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College 
Means you have to work for 4 years at a job you hate so you can pay to go to a place you don't want to go so that you can be told you're stupid.

QED. 
Dear Everyone Hosted On LD.org 
You've likely noticed you can't login to FTP for the past few days. This is due to a server moved by my host. I just heard back on how to login now.

To login, use the new address of: image.apisnetworks.com
and add to the end of your username @leveldesign.org (ex: "scampie" becomes "scampie@leveldesign.org")
Your password will be the same as it's been

Let me know (here, or irc, or scampbell@ravensoft.com) if you have any issues. 
Distrans 
Effectively its what Zwiffle said, except sometimes you have to work 5 years, some people want to go there, and you're not always told you're stupid (this happens most often with professors from the former USSR).

However, in more formal terms, "college" is basically any post-secondary education, although I guess it is used less often by someone seeking a PhD. In the US, I have never heard "college" used to describe any sort of high-school alternative, but it does describe vocational training institutions, 2-year colleges, 4-year colleges, and full-blown universities. 
And Don't Forget 
to log out with your cog out. 
Beyond Belief .map Files 
I never knew those were released:
http://www.langsuyar.com/files/quake/bbmaps.zip 
Beyond Belief 
College 
Is a voluntary education of 2 years to 4 years and possibly more depending on the major/vocation. 
Distrans 
had some good points. I'm tired of reading about everyone reading into "omg everything is predetermined, I don't have a soul" speculation and jumping these huge vast gaps like they were never there.

I happen to know a bit about how the brain functions. In a technical and physical way.
I didn't bother to read the whole article, it was written far too much in press article type, and I'm tired of that. Describing the california futurist was a telltale sign. Wired itself writes stuff like that a lot.

"Telling rabbits apart from hares is a task considered impossible since Descartes wrote his theses in the cold towers of Chalmers castle. Yet, beyond the shiny rows of test tubes in a small californian university laboratory sits a misfigured little man whose burning eyes tell of a lifelong desire for these long-eared animals. When leading me under imposing rows of small skeletons and hides he boasts to have found the final solution."

Anyway, imaging how the brain functions is almost "everyday" nowadays in the 21st century. MEG or magnetoencephalography sees where neurons fire, so in that way it's direct imaging. It uses superconducting "quantum" sensors btw.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetoencephalography 
And 
there isn't a very widely accepted theory of consciousness yet afaik. There are numerous candidates of course, they seem quite... glossy and popularized and don't make much predictions. This is all just afaik and vague etc, I haven't bothered to delve into this too much as the revealing returns seem slim. 
 
For example I'd need a good 300 words to explain why the conditional in your second para doesn't hold. I'd need to give a couple of "lectures" on logic before demonstrating that the "argument" in your third para isn't cogent. Then we'd have to have several exchanges until we knocked that last para of yours into something that actually made some sort of sense...then we could debate it.

or;

"Yeah, you're wrong. You are in fact so wrong, I shan't be bothered to explain to you why. My brain is so astoundingly spectacular that if I were to let you in on my magnificence, you'd piss your pants. I'm so fantastic; all you sniveling shits would be lost without me."

--

I'd go with the second option. It's more honest, really. 
Bambuz; 
Consciousness is an adaptation. I'd bet the bank on that, and I'd feel safe doing so.

Anyway, consciousness might just be one of the most exciting things about the mind, so it's well worth studying. Besides, the physical map of the brain isn't everything. The functions derived from it are equally revealing. 
Wrath: 
Consciousness is an adaptation.

Interesting, because if consciousness confers a functional advantage, then it should be physically detectable, and we can easily settle the question of whether a computer, or a dolphin, or a tapeworm, is conscious.

I'm more in the camp that a conscious mind and an unconscious thinking machine are functionally identical, and only the mind itself is aware of the fact that it is conscious. I think this is a general assumption that many (most?) philosophers make. 
Metl... 
... I think you are probably correct about the generally held view and this "awareness of being aware" is slippery thing to pin down (much like qualia).

Guys: thanks for clearing up the "college" terminology. Seems both sides of the pacific use it broadly, with enough occasional similarity to allow for misunderstanding. C'est la vie.

Wrath: out of context therefore incorrect interpretation, but hugs for not letting me down :) 
While I Don't Have A Set View On This, 
For a long time I've felt like arguements that are ultimately deterministic cannot be beat. I still fail to understand how free will can exist in a 100% materialistic world. There is the possibility of something beyond logic, which is a point much abused by the protestants, which could allow for free will. But within logic and science I just can't see how there could be such a thing as free will. If a cat just responds its environment, in a way "automatically" judging the best response to a given situation based on genetics and past experience, I don't see what kind of choice the cat has made. There could be a more cowardly cat and a more bold cat, but does any of this come back to willpower? Don't get me wrong, I'm pretty sure that as I write this that I am making some kind of conscious thought process and infact choice, but just because it appears that way to me doesn't mean it's true. 
Every One Hates Politics 
for good reason, but I had a horrible vision that I needed to share:

After Royal is elected President in France, and Clinton is elected here in the States, there will be a meeting between the two in which the sexy, French vixen goes up to her rather mannish looking counter part and asks innocently enough,'is that a polyester blend?'

After which of course there will be a catfight that leads to a bloody nuclear war between our
proud nations. 
Tronyn... 
... compatibilists try to allow for both free will and determinism in humans without recourse to some third entity but within logic by deeming that the meeting of certain conditions fulfills the requirements for a free choice. For example, one variety of compatibilism has it that a choice is free if it is the result of one's deliberation, such that if the deliberation had been different the choice would have been different. Versions of compatibilism are manifold and sometimes I think the debate strays too far from its metaphysical roots into ethics. Ah well!

