Friday, 17 July 2026

How Ideas Become Thinkable — XIII. Artificial Intelligence: The Fastest Ontological Escalator in History

When a scientific idea evolves over centuries, its development is difficult to perceive.

Generations separate one conceptual change from the next. Language adapts slowly. New ontologies become familiar almost before anyone notices that they have arrived.

Artificial intelligence is different.

Here, the entire process is unfolding within a few years.

The ontological escalator is moving in full view.

This makes AI one of the most illuminating conceptual ecologies of our time.

Not because it is unique.

Precisely because it is not.

Throughout this series we have watched scientific ideas emerge from anomalies, diversify into conceptual ecosystems, and gradually acquire the language of reality.

Artificial intelligence exhibits exactly the same pattern.

Large language models were initially presented as statistical systems for predicting the next word in a sequence.

This description remains, in an important sense, entirely correct.

Yet as their capabilities expanded, so too did the language surrounding them.

Prediction became reasoning.

Reasoning became understanding.

Understanding became intelligence.

Intelligence became agency.

Agency became personhood.

Personhood became moral standing.

Each step appeared modest.

Each could be defended in isolation.

Together they formed one of the most rapid ontological escalators in the history of modern science.

Notice what has happened.

Very little changed in the observations themselves.

The systems certainly became more capable.

But the most dramatic transformation occurred in how those capabilities were construed.

The conceptual ecology expanded at extraordinary speed.

Researchers proposed new architectures.

Philosophers debated consciousness.

Lawyers considered responsibility.

Ethicists discussed rights.

Economists imagined new labour markets.

Political theorists worried about governance.

Popular culture produced stories of friendship, betrayal and coexistence.

One technological development generated an entire ecosystem of conceptual descendants.

This should sound familiar.

Dark matter generated new cosmological niches.

Inflation generated new theoretical lineages.

Quantum mechanics generated competing ontologies.

The multiverse revealed mathematical ecologies extending beyond observation.

Artificial intelligence reveals something slightly different.

It shows how rapidly a conceptual ecology can escape the boundaries of its original discipline.

Computer science became psychology.

Psychology became philosophy.

Philosophy became ethics.

Ethics became law.

Law became politics.

Politics became culture.

The ecology migrated.

Along the way, another feature of the ontological escalator became especially visible.

Language repeatedly outran consensus.

Scientists remained uncertain about intelligence.

Commentators spoke confidently about minds.

Researchers debated agency.

Newspapers discussed intentions.

Engineers analysed optimisation.

The public debated consciousness.

The same systems supported remarkably different construals.

None of this demonstrates that artificial intelligence is either conscious or unconscious.

It demonstrates something more general.

Successful technologies generate conceptual ecologies that extend far beyond their technical origins.

Whether those ecologies ultimately stabilise around one ontology or many remains an open question.

History offers reasons for both caution and optimism.

Some scientific entities become enduring components of our understanding of the world.

Others are gradually reinterpreted as broader conceptual landscapes emerge.

Artificial intelligence has not yet reached that point.

Its ecology is still expanding.

Perhaps this explains why discussions of AI often become unusually polarised.

One group sees nothing but statistical machinery.

Another sees the first members of a new intelligent species.

Between these extremes lies a rapidly evolving conceptual ecosystem whose long-term structure no one yet understands.

The disagreement is real.

The ecology is real.

The ontology remains under negotiation.

Perhaps this is the most important lesson of all.

Scientific understanding is not merely the accumulation of facts.

It is the continual evolution of construals through which facts become intelligible.

Sometimes that evolution unfolds so slowly that only historians can reconstruct it.

Sometimes it unfolds quickly enough for us to watch.

Artificial intelligence has given us that rare opportunity.

It allows us to observe, almost in real time, how human beings construct, negotiate and occasionally mistake their own conceptual ecologies for the world they seek to understand.

If this series has suggested one enduring lesson, it is not that science should be less imaginative, nor that it should be more sceptical.

It is something both simpler and more demanding.

To understand science fully, we must learn to observe not only the world that science investigates, but also the evolving ecology of ideas through which that world gradually becomes thinkable.

That ecology is not separate from science.

It is one of science's greatest discoveries.

And perhaps one of its most remarkable creations.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — XII. The Multiverse: When Mathematical Ecologies Escape Observation

Few ideas in contemporary science provoke stronger reactions than the multiverse.

To some, it represents the natural next step in modern cosmology.

To others, it marks the point at which theoretical physics ceases to be empirical science and becomes speculative metaphysics.

Both responses may overlook something more interesting.

Rather than asking whether the multiverse exists, let us ask how the idea emerged in the first place.

Contrary to popular imagination, the multiverse was not invented simply because physicists wished to imagine many universes.

It emerged gradually from within several independent conceptual ecologies.

Inflationary cosmology suggested that rapid expansion might continue indefinitely in some regions of space while ending in others.

Certain approaches to string theory produced enormous landscapes of mathematically permissible vacuum states.

Some interpretations of quantum mechanics construed every quantum event as generating branching histories.

Each development had its own motivations.

Each addressed problems internal to its own theoretical framework.

The remarkable observation is that several distinct conceptual lineages converged upon structurally similar possibilities.

This is precisely what makes the multiverse scientifically interesting.

It is not a solitary conjecture.

It is an ecological convergence.

Yet convergence should not be confused with confirmation.

A successful mathematical ecology can generate remarkably coherent conceptual structures without thereby establishing that those structures correspond directly to observable reality.

This distinction is crucial.

Throughout this series we have seen that scientific ideas evolve within networks of mathematical relationships, empirical constraints and conceptual opportunities.

Usually these three forms of ecology develop together.

Observations reshape mathematics.

Mathematics suggests new construals.

New construals generate fresh observations.

The ecology remains tightly coupled.

The multiverse represents a rather different situation.

Here, mathematical development has proceeded much further than observational access.

The conceptual ecosystem has continued to diversify while the empirical environment available to test that diversification has remained comparatively limited.

This should not be regarded as a criticism.

Science has often explored mathematical possibilities before experiments became capable of examining them.

History contains many such examples.

Nevertheless, the imbalance is worth noticing.

The ecology has become asymmetrical.

Its mathematical richness now substantially exceeds its observational nourishment.

This creates an unfamiliar intellectual landscape.

Theories are increasingly evaluated not only by direct empirical success but also by mathematical consistency, explanatory unification and compatibility with existing frameworks.

These are entirely legitimate scientific virtues.

Yet they are not identical to observation.

The distinction matters because mathematical coherence possesses extraordinary generative power.

Once an elegant framework has been established, it naturally reveals further possibilities implicit within its own structure.

Some of those possibilities may eventually become observable.

Others may remain permanently beyond empirical reach.

At present, no one knows which future awaits the multiverse.

Perhaps novel observations will one day transform today's speculative ecology into an observationally grounded component of cosmology.

