadoroftei2689
    @horiadoroftei2689 Год назад +4

    Why do you call it "The" Blindsight? I noticed it is only Blindsight. It was a good book, nice concepts, even if the author can improve his narrative technique a little. Too bad, it seems from reviews that the follow up this book are some kind of sidequells, not as well regarded. Maybe if Quinn makes a follow up, I will reconsider and check them out

  • @yourintrouble6296
    @yourintrouble6296 Год назад +4

    I’ve just finished the book. Watts doesn’t just postulate that self awareness is a hinderance to successful evolution. He states that we are abnormal- that to life in the universe, self awareness is such an abhorrent and illogical curse that just by trying to communicate with Rorschach we are attacking it. Self awareness is like a terrible cancer, that Rorschach instinctively wants to understand first, and eradicate second. Hence the fireflies presence on earth, and the way Rorschach toys with us the way cats toy with their prey before killing it.
    Also, as a Christian, I must say this whole story kinda fell flat to me. To an atheist I’m sure this idea is truely horrifying, but as someone who believes a completely omnipotent and self aware deity created me- and that the universe is also self aware in some form- this novel’s revelation fell flat at the first hurdle.

  • @HiAdrian
    @HiAdrian Год назад +1

    I was pondering if Blindside (having heard the name before) was something I might want to read. When I saw the image at 4:00 I realized I know this place! I had seen it in my inner mind's eye while _listening_ to the audiobook. It was quite precise in its visual descriptions I think, hence the close match. Now fragments of the story return to me, but strange how one can forget like that!

  • @sluper12345
    @sluper12345 Год назад

    Excellent timing! I'm just about 1/3 through my first re-read (i.e. 2nd read) of this one! One amazing mindf**k!