PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses,...

19
PERCEPTION • Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality • Five senses, Sixth sense • Physiological constraints (biology) • Cognitive constraints (embodied) • Illusions, role of memory, emotions, blind sight • Limits of logical approaches • Neuroscience Explosion (FMRI , molecular biology, and computers

Transcript of PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses,...

Page 1: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

PERCEPTION

• Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality

• Five senses, Sixth sense• Physiological constraints (biology)• Cognitive constraints (embodied) • Illusions, role of memory, emotions, blind sight• Limits of logical approaches• Neuroscience Explosion (FMRI , molecular

biology, and computers

Page 2: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

WAYS TO DECIDE

• Authority• Revelation• Instinct• Intuition• Reason• Psyche

Page 3: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

How Do We Know We KnowFeeling or Intellect

–Water is wet–2 + 2 = 4–Capgras Syndrome–E=MxC Squared–Atoms–Quarks–Quantum Theory–God

Page 4: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

AUTHORITY

• Parents• Roles (teacher, coach, religious leaders)• Laws• Uniforms and Social cues (norms)• Learned vs. instinctual

Page 5: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

REVELATION

• Direct experience via spirit contact• Indirect experience through senses• Belief independent of natural phenomena• Is there a religion gene or instinct?• Has religion evolved?• Temporal lobe seizures (St Theresa)• Persinger’s deep brain stimulation

Page 6: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

INSTINCT

•Built in or hard wired• Inherited•Not learned•Considered animalistic

Page 7: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

Intuition

• Unconscious or preconscious• Effortless and fast• Adaptive based valuation, not precise• Association based, like a metaphor, • Automatic, not flexible• Practice (muscle memory)• Learned

Page 8: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

Reason

• Conscious• Takes Effort• Slow• Rule based like logic• Flexible• Can be practiced but takes a long time• Can not reliably predict future as rules based

on the past (stock market)

Page 9: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

PSYCHE

• Psychodynamic (Freud, Jung, Adler, Klein etc)• Psychophysiologic (conditioning, aversion,

hypnosis, CBT, addiction, etc)• Abnormalities of cognition or perception• Combinations

Page 10: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

FREE WILL

•Determinism•Agency•Combination•Neuro-ethics and neuro-jurisprudence•RESPONSIBILITY

Page 11: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

Decision Defects• Delusion (hallucination)• Illusion ( perceptual constraints)• OCD (can’t be sure)• Decision influences (non conscious effects, loss

aversion, relativity)• Wrong premise (bad information)• Wrong logic (faulty thinking)• Wrong guess (intuition fails)• Compulsion ( determined by instinct)• Misled

Page 12: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

DECISION MAKING

• How do we know the basis of any given decision or conclusion?

• Are decisions made consciously, unconsciously, both?

• Can we change our minds? Value of rational discourse vs. appeal to un or preconscious?

• Can we protect ourselves?

Page 13: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

Further Viewing Decisions

• Daniel Kahnemann http://www.uctv.tv/search-details.aspx?showID=12301

• Jonah Lehrer Fora TV How we decide• Dan Ariely

http://www.ted.com/talks/dan_ariely_asks_are_we_in_control_of_our_own_decisions.html

• Robert A Burton http://youtube.com/watch?v=QL12cd4d0ro4

• Robert Cialdini Http://bigthink.com/robertcialdini

Page 14: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.
Page 15: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.
Page 16: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.
Page 17: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

Themes

• Worldview • Internal vs. External• Reductionism vs. Dualism vs Emergence• Consciousness, Constraints on Knowing• Strange or Wonderful Mathematics• Fundamental Weirdness of Matter, Space and

Time• Feeling of Knowing• Implications for Discourse

Page 18: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.
Page 19: PERCEPTION Ways of understanding or being aware of sensory information and reality Five senses, Sixth sense Physiological constraints (biology) Cognitive.

Science vs. Religion Debate

Many Hours of challenging thought• Beyond Belief Series of Meetings on The Science

Network • The Four Horsemen Google Videos• Templeton Foundation• Wright and Goldberg on Blogging heads• Kuhn Closer to Truth• Faraday Institute St Edmunds Cambridge• Clayton Clayton’s Emerging