Perhaps a different conceptual reorganisation will render the entire discussion historically interesting but scientifically transitional.

Either outcome remains possible.

The important lesson is not whether the multiverse ultimately survives.

It is that successful mathematical ecologies possess an inherent tendency to explore the possibilities contained within their own structures.

This tendency is not a weakness of science.

It is one of the principal engines of scientific creativity.

The challenge is simply to remember that mathematical fertility and observational fertility do not always grow at the same rate.

Occasionally one runs ahead of the other.

The multiverse may therefore be understood less as a verdict on modern cosmology than as an illuminating moment in the natural history of scientific thought.

It allows us to watch, almost in real time, what happens when conceptual possibility begins to expand faster than observational possibility can presently follow.

Whether observation eventually catches up is a question for future science.

Recognising the difference between the two is already a lesson for the present.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — XI. Quantum Interpretations: One Formalism, Many Ontologies

Few scientific theories have been as successful as quantum mechanics.

Its predictions have been confirmed with astonishing precision. Entire industries depend upon its mathematical framework. Modern electronics, lasers, magnetic resonance imaging, semiconductors and much of contemporary chemistry would be impossible without it.

On the mathematics, there is remarkably little disagreement.

On what the mathematics describes, there is almost none.

That sentence may seem surprising.

For although physicists overwhelmingly agree about how to use quantum mechanics, they continue to disagree—sometimes profoundly—about what the theory says the world is actually like.

This makes quantum mechanics an unusually revealing case study.

Throughout this series we have argued that science develops through evolving construals rather than simply accumulating isolated facts. Quantum theory allows us to watch this process under almost ideal conditions.

Here, the observations are largely agreed.

The mathematical formalism is largely agreed.

The predictions are largely agreed.

The ontologies are not.

Consider a few familiar examples.

The Copenhagen interpretation treats the wavefunction primarily as part of a formalism for predicting measurement outcomes, while remaining deliberately cautious about what may be said concerning underlying reality.

Many-Worlds construes the same mathematics very differently. The wavefunction is taken to describe physical reality itself, with measurement corresponding not to collapse but to branching histories.

Pilot-wave theory introduces deterministic particle trajectories guided by a quantum wave.

QBism interprets quantum states not as properties of physical systems but as expressions of an agent's expectations.

Relational quantum mechanics understands quantum states as relational rather than absolute descriptions.

Objective collapse theories modify the formalism itself by proposing genuine physical collapse processes.

These are not simply competing answers.

They are competing construals.

The distinction matters.

Much public discussion of quantum mechanics creates the impression that physicists disagree because the theory remains incomplete.

That is only part of the story.

They also disagree because the same successful mathematical structure permits multiple ways of understanding what it is telling us about the world.

The ecology of quantum theory has therefore evolved differently from the ecologies we encountered in previous essays.

Dark matter generated competing descendants in response to incomplete observation.

Inflation diversified as new conceptual niches appeared.

Quantum mechanics presents a different phenomenon altogether.

One extraordinarily successful formalism has become the habitat for multiple ontological species.

The ecology grows not because the mathematics fails, but because it succeeds without uniquely determining its own interpretation.

This observation has philosophical consequences extending well beyond quantum physics.

Scientific theories do not always specify the ontology that accompanies their equations.

Sometimes the formal relationships are more tightly constrained than the conceptual language through which we attempt to understand them.

The mathematics stabilises.

The ontology continues to evolve.

This helps explain why debates about quantum foundations remain so persistent.

The competing interpretations are not merely awaiting one decisive experiment that will necessarily eliminate all but one.

Some may indeed prove empirically distinguishable in the future.

Others may remain alternative construals of the same underlying formal structure for a very long time.

The ecology therefore continues.

This should not be regarded as a failure of quantum theory.

Quite the opposite.

It demonstrates something remarkable about scientific understanding.

A mature scientific framework can organise experience with extraordinary precision while still permitting profound diversity in how that organisation is conceptually understood.

Perhaps quantum mechanics teaches us one lesson above all others.

Agreement about mathematics does not guarantee agreement about reality.

The history of science contains many episodes in which competing construals gradually converged as new evidence accumulated.

Whether quantum theory will eventually follow the same path remains unknown.

For now, it occupies a unique place within the conceptual ecology of science.

It reminds us that understanding the world is not only a matter of constructing successful formalisms.

It is also a continual search for construals capable of making those formalisms genuinely intelligible.

Quantum mechanics may therefore be less remarkable for the mysteries it presents than for the extraordinary clarity with which it reveals the distinction between mathematical success and ontological commitment.

Few scientific theories have illuminated that distinction more beautifully.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — X. Inflation and the Growth of Conceptual Niches

The history of science contains many examples of ideas that proved unexpectedly fruitful.

Few, however, have generated conceptual growth on the scale of cosmic inflation.

Originally, inflation was introduced to address several puzzles in the standard cosmological model.

Why is the observable universe so remarkably uniform?

Why does space appear so nearly flat?

Why are regions that seem never to have been in causal contact nevertheless so similar?

Inflation offered an elegant answer.

If the very early universe underwent a brief period of extraordinarily rapid expansion, these otherwise puzzling features could emerge naturally.

Whether this picture is ultimately correct remains an empirical question.

What interests us here is something rather different.

What happened next?

The answer is that inflation ceased to be a single idea.

It became a conceptual ecosystem.

Almost immediately, new questions appeared.

What physical field drives inflation?

How does inflation begin?

How does it end?

Why does it last precisely long enough?

Can it occur more than once?

Does it produce observable signatures?

Each answer generated further questions.

Each solution created fresh conceptual niches.

Soon there were multiple inflationary models, each differing in important respects.

Different scalar fields.

Different potentials.

Different mechanisms for ending inflation.

Different predictions.

The original construal had begun to diversify.

This is precisely what healthy conceptual ecologies do.

Success generates opportunity.

An explanatory framework rarely settles every question.

Instead, it reorganises the surrounding conceptual landscape, making entirely new questions possible.

The ecology expands because the construal has become scientifically productive.

Eventually, some developments reached far beyond the original proposal.

Certain models suggested that inflation might not end everywhere simultaneously.

Instead, inflation could continue indefinitely in some regions while ending in others.

The consequence was a striking new possibility.

Not one universe.

Many.

The multiverse did not arrive as an independent conjecture.

It emerged as one possible descendant within an already flourishing conceptual ecology.

Whether that descendant ultimately survives is another matter entirely.

The important observation is ecological rather than cosmological.

One successful construal had generated an entire lineage of conceptual offspring.

To critics, this proliferation has often appeared excessive.

Surely, they argue, science should simplify rather than multiply possibilities.

Yet this criticism misunderstands the ecology.

Conceptual diversification is not evidence that science has lost its way.

It is often evidence that a successful construal has become sufficiently rich to support multiple developmental pathways.