The question I'm more interested in is "if determinism is true, have we lost anything really important." Up till now the answer has always seemed to be, no.

...and if this is all old hat to you, my apologies. 
Put Simply 
socrates would make all of you look stupid if you talked to him 
No He Wouldn't! 
Haven't you heard of the Socratic Method? 
 
I QUIT! 
 
"The sands of time lay heavy on the eylids of the world" - at least while all this psuedo-intellectualism reigns.

I'm with Trinca. 
 
Interesting, because if consciousness confers a functional advantage, then it should be physically detectable, and we can easily settle the question of whether a computer, or a dolphin, or a tapeworm, is conscious.

I'm going to go ahead and agrue the other side of the coin, against myself as it were. It might be that consciousness is the byproduct of the advanced cerebral cortex present in some of the most cognitively niched organisms. A few animals pass the famed dot test. (Everybody who took psychology 101, raise your hands) If it is a byproduct, the positive must outweigh the negative, else it would have been furiously selected against. I suspect it has to do with emotions. On the one hand, emotions attached to sensory input and mental processes act as an amplifier, quickening the learning processes and allowing for a far greater individual environmental adaptation. On the other hand, you never see a gaselle with depression sauntering up to the lions, asking to get offed because they just can't take it anymore, ooh, the gasellity!

It might simply be a byproduct, or it might have started out as one.

But yes, meg machines are very interesting. However, we are studying a structure with more than 100 billion individual neurons, each one which can be connected to thousands of others. And it's plastic to boot. This isn't the human genome, varying very little between individuals, and only changing once per generation.

I'm more in the camp that a conscious mind and an unconscious thinking machine are functionally identical, and only the mind itself is aware of the fact that it is conscious. I think this is a general assumption that many (most?) philosophers make.

Oh, I don't know. say you could build a replica of a human brain. But with silicon pathways instead of neural dito. Say you fired it up.

I'm betting there's nothing inherently magical about the flesh, or the ion channels, or the nucleii... Consciousness is a product of structure and function, it doesn't stem from the material used for assembly.

We like to think that we are special, the crown of creation and the center of the universe. Chances are we're not. Our ego-mania is itself a product and an adaptation of a conscious mind that feels the need to eat, sleep, and fuck.

--

socrates would make all of you look stupid if you talked to him

Most likely, I don't speek greek. 
Gah 
i was about to write 'i won't read this bullshit', but then i didn't.

Oh, wait. 
Uh 
"consciousness is adaptation". That doesn't really give much information on what it is like. It's like saying "What is a car? A car made of steel". You could say that everything in a human is the result of adaptation. Etc etc.

I have a hunch that some day we have new mathematics and other sciences to handle the measurements and models and we can approximate when a structure has possibility for significant consciousness (say, related to humans) and when not. It might require simulation though, and probably not on something like current single pipeline computers, but something with lots of connections and feedbacks and balance states.

We can already measure brain waves with cheap EEG and estimate if a person is conscious or unconscious. (Useful during anesthesia when the patients are paralyzed with other drugs!)

The current computers are extremely different from the brain.
The brain has about 100 billion neurons, and many are connected and then again some are connected back etc..
I understand you can't currently, on a computer, simulate well even a simple neural network that has feedback, since the balance states don't form if the processor only checks one neuron at a time.

Science has not made good progress for a while. The branch of cybernetics (Norbert Wiener started this in 1948 or so) is as far as it goes and it is still struggling to find higher level ways of coping with multiple feedback systems. Control theory is the theory which it is built on, and that is well established but it starts from simple components and just adds them, it doesn't provide an overarching picture of complex systems.

When inspecting how the science works, cybernetics is the one dealing with the most "complex" systems, while quantum mechanics then is trying to deal with the simplest possible. In between there are always many levels with new simplifications. We can ditch quantum physics and just look at atoms in classical sense, and it's precise enough for most uses. Or molecules. If there are lots of molecules, we can use statistical physics. But when the number grows even larger, we can ditch that and use just some gas laws. PV=NRT, etc. And so on. There are upper levels of abstraction where new phenomena can be observed, and lower levels of revelation where it can be seen that "hey, it actually isn't exactly like is estimated at higher level".

But the science is stuck with cybernetics, it's supposed to be a higher level simplification of control theory but it is in troubles, it isn't clear.

Usually these levels also alternate in their fundamental mathematical nature: probabilistic, deterministic, probabilistic, deterministic. Quantum theory is probabilistic. But single atoms and molecules can be estimated to be deterministic for many purposes. But then when there are too many of them, again statistical physics is needed, and it uses the probabilistic approach. Etc. This mathematically different approach is what determines the boundaries of different methods of understanding and approximating the world.

I believe we need higher level methods than control theory (where we currently are) to understand consciousness.

Just like nobody who is trying to design a gas turbine does anything with single molecule mechanics, how it behaves in collisions etc... 
Correction 
"What is a car? A car is made of steel!" 
Addition 
Since control theory is deterministic, the next level of understanding after that will probably be probabilistic in nature.
I don't actively follow the field, I bet there are lots of proposals out there. How to statistically analyze neural networks with feedback.
I've seen some extremely complicated math related to it. I have a hunch this tells me that it's still in its infancy.
Maybe in 50 years kids learn it in high school. 
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