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PeterWatts_Blindsight

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Peter Watts 254 <strong>Blindsight</strong><br />

breakthroughs didn't spring fully-formed from the subconscious<br />

mind, manifest themselves in dreams, as full-blown insights after a<br />

deep night's sleep. It's the most basic rule of the stymied<br />

researcher: stop thinking about the problem. Do something else.<br />

It will come to you if you just stop being conscious of it.<br />

Every concert pianist knows that the surest way to ruin a<br />

performance is to be aware of what the fingers are doing. Every<br />

dancer and acrobat knows enough to let the mind go, let the body<br />

run itself. Every driver of any manual vehicle arrives at<br />

destinations with no recollection of the stops and turns and roads<br />

traveled in getting there. You are all sleepwalkers, whether<br />

climbing creative peaks or slogging through some mundane routine<br />

for the thousandth time. You are all sleepwalkers.<br />

Don't even try to talk about the learning curve. Don't bother<br />

citing the months of deliberate practice that precede the<br />

unconscious performance, or the years of study and experiment<br />

leading up to the gift-wrapped Eureka moment. So what if your<br />

lessons are all learned consciously? Do you think that proves<br />

there's no other way? Heuristic software's been learning from<br />

experience for over a hundred years. Machines master chess, cars<br />

learn to drive themselves, statistical programs face problems and<br />

design the experiments to solve them and you think that the only<br />

path to learning leads through sentience? You're Stone-age<br />

nomads, eking out some marginal existence on the veldt—denying<br />

even the possibility of agriculture, because hunting and gathering<br />

was good enough for your parents.<br />

Do you want to know what consciousness is for? Do you want<br />

to know the only real purpose it serves? Training wheels. You<br />

can't see both aspects of the Necker Cube at once, so it lets you<br />

focus on one and dismiss the other. That's a pretty half-assed way<br />

to parse reality. You're always better off looking at more than one<br />

side of anything. Go on, try. Defocus. It's the next logical step.<br />

Oh, but you can't. There's something in the way.<br />

And it's fighting back.<br />

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