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Peter Watts 261 Blindsight<br />

of cosmic-ray metaphors, because those feel right, because they<br />

feel natural, because it can't look at things any other way. But it's<br />

the wrong metaphor. So the system misunderstands everything<br />

about itself. Maybe that's not a grand and glorious evolutionary<br />

leap after all. Maybe it's just a design flaw."<br />

"But you're the biologist. You know Mom was right better'n<br />

anyone. Brain's a big glucose hog. Everything it does costs<br />

through the nose."<br />

"True enough," Cunningham admitted.<br />

"So sentience has gotta be good for something, then. Because<br />

it's expensive, and if it sucks up energy without doing anything<br />

useful then evolution's gonna weed it out just like that."<br />

"Maybe it did." He paused long enough to chew food or suck<br />

smoke. "Chimpanzees are smarter than Orangutans, did you know<br />

that Higher encephalisation quotient. Yet they can't always<br />

recognize themselves in a mirror. Orangs can."<br />

"So what's your point Smarter animal, less self-awareness<br />

Chimpanzees are becoming nonsentient"<br />

"Or they were, before we stopped everything in its tracks."<br />

"So why didn't that happen to us"<br />

"What makes you think it didn't"<br />

It was such an obviously stupid question that Sascha didn't have<br />

an answer for it. I could imagine her gaping in the silence.<br />

"You're not thinking this through," Cunningham said. "We're<br />

not talking about some kind of zombie lurching around with its<br />

arms stretched out, spouting mathematical theorems. A smart<br />

automaton would blend in. It would observe those around it,<br />

mimic their behavior, act just like everyone else. All the while<br />

completely unaware of what it was doing. Unaware even of its<br />

own existence."<br />

"Why would it bother What would motivate it"<br />

"As long as you pull your hand away from an open flame, who<br />

cares whether you do it because it hurts or because some feedback<br />

algorithm says withdraw if heat flux exceeds critical T Natural<br />

selection doesn't care about motives. If impersonating something<br />

increases fitness, then nature will select good impersonators over<br />

bad ones. Keep it up long enough and no conscious being would

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