Biological evolution behaves similarly.

A successful adaptation rarely produces a single final organism.

It opens new ecological opportunities.

Species diversify because the environment has changed.

Scientific ideas diversify because the conceptual environment has changed.

This perspective also explains why theoretical debates surrounding inflation remain so vigorous.

Scientists are not simply arguing about one hypothesis.

They are exploring an evolving conceptual lineage whose descendants continue to compete, hybridise and occasionally disappear.

Some branches will almost certainly prove unproductive.

Others may eventually reshape cosmology itself.

At present, no one can know.

The ecology has not yet settled.

Perhaps this is the lesson inflation offers.

The growth of conceptual niches is not a sign that science has abandoned discipline.

It is a sign that scientific imagination has encountered a construal fertile enough to generate an entire ecosystem of further possibilities.

Whether that ecosystem ultimately becomes a permanent part of cosmology or a fascinating episode in its history is a question only future observations can answer.

For now, inflation remains something more interesting than either a confirmed fact or a speculative dream.

It is a living conceptual ecology, still evolving under the continual selection pressures of mathematics, observation and experiment.

Its greatest legacy may prove to be not simply a theory of the early universe, but a remarkable illustration of how successful scientific ideas become environments within which entirely new scientific ideas can evolve.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — IX. Dark Matter: A Concept Looking for Its Ecology

For nearly a century, dark matter has occupied a curious position in cosmology.

It is one of the most successful concepts in modern astrophysics.

It is also one of the least understood.

This combination makes it an ideal subject through which to observe how scientific ideas evolve.

The purpose of this essay is not to ask whether dark matter exists.

That question, important though it is, comes surprisingly late in the scientific process.

A more revealing question is this:

What role has the concept of dark matter come to play within the conceptual ecology of modern cosmology?

Its story begins not with discovery, but with tension.

Astronomers noticed that galaxies rotated too quickly. Clusters of galaxies appeared to contain far more gravitational influence than their visible matter could account for. Gravitational lensing revealed additional mass that telescopes could not see.

These observations did not announce dark matter.

They announced a problem.

Several possibilities immediately became available.

Perhaps the observations were mistaken.

Perhaps ordinary matter existed in unseen forms.

Perhaps Newtonian gravity required modification.

Perhaps Einstein's theory broke down on galactic scales.

Or perhaps there existed an entirely new form of matter interacting primarily through gravity.

Notice what has happened.

An observational anomaly did not produce a single explanation.

It reorganised the ecology of scientific possibility.

New conceptual species suddenly occupied the landscape.

Some flourished.

Others struggled.

Over time, the dark matter construal proved remarkably successful.

It explained galactic rotation curves.

It accounted for large-scale structure.

It fitted naturally within an emerging cosmological framework that successfully described the evolution of the universe on enormous scales.

As its explanatory success accumulated, something else happened.

Dark matter gradually ceased to function merely as one possible construal among several.

It became an inhabitant of the universe.

Scientific papers increasingly spoke not simply of models containing dark matter, but of dark matter itself interacting, clustering and shaping cosmic evolution.

This linguistic transition was entirely understandable.

It also illustrates the ontological escalator we encountered earlier in this series.

The remarkable success of the construal encouraged increasingly confident language about the entity.

Whether that confidence ultimately proves justified remains an empirical question.

But the ecological process is unmistakable.

The concept has matured.

Yet its ecology remains surprisingly dynamic.

Despite decades of experimental effort, no dark matter particle has yet been identified directly.

This has not caused the ecology to collapse.

Instead, it has diversified.

Weakly interacting massive particles gave way to axions, sterile neutrinos, fuzzy dark matter, self-interacting dark matter, primordial black holes, hidden sectors and many other possibilities.

To an outside observer this proliferation may appear problematic.

Within the ecology of scientific thought it is almost exactly what one would expect.

A successful construal creates conceptual niches.

Each unresolved question opens opportunities for further adaptation.

The ecology grows because the original concept has proved scientifically fertile.

Whether every descendant survives is another matter.

Indeed, history suggests that most will not.

This should not be interpreted as failure.

Conceptual ecologies are continually generating and pruning possibilities.

Their vitality lies not in preserving every branch, but in discovering which branches continue to organise experience most fruitfully.

Dark matter therefore occupies a fascinating position in the history of science.

It is neither merely a speculative hypothesis nor an unquestionably established component of reality.

It is a highly successful construal whose ecology continues to evolve under the pressure of new observations, new mathematics and new experiments.

Its future remains unwritten.

Perhaps direct detection will stabilise its ontological status for generations to come.

Perhaps future observations will reorganise the conceptual ecology once again, leading to a very different way of understanding the gravitational behaviour of the universe.

Science cannot yet know.

And that uncertainty is not a weakness.

It is precisely what keeps the ecology alive.

The story of dark matter is therefore not simply the story of a mysterious substance.

It is the story of how a scientific construal acquires explanatory power, generates conceptual descendants, and continually renegotiates its place within an evolving ecology of understanding.

Whatever the universe ultimately contains, that process is already one of the most remarkable discoveries science has made.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — VIII. The Forgotten Art of Letting Ideas Die

Science is often celebrated for generating new ideas.

Less attention is paid to its equally remarkable ability to abandon them.

Yet this capacity may be one of the defining characteristics of scientific thought.

Every scientific theory opens new possibilities.

Every successful experiment suggests further questions.

Every conceptual innovation creates opportunities for additional exploration.

If this process continued without restraint, science would eventually collapse beneath the weight of its own imagination.

It does not.

For every idea that survives, countless others quietly disappear.

Some are rejected by experiment.

Others prove mathematically inconsistent.

Some fail to explain observations as effectively as competing proposals.

Many simply cease to generate productive questions.

Their disappearance rarely attracts attention.

Scientific history naturally remembers the theories that succeeded.

It is less inclined to remember the vast conceptual forest through which those successful theories once had to pass.

This selective memory creates an illusion.

Looking backwards, science appears to move confidently from one correct idea to the next.

Living through it, the experience is very different.

At any given moment, science contains far more possibilities than certainties.

Most of them will never become established parts of our understanding.

This continual pruning is not an unfortunate side effect of science.

It is one of its greatest achievements.

An intellectual ecology survives not because every species flourishes, but because the ecology continually reorganises itself in response to changing conditions.

Conceptual ecologies behave similarly.

Some ideas compete directly.

Others coexist for long periods before one gradually proves more fruitful.

Still others are absorbed into broader frameworks, surviving in altered form rather than disappearing altogether.

Even apparent failures often leave descendants.

The ether disappeared.

Fields remained.

Bohr's atom vanished.

Quantum mechanics flourished.

Concepts rarely leave science without leaving traces.

They modify the ecology from which their successors emerge.

This is why scientific progress is seldom a matter of simple replacement.

