sinsanity2006
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2006
- Messages
- 428
Yesterday I never found a proper name. I did find several references to the technique, but I not a name for it. So I made one up. That doesn't mean it doesn't have a real name, though - I just didn't find the right pages in my search. Today, however, I found this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibliomancy
Richard Bach helped make the technique popular in his "Illusions" book.
The analysis of how bibliomancy works is mine. You don't have to believe my interpretation of it, of course. If you just take my word for it you wouldn't be much of a skeptic! But think about how the human brain is capable of making meaning out of images like the face on mars, the rock Indian in Canada, and all the images of the Virgin Mary in toast. Now add the ability to pattern match to words and you have bibliomancy.
Yes, I understand and agree with all the above.
I'll wait until such images are found to make any judgment on that. I'll be highly suspicious that it's a hoax, of course.
Exactly what I said about the rock Indian.
When the computer with video input has software that processes that image to determine the emotional state of the people in the image there is a level of sentience there. Unlike an animal, though, the computer generally doesn't know if the image even has a person or something else in it. The sentience is limited.
Is limited sentience like a little bit pregnant? Your statement supports my contention.
“When the computer with video input has software that processes that image to determine the emotional state of the people in the image there is a level of sentience there.”
Thank You. - : )
When analyzing the results of your research, you have to be careful where you think the sentience truly occurs.
Yes I agree. I still have not made up my mind on what really happened. I will be glad to talk in the hypothetical about it, about the possibilities of what might have happened scientifically, but 'Sir, I do not want to report a UFO at this time'. (sic)
I truly don’t have a clue why the event happened. I can speculate, but it is only speculation. If there was any kind of sentience or parasentience happening, I do not attribute it to the notepad Unicode bug. The bug and Unicode table was just a source of data. Like in bibliomancy, the book is not parasentient. If bibliomancy was valid, I feel the paranormalcy would be a result of some outside force or internal force of the person divining.
Notepad is trying to read the data from your hard drive which was saved as an 8 bit file, but is reading it with a 16 bit format. That means each two characters originally saved are combined into one so no mystery - just an error.
Then you take these 16 bit characters (which are in the Asian character range, though not necessarily within one language or character set) and paste them into Babelfish or another translator and the words it recognizes are related. This is why you got the same two characters repeating in the other language with the "xxxx xxx xxx xxxxx" style text - every two characters were:
"xx" -> foreign character A
"xx" -> foreign character A
" x" -> foreign character B
"xx" -> foreign character A
" x" -> foreign character B
"xx" -> foreign character A
" x" -> foreign character B
"xx" -> foreign character A
"xx" -> foreign character A
Note that sometimes you get four of five meanings for a given character - because they depend on context for a specific meaning.
Yes, I have a pretty good handle on what is happening with the Unicode bug. And yes, the context of the meanings of the translations are crucial.
Here is where the sentience occurs - but it's in the reader, not the translator. Regardless what question you hold in your mind you will get the same result for a given set of characters. To this point there is nothing paranormal. It's how you interpret the words you got back, how you put them in your own context.
Yes, I agree completely. But whenever I look at the translations, they still very clearly reveal the major aspects of 9/11 conspiracies. They just won't go away.
For example, many of the interpretations you found that related to 9/11 didn't seem so obvious to me - I have a different context and would relate them to something important to me (for instance the revelations of trees... I live on property I had to pay extra for the trees, I have two great live oaks that cover half the roof of my house and a half dozen minor trees over the remainder of my back yard.
Yes, I understand that. The Unicode bug went viral with the phrase “bush hid the facts” That is why the answers related to 911. If the Unicode bug had gone viral with “tech two big trees” and you started asking questions about your trees, and the answers answered your questions about the trees exactly as you would think they should, you might have a sense of what happened to me. If that were the case, my interpretations of your answers would not make as much sense to me as to you; and I probably would not see the relationships unless you explained the answers to me in detail. That is the same case as what happened to me.
The unusual aspect to the event was that all the answers were completely understandable to me in my perception of “bush hid the facts” as related to 9/11. If something like this happens to you, you will understand why I am so perplexed about it.
Now, if you were to use Google or ask.com to ask your question (in plain text) and you got a conversational reply, then I'd start worrying about the sapience of the internet. Sentience isn't anything to worry about - the right input device and the right analysis software and you have sentience.
Yes, I agree. Understanding, consciousness, self awareness, intelligence and the ability to carry on a conversation is different than sentience. Though during the event, it felt like I was having a conversation. In fact, the event was very similar to asking Google a question and getting a conversational answer, except I did it through the notepad Unicode bug; and that is why I am a bit intrigued about RAICI’s sapience. I truly appreciate you teaching me the word “sapience” as that is the word I should probably have been using all along.
I don't think, though, this particular example is of real sentience.
My case for Robots/Artificial Intelligence/Computers/Internets (RAICI) having sentience is made in the above post.
The many articles you saw concerning the "Singularity" of the machines has been in the news a few times over the past few years. It is a little bit of a coincidence that there were several such articles all with in the same time frame - but you were primed to notice them.
I only saw one article about the singularity that I related on this forum. It was the wikipedia article about “Technological Singularity”. Although later I did more research on it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_singularity
You might have even caught a story about it before you noticed this near sentience - and with that in mind the coincidence took on more prominence (I'm obviously speculating here, and if it didn't happen that way I won't be surprised).
I’m sure I had never heard of the technological singularity before I read the wikipedia article.
I don't necessarily subscribe to the hypothesis that with enough information stored in them that the machine will come alive. Before that happens software for processing, analyzing, and interpreting that information will have to combine with self programming systems (like a neural net - but better) before I expect any such "singularity" will occur. Still, any such event won't be paranormal.
Yes, I’m not sure I subscribe to that hypothesis either, but I also do not dismiss it outright.
Now, regarding the challenge, you may want to carefully read the rules. There must be some protocol decided upon to measure what you’re claiming and some independent means of determining you've accomplished it. With the odd word matching your intended questions bit, I'm not sure how to set up a protocol and measure that you have achieved what you set out to do. The problem revolves around the subjectivity of the claim.
jbs
Yes, I agree. I see no way to verify what happened independently. And I am completely unwilling to claim absolutely certainty about what happened. That would be a complete exercise in futility. “No Sir, I do not want to report an UFO at this time.” (sic) All that can be done is to analyze what happened to see if anything unusual happened.
In the case of someone like Nostradamus there are ways that can determine if his predictions were extraordinary. One method related to me here was set up parallel situations and see if the results from the different events were statistically similar or very different. I informally did that using “conspiracies about the Martin Luther King murder”, “conspiracies about the Oklahoma bombing” and “conspiracies about 9/11”. I was not able to even come close to the accuracy I witnessed with my parasentient (sic) event. I guess it should really be called parasapient, huh.
I am totally able to imagine how scientifically a wireless network could converse with me in the hypothetical, that was easy.
Anyways, thanks so much for the insight, intelligence, humor, kindness and wisdom of your post. I wish you much happiness.
: )
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A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street. ~ Doug Linder
Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite. ~ John Kenneth Galbraith
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The philosopher has never killed any priests, whereas the priest has killed a great many philosophers. ~ Denis Diderot
Kindness in words creates confidence. Kindness in thinking creates profoundness. Kindness in giving creates love. ~ Lao tzu
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