He suggests that the reason we don’t have awareness that our sensory experiences are created by a detailed internal process is that it wasn’t evolutionarily worthwhile. However, we’re currently in an environment where at least our emotional experiences are more and more likely to be hacked by other people who aren’t necessarily on our side, which means that self-awareness is becoming more valuable. At this point, the evolution is more likely to be memetic (parents teaching their children to notice what’s going on in advertisements) than physiological, though it’s also plausible that some people find it innately easier to track what is going on with their emotions than others.
Has anyone read The Book of Not Knowing by Peter Ralston? I’ve only read about half of it, but it looks like it’s heading into the same territory.
He suggests that the reason we don’t have awareness that our sensory experiences are created by a detailed internal process is that it wasn’t evolutionarily worthwhile. However, we’re currently in an environment where at least our emotional experiences are more and more likely to be hacked by other people who aren’t necessarily on our side, which means that self-awareness is becoming more valuable. At this point, the evolution is more likely to be memetic (parents teaching their children to notice what’s going on in advertisements) than physiological, though it’s also plausible that some people find it innately easier to track what is going on with their emotions than others.
Has anyone read The Book of Not Knowing by Peter Ralston? I’ve only read about half of it, but it looks like it’s heading into the same territory.