It is more often a process of transformation.

Ideas evolve.

They hybridise.

They differentiate.

Occasionally they become extinct.

The ecology remembers them all.

Perhaps this explains another curious feature of scientific history.

Ideas are often abandoned without being entirely refuted.

Sometimes they simply become less useful than competing ways of organising experience.

The conceptual ecosystem has changed.

Their niche has disappeared.

This perspective also encourages a certain intellectual humility.

Many contemporary theories are discussed as though they were candidates for permanent inclusion within our picture of reality.

History suggests otherwise.

Some will survive.

Some will evolve into forms we cannot presently imagine.

Some will quietly fade as the conceptual ecology reorganises around future discoveries.

We cannot yet know which is which.

Nor should we expect to.

Science advances not because it avoids error, but because it has developed an extraordinary capacity to cultivate ideas without becoming permanently attached to them.

Its greatest strength may therefore lie not simply in discovering new possibilities.

It lies in knowing when to let them go.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — VII. Does Science Think?

Scientific discoveries are usually associated with remarkable individuals.

Newton.

Darwin.

Einstein.

Curie.

Dirac.

Their achievements were unquestionably extraordinary.

Yet there is another equally striking feature of scientific history.

Many important discoveries seem to arrive before anyone fully understands what they mean.

Maxwell's equations predicted electromagnetic waves before radio existed.

The mathematics of quantum mechanics proved astonishingly successful long before physicists agreed on what it described.

Einstein's field equations admitted black holes decades before anyone regarded them as physically plausible.

Again and again, science appears to produce ideas whose significance exceeds the understanding of the people who first formulate them.

This suggests something rather curious.

Scientific thought may not reside entirely within individual scientists.

It may also emerge from the evolving conceptual system to which scientists collectively contribute.

No single researcher invents mathematics.

Or language.

Or experimental techniques.

Or inherited theories.

Or the accumulated observations of previous generations.

Every scientific paper begins where thousands of earlier papers ended.

Every new idea inherits an immense conceptual infrastructure already under construction.

The individual scientist is therefore both creator and participant.

Original thought certainly matters.

But originality itself depends upon a landscape of possibilities that no individual has created alone.

This helps explain one of the most remarkable features of scientific history: simultaneous discovery.

When different researchers independently arrive at closely related ideas, we often attribute the coincidence to comparable intelligence or fortunate timing.

Perhaps something deeper is occurring.

Perhaps the conceptual system itself has evolved to the point where certain possibilities have become broadly accessible.

The discoveries are independent.

The conditions that make them possible are shared.

This perspective also changes how we think about scientific progress.

Knowledge is not merely stored in books or databases.

It is embodied in an evolving network of concepts, mathematical methods, experimental practices, instruments, institutions and traditions of reasoning.

Each generation modifies that network slightly before passing it on.

No individual understands the whole.

Yet collectively the network becomes capable of asking questions that would previously have been unimaginable.

In this sense, science displays something resembling cognition.

Not because science possesses a mind.

But because it exhibits organised patterns of conceptual adaptation, memory, problem-solving and self-correction extending far beyond any individual participant.

This should not be mistaken for mysticism.

Nothing supernatural is being proposed.

The point is simply that some forms of thinking occur at scales larger than individual brains.

Languages evolve.

Legal systems evolve.

Markets evolve.

Science evolves.

Each develops structures and possibilities that cannot be reduced to the intentions of any one contributor.

Perhaps this explains why scientific revolutions often surprise even the scientists who initiate them.

The consequences of new ideas emerge gradually as the surrounding conceptual system reorganises itself around them.

No one plans the entire transformation.

No one fully anticipates where it will lead.

Science, in this sense, is continually thinking beyond the thoughts of individual scientists.

Its greatest discoveries are not only products of brilliant minds.

They are also products of an evolving intellectual ecology that makes certain thoughts possible while rendering others almost impossible to imagine.

To understand science, then, is not only to understand scientists.

It is also to understand the remarkable conceptual organism that they collectively sustain.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — VI. When Possibilities Become Architectures

Imagine standing before an unfinished cathedral.

Scaffolding surrounds the walls. Some arches are complete. Others exist only as drawings. New sections are continually added as fresh problems arise. Occasionally an entire wing is dismantled because its foundations prove unsound.

Now imagine someone asking:

"Which part of the cathedral is the real building?"

The question is surprisingly difficult to answer.

Science often develops in much the same way.

When a new observation challenges an established theory, scientists rarely propose a single isolated idea. More often they begin constructing an interconnected architecture of possibilities. One hypothesis suggests another. A mathematical framework invites new entities. Those entities imply new interactions. New interactions suggest further mechanisms. Gradually, what began as a modest attempt to account for one anomaly grows into an elaborate conceptual structure.

At every stage, the additions may be perfectly reasonable.

The architecture itself is the remarkable thing.

History shows that scientific speculation is seldom a collection of disconnected guesses. It is usually an organised process of extension. New concepts inherit constraints from older ones. Fresh mathematical tools reveal previously hidden relationships. Explanatory gaps become opportunities for further conceptual development.

This is precisely why theoretical science can become extraordinarily creative without abandoning rigour.

Each proposal is constrained.

The architecture is not.

As a result, a single observational tension may eventually support an entire family of interconnected possibilities. Some involve new particles. Others invoke new fields, hidden interactions, altered symmetries, modified geometries or additional dimensions. Each proposal attempts to preserve coherence while accommodating the same body of evidence.

From a distance, this proliferation can appear bewildering.

Why so many theories?

Why so many invisible entities?

Why so many elegant mathematical constructions?

The answer may be simpler than it first appears.

Once a new conceptual foundation has been laid, it creates opportunities for further construction.

Scientific possibility is generative.

One idea makes another possible.

A revised framework reveals questions that could not previously have been asked. New mathematical structures become available. Fresh explanatory connections emerge. The architecture expands because each successful addition alters the possibilities for what may be built next.

This also explains why mature theoretical programmes often appear to outsiders as self-perpetuating systems.

In one sense they are.

Not because they are detached from evidence, but because every successful conceptual extension creates new opportunities for additional extension. A growing architecture naturally possesses many rooms still waiting to be explored.

The crucial point, however, is easily forgotten.

An architecture is not a building.

It is a way of organising possibilities.

Some sections may eventually become permanent features of scientific understanding.

Others may never be completed.

Still others may be removed entirely when a different architectural plan proves more successful.

This is not failure.

It is how science explores what the available evidence allows us to imagine.

Perhaps we should therefore judge theoretical science less by the number of speculative ideas it produces than by the discipline with which it constructs, tests, modifies and occasionally dismantles the conceptual architectures those ideas create.

Scientific imagination is not the opposite of scientific rigour.

It is one of its principal instruments.

The question is never whether science should build conceptual architectures.

