Quantum Field Is-Oughts

teleologySean Carroll’s Oxford lecture on Poetic Naturalism is worth watching (below). In many ways it just reiterates several common themes. First, it reinforces the is-ought barrier between values and observations about the natural world. It does so with particular depth, though, by identifying how coarse-grained theories at different levels of explanation can be equally compatible with quantum field theory. Second, and related, he shows how entropy is an emergent property of atomic theory and the interactions of quantum fields (that we think of as particles much of the time) and, importantly, that we can project the same notion of boundary conditions that result in entropy into the future resulting in a kind of effective teleology. That is, there can be some boundary conditions for the evolution of large-scale particle systems that form into configurations that we can label purposeful or purposeful-like. I still like the term “teleonomy” to describe this alternative notion, but the language largely doesn’t matter except as an educational and distinguishing tool against the semantic embeddings of old scholastic monks.

Finally, the poetry aspect resolves in value theories of the world. Many are compatible with descriptive theories, and our resolution of them is through opinion, reason, communications, and, yes, violence and war. There is no monopoly of policy theories, religious claims, or idealizations that hold sway. Instead we have interests and collective movements, and the above, all working together to define our moral frontiers.

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Local Minima and Coatimundi

CoatimundiEven given the basic conundrum of how deep learning neural networks might cope with temporal presentations or linear sequences, there is another oddity to deep learning that only seems obvious in hindsight. One of the main enhancements to traditional artificial neural networks is a phase of supervised pre-training that forces each layer to try to create a generative model of the input pattern. The deep learning networks then learn a discriminant model after the initial pre-training is done, focusing on the error relative to classification versus simply recognizing the phrase or image per se.

Why this makes a difference has been the subject of some investigation. In general, there is an interplay between the smoothness of the error function and the ability of the optimization algorithms to cope with local minima. Visualize it this way: for any machine learning problem that needs to be solved, there are answers and better answers. Take visual classification. If the system (or you) gets shown an image of a coatimundi and a label that says coatimundi (heh, I’m running in New Mexico right now…), learning that image-label association involves adjusting weights assigned to different pixels in the presentation image down through multiple layers of the network that provide increasing abstractions about the features that define a coatimundi. And, importantly, that define a coatimundi versus all the other animals and non-animals.,

These weight choices define an error function that is the optimization target for the network as a whole, and this error function can have many local minima. That is, by enhancing the weights supporting a coati versus a dog or a raccoon, the algorithm inadvertently leans towards a non-optimal assignment for all of them by focusing instead on a balance between them that is predestined by the previous dog and raccoon classifications (or, in general, the order of presentation).… Read the rest

Dates, Numbers, and Canadian Makings

Against SuperheroesOn the 21st of June, 1997, which was the solstice, my wife and I married. We celebrated that date again today, but it is not the solstice again due to astronomical drift around the calendar. And I also crossed the border of 100,000 words on Against Superheroes, moving towards resolution of a novel that could, conceivably, have no ending. There are always more mythologies to be explored.

Just last week I was in Banff, Canada, sitting quietly with my bear spray and a little titanium cook pot. I didn’t have to deploy the mace, and was relieved I also didn’t have to endure twelve hours of wolf stalking like this Canadian woman.

And while I was north of the US border, I learned that a Canadian animated film I was involved with was released to Amazon Prime video. I am just an Executive Producer of the film, which means that I had no creative input, but I am really pleased with the film. Ironically, I couldn’t watch this Canadian product while in Canada, just an hour from the studio that produced it. But rest assured that Christmas will be saved in the end!… Read the rest