onehitwanda
Venatrix Lacrimosal
- Joined
- May 20, 2013
- Posts
- 4,503
Not without instructions or, for earlier versions, a machinist to do the manipulation.However, can a subpar machine create an improved version of itself
I have no existential dread. I'm comfortable with the fact that I'm a strange local anomaly in the probability waves of a plethora of subatomic particles that behave like waves - or is it infinatesimal waves that behave like particles? I can never quite remember. It would be nice to be around a while longer but there's little I can do to steer that ship, so it's pointless wasting energy worrying about it.I suppose whatever helps you cope with the existential dread.
Life is explicable in that it likely arises in situations where there is sufficient complexity in self-replicating structures that can adapt to changes in their environment and out compete their competitors. It's entirely possible that given sufficient advances in computing we will see self-replicating machines that can construct improved versions of themselves. Perhaps they will be able to evolve their rulesets. But I doubt a single one of them will ever reach the point where they stick their fingers in a plug socket just to see what happens.
Machines are, at their origin, logical. Creatures are not. Humans are creatures, not machines, and while our bodies can be reduced to some sort of machine-like analog there remains some strangeness to us that cannot be simulated. Perhaps that will change - every probability curve has outliers, no matter how unlikely.
and yet, here we are, 800-odd million years on from the first prototype of life on what was previously basically just gravel, able to snipe at one another despite my obvious limitations due to my inferior processor.Some may argue that your brain is not only a processor, but also not very successful at it.