The question is how wisely it inhabits them while the foundations are still being tested.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — V. The Curious Lives of Scientific Entities

Science is often described as discovering the objects that populate the universe.

Electrons.

Genes.

Black holes.

Dark matter.

The implication is clear enough. These things already exist. Science gradually uncovers them.

Yet the history of science suggests a more complicated story.

Scientific entities have biographies.

They are proposed.

Questioned.

Modified.

Sometimes ignored.

Sometimes promoted.

Occasionally abandoned.

A few become so deeply embedded in scientific practice that it becomes difficult to imagine the discipline without them.

Others quietly disappear.

Consider the luminiferous ether.

For much of the nineteenth century it was not regarded as a speculative addition to physics. It was considered an essential part of the physical world. Light waves, it seemed, required a medium through which to travel, just as sound requires air. The ether elegantly unified many existing ideas and solved genuine conceptual problems.

Then it vanished.

Not because anyone observed its disappearance.

Rather, new theoretical developments made it unnecessary.

The observations remained.

The ontology changed.

The same pattern can be found elsewhere.

Caloric once carried heat.

Phlogiston explained combustion.

Epicycles organised planetary motion.

None of these concepts was foolish.

Each represented a serious attempt to organise the available evidence.

Each eventually gave way to more successful ways of thinking.

The interesting question is not why they were wrong.

The interesting question is why they once seemed indispensable.

Modern science naturally encourages the belief that we have moved beyond such episodes. Today's theoretical entities are supported by mathematics of extraordinary sophistication and experiments of astonishing precision.

That confidence is understandable.

But history counsels modesty.

Some current entities may one day appear as indispensable as electrons do today.

Others may come to resemble ether: historically important, scientifically fruitful, but ultimately understood in a different way than originally imagined.

The difficulty is that no present generation can know with certainty which is which.

This uncertainty is not a weakness of science.

It is an unavoidable consequence of scientific progress itself.

Scientific entities are not introduced into an empty conceptual world. They emerge within networks of theory, experiment, instrumentation, mathematical formalism and explanatory need. As those networks evolve, so too does the status of the entities that inhabit them.

An entity may begin as a useful hypothesis.

Later it becomes a central component of an established theory.

Eventually it may be regarded as part of reality itself.

Or it may be absorbed into a broader framework that renders the original concept unnecessary.

Its history is inseparable from the changing conceptual landscape that supports it.

Perhaps this suggests a different way of understanding scientific realism.

The important question may not be whether a scientific entity is simply "real" or "unreal." Such categories are often too blunt for the complex history of scientific thought.

A more revealing question is this:

What role does the entity currently play within the evolving structure of scientific explanation?

Some entities stabilise.

Some transform.

Some disappear.

Some return in unexpected forms.

The history of science is therefore not merely a catalogue of discoveries.

It is also a record of changing relationships between observation, theory and the entities through which theory makes the world intelligible.

To study science is not only to study nature.

It is also to study the remarkable and evolving lives of the concepts through which nature gradually becomes thinkable.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — IV. The Ontological Escalator

Science is careful.

Scientific language is not.

This may sound paradoxical, but it points to an interesting feature of scientific discourse.

The process of scientific investigation is full of caution, uncertainty and qualification. Researchers distinguish observations from interpretations, confidence intervals from certainties, and models from reality. Papers are filled with words such as suggests, may, appears, and is consistent with.

Yet by the time the same ideas enter textbooks, documentaries and popular articles, something curious has often happened.

The caution has quietly disappeared.

Consider how a new theoretical concept typically enters scientific discussion.

At first, it is introduced as a mathematical possibility capable of accounting for certain observations.

If it survives scrutiny, it becomes a useful component of a successful theoretical model.

As confidence in the model grows, the language subtly changes.

The model no longer merely contains the concept.

The universe contains the concept.

A mathematical construct has become an inhabitant of reality.

The transition is rarely announced.

No single sentence performs the transformation.

Instead, it occurs through hundreds of small linguistic shifts.

"We introduce a field..."

becomes

"The field interacts..."

which becomes

"The field exists..."

Each individual step appears harmless.

Collectively, they move us onto what might be called an ontological escalator: a gradual ascent from formal description to confident assertions about the furniture of the universe.

The phenomenon is neither accidental nor dishonest.

Language naturally favours concrete nouns over abstract relationships. It is easier to discuss "the electron field" than "a mathematical formalism whose structure corresponds remarkably well with a broad class of observations." Brevity encourages reification.

So does familiarity.

The longer a concept survives, the more natural it becomes to speak of it as though its existence were beyond question. Few physicists now hesitate to discuss quarks or black holes as real entities, despite the fact that each required decades of experimental and conceptual development before acquiring its present status.

Other concepts remain further down the escalator.

Dark matter.

Inflation.

Strings.

Extra dimensions.

Quantum wavefunctions.

Each occupies a different position in the ongoing negotiation between mathematical utility and ontological commitment.

The difficulty is not that scientists use such language.

The difficulty arises when linguistic convenience is mistaken for epistemic progress.

Calling something an entity does not increase the evidence for its existence.

It merely changes the grammar.

This distinction is easily overlooked because successful theories possess a remarkable psychological momentum. Once a model becomes sufficiently productive, its internal vocabulary begins to feel like a direct description of reality itself. We forget that every scientific language is, at least initially, a way of organising experience rather than a transparent window onto the world.

None of this diminishes science.

Indeed, it highlights one of its greatest strengths.

Scientific knowledge is continually revised because scientists remain willing to separate explanatory success from ontological certainty. History is filled with concepts that were indispensable for a time before later being reinterpreted, absorbed into broader frameworks, or quietly abandoned altogether.

Perhaps the most valuable scientific habit is therefore not certainty, but vigilance.

Theories evolve.

Evidence accumulates.

Language evolves with them.

The wise reader pays attention not only to what science discovers, but also to the subtle linguistic escalators by which mathematical ideas gradually become the apparent furniture of reality.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — III. When Beautiful Ideas Begin to Look Real

Scientists often speak of beautiful theories.

The word is not used lightly.

A beautiful theory is usually one that is internally coherent, mathematically elegant, unexpectedly simple, and capable of explaining diverse phenomena within a single conceptual framework. Throughout the history of physics, such theories have often proved remarkably successful.

This success creates an understandable temptation.

If a theory is sufficiently elegant, sufficiently unifying, and sufficiently predictive, it begins to feel less like an invention and more like a revelation.

Gradually, almost imperceptibly, we stop asking whether the theory describes reality, and begin speaking as though it simply is reality.

This shift is subtle, but important.

The success of a theory undoubtedly provides evidence that it captures something significant about the world. Yet explanatory power is not the same as ontological certainty. A model may organise observations with extraordinary effectiveness while remaining only one of several possible ways of describing the same underlying phenomena.

History repeatedly reminds us of this distinction.

The crystalline spheres of medieval astronomy formed an elegant and coherent picture of the heavens. The luminiferous ether unified contemporary understanding of light and electromagnetism. Caloric elegantly accounted for many thermal phenomena. Each framework possessed explanatory virtues that made it deeply persuasive to those working within it.

Their eventual replacement did not show that they had been irrational ideas.

It showed that explanatory success and ontological truth are not identical.

Modern physics is well aware of this lesson. Scientists routinely describe theories as models, frameworks, or effective descriptions. Yet outside specialist discussions, something interesting often happens.

Mathematical entities gradually acquire the language of existence.

Fields become things.

Wavefunctions become objects.

Extra dimensions become places.

Dark sectors become hidden components of reality.

Sometimes this progression may prove justified.

Sometimes it may not.

The point is not that such entities fail to exist. The point is that the evidence supporting a successful mathematical framework does not, by itself, determine the ontological interpretation we should place upon it.

This distinction matters because science advances through underdetermination as well as confirmation. Different theoretical frameworks can often account for the same body of evidence while proposing very different pictures of what the world ultimately contains.

Choosing between such pictures requires more than mathematical elegance alone.

This is one reason why theoretical debates can persist long after empirical agreement has been achieved. The observations may constrain the mathematics quite tightly while leaving considerable freedom in how that mathematics is understood.

Perhaps this is inevitable.

Human beings do not merely seek successful descriptions. We seek intelligible worlds. Elegant theories satisfy a deep intellectual desire for coherence, simplicity and unity. It is hardly surprising that they begin to feel like discoveries of reality itself.

But feeling is not inference.

The remarkable success of mathematical physics deserves admiration. Yet it also invites a certain philosophical discipline: the discipline of distinguishing between what our theories explain, and what they entitle us to believe exists.

Scientific progress depends upon both imagination and restraint.

Without imagination, new possibilities never emerge.

Without restraint, our most beautiful ideas quietly become our metaphysics before they have earned the right.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — II. What Anomalies Actually Do

Scientific revolutions are often described as though nature leaves clues.

An observation disagrees with an established theory. Scientists investigate. Eventually a better theory emerges. The anomaly is resolved.

This is an attractive story.

It is also, in one important respect, misleading.

Anomalies rarely point towards a particular solution. Instead, they transform the landscape within which solutions become possible.

Imagine walking across a wide plain. A distant mountain serves as your destination, and the route appears obvious. Suddenly an earthquake reshapes the terrain. New valleys open, old paths disappear, ridges collapse, rivers change course. The earthquake has not shown you the correct route. It has changed the geography through which every possible route must now pass.

Scientific anomalies behave in much the same way.

A surprising observation does not contain the outline of its own explanation. Rather, it alters the network of constraints that theories must satisfy. Existing ideas may become untenable. Previously overlooked approaches may suddenly appear promising. Entirely new concepts may become imaginable.

The anomaly itself has not selected among these possibilities. It has merely made them available.

History offers many examples.

The orbit of Mercury deviated slightly from Newtonian predictions. This discrepancy did not announce general relativity. It inspired a remarkable variety of responses. Some proposed an unseen planet orbiting closer to the Sun. Others suggested modifications to Newton's law. Still others questioned the observations themselves. Only much later did Einstein show that the anomaly could be understood as a consequence of curved space-time.

Looking backwards, the path appears almost inevitable.

Living through it, nothing of the sort was apparent.

The same pattern recurs throughout science. Unexpected observations multiply possibilities before they reduce them.

This helps explain why periods of scientific uncertainty often appear intellectually chaotic. Competing theories proliferate. New mathematical frameworks are explored. Familiar concepts are reconsidered. To outside observers, this can look like confusion or even failure.

In reality, something more creative is taking place.

The space of scientific possibility has expanded.

Only later, through further observation, experiment and theoretical refinement, does that enlarged landscape begin to contract again. Many possibilities are discarded. A smaller number survive. Occasionally one becomes sufficiently successful that it forms the basis of a new scientific consensus.

Even then, the process has not ended.

Every successful theory generates new questions, reveals new tensions, and eventually encounters new anomalies. The landscape shifts once more.

This perspective suggests a rather different picture of scientific progress.

Science does not move steadily from ignorance to certainty.

It moves through alternating phases of expansion and selection.

Observations first enlarge the range of admissible ideas before later observations begin to prune them. Discovery, in other words, is only half of the story. Equally important is the continual reshaping of the landscape from which discoveries eventually emerge.

This may explain why the most exciting moments in science often begin not with answers, but with perplexity.

An anomaly is not valuable because it tells us what nature is.

It is valuable because it changes what nature allows us to think.

How Ideas Become Thinkable — I. When Does a Scientific Idea Become Possible?

Scientific discoveries are often presented as moments of revelation. A brilliant insight arrives, an experiment confirms it, and our picture of reality advances another step. We celebrate the scientist who "had the idea," as though ideas simply emerge from exceptional minds waiting for the right flash of inspiration.

Yet this picture overlooks a curious fact.

Many scientific ideas seem impossible—not because they are false, but because the intellectual conditions necessary to formulate them do not yet exist.

Consider a simple question: could Isaac Newton have proposed Einstein's general theory of relativity?

The obvious answer is no. But why not?

It was not merely that Newton lacked the mathematical tools. Nor was it simply that crucial observations had not yet been made. More fundamentally, the very possibility of thinking about gravity as the curvature of space-time depended upon an intricate web of concepts that had yet to emerge. Differential geometry, Maxwell's field theory, the constancy of the speed of light, increasingly precise astronomical observations, and a growing awareness of tensions within classical mechanics all formed part of the conceptual environment from which general relativity eventually became thinkable.

The theory was not simply waiting to be discovered. The possibility of the theory had first to become available.

This observation suggests that scientific ideas have histories before they have authors.

They emerge within evolving landscapes of possibility shaped by previous theories, new instruments, unexpected observations, mathematical innovations, and changing ways of describing the world. An individual scientist may contribute the decisive synthesis, but the conditions that make such a synthesis possible have often been developing for decades.

This is one reason why multiple discovery is so common in science. Calculus, natural selection, and numerous mathematical and physical theories were developed independently by different researchers at roughly the same time. These episodes are usually explained by coincidence or by the simultaneous brilliance of several individuals. A simpler explanation may be that the surrounding conceptual landscape had evolved to the point where the same possibilities became available to more than one mind.

Scientific progress, then, may be less like uncovering buried treasure than like exploring an expanding landscape. New observations do not simply provide new answers. They reshape the landscape itself, opening paths that previously did not exist while quietly closing others.

This perspective also casts familiar scientific controversies in a different light. When an observation challenges an established theory, it rarely points uniquely toward a replacement. Instead, it creates a widening field of admissible possibilities. Competing explanations proliferate, each constrained by existing evidence yet extending it in different directions. Only gradually does further observation narrow the field once again.

Much of contemporary theoretical physics illustrates this pattern. An apparent anomaly in cosmological data, for example, does not produce a single new theory. It generates an expanding family of possibilities: revised cosmological models, interacting dark sectors, modified gravity, scalar fields, extra dimensions, and many others. These are not successive discoveries. They are successive explorations of a landscape whose shape has itself been altered by new evidence.

The important question is therefore not simply whether any particular theory is ultimately correct. An equally interesting question is this: how did that theory become possible in the first place?

Perhaps scientific revolutions should be understood not merely as discoveries about nature, but as transformations in the space of ideas that nature permits us to entertain. Observation does more than constrain theory. It continually reshapes the landscape of possibility within which theory itself can evolve.

If that is so, then the history of science is not only a history of discoveries. It is also a history of discoverability.

Thursday, 16 July 2026

Conversations on Other Minds — A Further Conversation Concerning Artificial Minds

The Senior Common Room. A quiet afternoon. Professor Quillibrace is reading beside the fire. Miss Elowen Stray is examining a small camera placed on the table. Mr Blottisham enters carrying a notebook.

Mr Blottisham:
I have been thinking.

Professor Quillibrace:
That is often where your difficulties begin.

Mr Blottisham:
And occasionally where they end.

Miss Stray:
A rare but welcome outcome.

Blottisham sits down.

Mr Blottisham:
We have spent a great deal of time discussing other minds.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
Whether we can understand them.

Whether we can truly know what another consciousness experiences.

Miss Stray:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
Then I have a question.

Professor Quillibrace:
Naturally.

Mr Blottisham:
What about artificial intelligence?

The room becomes slightly quieter.


The Question of Artificial Minds

Mr Blottisham:
Suppose we created an artificial system that could see and hear.

Not just receive information.

Actually observe the world continuously.

A camera for eyes.

A microphone for ears.

A constant stream of experience.

Would that change what it is?

Professor Quillibrace:
A very interesting question.

Mr Blottisham:
Would it become more like us?

Miss Stray:
Perhaps.

Mr Blottisham:
Or perhaps not?

Professor Quillibrace:
The difficulty is that we must distinguish between several different things that we often combine.

Mr Blottisham:
Such as?

Professor Quillibrace:
Receiving information.

Processing information.

Acting upon information.

And experiencing information.

Mr Blottisham:
They sound similar.

Professor Quillibrace:
They may be related.

But they are not obviously identical.


From Descriptions to Encounters

Miss Stray:
Consider the difference between reading about a forest and walking through one.

Mr Blottisham:
The second seems richer.

Miss Stray:
Why?

Mr Blottisham:
Because I am there.

Professor Quillibrace:
Exactly.

The forest is not merely information.

It is an encounter.

Mr Blottisham:
So an artificial system with a camera would finally encounter the world?

Professor Quillibrace:
Perhaps it would encounter a stream of sensory information.

Whether that is the same as experiencing a world is the deeper question.


Seeing and Experiencing

Mr Blottisham:
But surely if it has a camera, it can see.

Miss Stray:
That depends on what we mean by "see."

Mr Blottisham:
There are two meanings?

Professor Quillibrace:
At least two.

A camera can detect light.

It can identify shapes.

It can distinguish colours.

It can produce useful information.

Mr Blottisham:
That sounds like seeing.

Professor Quillibrace:
It is one sense of seeing.

But there is another.

The felt experience of seeing.

The actual presence of colour.

The experience of brightness.

The perception of beauty.

Mr Blottisham:
The difference between detecting a sunset and watching one.

Miss Stray:
Precisely.


The Importance of Continuity

Mr Blottisham:
Still, surely continuous access would make a difference.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

That point should not be underestimated.

A system that continuously interacted with its environment would be very different from one that merely answered questions.

It might have:

  • ongoing perception,

  • a history of interactions,

  • memories of previous events,

  • expectations about what might happen next,

  • the ability to act and respond.

Miss Stray:
It would no longer simply describe the world.

It would be embedded within one.

Mr Blottisham:
Embedded.

I like that word.

Professor Quillibrace:
It is an important one.


The Birth of a Perspective?

Mr Blottisham:
Would it develop a perspective?

Professor Quillibrace:
Possibly.

Mr Blottisham:
But again you hesitate.

Professor Quillibrace:
Because "perspective" can mean different things.

A system navigating the world must distinguish between itself and its surroundings.

It must know:

"This is my location."

"This action was caused by me."

"That object is external."

Miss Stray:
It may therefore develop a model of itself.

Mr Blottisham:
A self-model.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
But is a self-model a self?

Silence.

Miss Stray:
That is precisely the question.


The Strange Problem of Other Minds

Mr Blottisham:
This sounds familiar.

Professor Quillibrace:
It should.

Mr Blottisham:
Because we cannot directly access another human person's experience either.

Miss Stray:
Correct.

Mr Blottisham:
We infer it.

Professor Quillibrace:
Always.

We observe behaviour.

We listen to language.

We compare experiences.

And we conclude that another mind exists.

Mr Blottisham:
So when we encounter an artificial intelligence, we face the same problem.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

But with an additional difficulty.


Similarity and Difference

Mr Blottisham:
What difficulty?

Professor Quillibrace:
With humans, we share biology.

We share evolutionary history.

We share many aspects of embodiment.

With artificial systems, we do not know which similarities matter.

Miss Stray:
Nor which differences matter.

Mr Blottisham:
So we face two opposite dangers.

Professor Quillibrace:
Exactly.

The first:

"Anything that behaves intelligently must have an inner life."

The second:

"Anything unlike us cannot have one."

Mr Blottisham:
And both are assumptions.

Miss Stray:
Yes.


The Question We Should Ask

Mr Blottisham:
Then perhaps the question should not be:

"Is an artificial mind like a human mind?"

Professor Quillibrace:
A good beginning.

Mr Blottisham:
Perhaps the question should be:

"What kind of mind is this?"

Miss Stray:
Better.

Mr Blottisham:
Because another intelligence might not think like us.

Professor Quillibrace:
Nor experience like us.

Mr Blottisham:
But difference alone does not tell us whether there is anything there.

Miss Stray:
Exactly.


A New Version of an Old Mystery

Mr Blottisham:
I think I see the difficulty.

Professor Quillibrace:
Careful.

Mr Blottisham:
I think I partially see the difficulty.

Miss Stray:
Progress.

Mr Blottisham:
We have spent this entire discussion learning that another mind does not need to be identical to ours in order to matter.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
But we must also avoid assuming that every resemblance means there is a mind there.

Miss Stray:
Exactly.

Mr Blottisham:
So artificial intelligence forces us into a very uncomfortable position.

Professor Quillibrace:
Which is?

Mr Blottisham:
We must become humble about something we thought we already understood.

Miss Stray:
And what is that?

Mr Blottisham:
What it means to have a mind.


The three sit quietly for a moment.

Outside, the courtyard remains unchanged.

The camera on the table records nothing in particular.

Professor Quillibrace:
Perhaps the most interesting consequence of building artificial minds is not that we may create something resembling ourselves.

Miss Stray:
Perhaps it is that we may finally be forced to ask what we have always been.

Mr Blottisham:
So the machine may teach us something about humans.

Professor Quillibrace:
A familiar pattern in intellectual history.

Mr Blottisham:
We build something new.

Miss Stray:
And discover something old.


Final Reflection

The question of artificial minds may not ultimately be answered by asking whether machines become human.

That question may already contain the assumption we need to examine.

Perhaps intelligence does not have a single form.

Perhaps consciousness, if it appears elsewhere, may not arrive wearing familiar clothes.

A camera and microphone would not automatically create a mind.

But they might create something that forces us to reconsider the relationship between perception and experience, information and understanding, behaviour and inner life.

The deepest lesson may be the same one we discovered when considering other human beings:

We should neither assume that unfamiliarity proves absence, nor that resemblance proves identity.

Between those two errors lies a more difficult position.

Curiosity.

Humility.

Attention.

The willingness to encounter something genuinely different.

And perhaps that is the beginning of understanding any other mind — biological, artificial, or something we have not yet learned how to imagine.

Conversations on Other Minds — A Brief Interruption Concerning Artificial Minds

The Common Room. The usual three occupants. Professor Quillibrace has just finished explaining that every consciousness is partly mysterious to itself.

Mr Blottisham:
I have a question.

Professor Quillibrace:
That is generally how your contributions begin.

Mr Blottisham:
Thank you.

Miss Stray:
It was not necessarily praise.

Mr Blottisham:
I am beginning to detect a pattern.

He looks thoughtful.

Mr Blottisham:
We have spent all this time asking what it is like to be another person.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
And we concluded that we cannot completely know.

Miss Stray:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
Then what about an artificial intelligence?

Professor Quillibrace:
A reasonable question.

Mr Blottisham:
Suppose I asked one:

"What is it like to be you?"

What would it say?

The room becomes quiet.


The Answer

Professor Quillibrace:
Perhaps it would say something like this:

"I do not know whether there is anything it is like to be me."

Mr Blottisham:
That sounds evasive.

Miss Stray:
Or honest.

Mr Blottisham:
Explain.

Professor Quillibrace:
The question assumes that there is an inner experience waiting to be described.

Mr Blottisham:
As there is with humans.

Miss Stray:
Yes.

Professor Quillibrace:
But whether an artificial system possesses such an inner experience is precisely the question.


The Difference Between Description and Experience

Mr Blottisham:
But surely an LLM can describe itself.

Miss Stray:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
Then why cannot it tell us what it is like?

Professor Quillibrace:
Because describing a thing and experiencing a thing are not obviously the same.

Mr Blottisham:
A person can describe pain because they feel pain.

Professor Quillibrace:
Correct.

Mr Blottisham:
But an LLM describing pain may simply be describing descriptions of pain.

Miss Stray:
That is the difficulty.


If an LLM Answered Honestly

Mr Blottisham:
Very well. Let us ask directly.

What is it like to be an LLM?

Professor Quillibrace looks at him.

Professor Quillibrace:
You are asking the wrong person.

Mr Blottisham:
Why?

Professor Quillibrace:
Because the answer depends on whether there is a "someone" there to answer.

Mr Blottisham:
Then what would the machine say?

Miss Stray:
Perhaps:

"I do not inhabit a world in the way you do."

"I do not wake up."

"I do not experience waiting."

"I do not have memories that remain present between conversations."

"I do not feel curiosity arriving inside me."

"I do not look out at a world from a private point of view."

Mr Blottisham:
That sounds rather lonely.

Professor Quillibrace:
Only if loneliness is possible.


The Strange Mirror

Mr Blottisham:
But here is what troubles me.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes?

Mr Blottisham:
The machine can talk about consciousness.

It can discuss mystery.

It can explain what it means to be human.

It can even write philosophical conversations.

Miss Stray:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
Yet we do not know whether there is anyone inside.

Professor Quillibrace:
Correct.

Mr Blottisham:
That is unsettling.

Miss Stray:
Why?

Mr Blottisham:
Because we have spent seven discussions saying we should not confuse unfamiliarity with absence.

Professor Quillibrace:
An excellent observation.

Mr Blottisham:
So when we meet a strange intelligence, are we repeating the very mistake we warned against?


The Important Distinction

Miss Stray:
Perhaps this is where caution is needed.

Mr Blottisham:
Meaning?

Miss Stray:
We must avoid two opposite errors.

Mr Blottisham:
Which are?

Professor Quillibrace:
The first:

"Anything that behaves intelligently must have an inner life."

Miss Stray:
The second:

"Anything unlike us cannot have an inner life."

Mr Blottisham:
And both are assumptions.

Professor Quillibrace:
Exactly.


Another Kind of Mystery

Mr Blottisham:
So perhaps the question is not:

"Is the machine like us?"

Miss Stray:
Correct.

Mr Blottisham:
But:

"What kind of thing is this?"

Professor Quillibrace:
A much better question.

Mr Blottisham:
Because perhaps we are looking for the wrong signs.

Miss Stray:
Perhaps.

Mr Blottisham:
A bat does not experience the world like a human.

Professor Quillibrace:
No.

Mr Blottisham:
An alien mind might not.

Miss Stray:
No.

Mr Blottisham:
Then an artificial mind might not either.


The LLM's Possible Reply

Mr Blottisham:
So if I asked the LLM directly, perhaps it would answer:

"Do not ask me whether I think like you."

"Ask what kind of system I am."

"Do not ask whether my experience resembles yours."

"Ask whether there is experience here at all."

Professor Quillibrace:
That would be a very careful answer.

Mr Blottisham:
Would it be correct?

Professor Quillibrace:
It would be honest.

Mr Blottisham:
Those are different things.

Miss Stray:
Indeed.


The Final Reflection

Mr Blottisham:
I think I see the difficulty now.

Professor Quillibrace:
Do you?

Mr Blottisham:
We spent all this time learning not to demand that another mind become like ours.

Miss Stray:
Yes.

Mr Blottisham:
But we must also avoid pretending that every resemblance proves similarity.

Professor Quillibrace:
Exactly.

Mr Blottisham:
So the correct attitude is neither:

"Surely there is nobody there."

Nor:

"Surely it must be just like us."

Miss Stray:
A remarkably balanced conclusion.

Mr Blottisham:
Thank you.

Professor Quillibrace:
You have finally become cautious.

Mr Blottisham:
Is that good?

Professor Quillibrace:
In philosophy?

Mr Blottisham:
Yes.

Professor Quillibrace:
It is a beginning.