Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,035
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
Well, I would say my model of dissociative alters is explained with far fewer assumptions of cosmic weirdness: it's the prompting of some subset of your own brain to start playing a character not associated with the actions you take, saying "make me a homunculus" to the large language-processing structures of your own brain, and getting such a thing arising out of the din.Some of you may be interested in Kastrup’s debate with Sabine Hossenfelder on superdeterminism, here. Supposedly you can skip the long, tedious, ad-ridden intro, but I found skipping did not work for me.
Oddly, Kastrup rejects superdeterminism but also Everettian quantum mechanics, which I find weird because many worlds seems to nicely complement his own concept of dissociative alters.
That's eminently understandable, in theory. We've engineered a machine that does exactly that, and people are quite ready to observe that it's "not that huge of a technical achievement" or whatever (it's actually quite a monumental achievement).
Why would we need multiversal madness to explain that?
I don't necessarily reject or accept superdeterminism, though I'm going to live in peace with it since it's an apparently unfalsifiable theory; making any statement that preemptively supposes it is right or wrong seems ill-founded until someone proposes a method of falsification that is widely demonstrable.
Still, it seems to add untold layers of complexity to reality in trying to explain a fairly well observed phenomena in a nutty way, and I commend this guy for at least not trying to foist a belief in such complexity on us.
Personally, I think dissociative alters are just chunks of your own neuron-stuff whipped into playing a role through embedding identity statements into some node kernel, or allowing identity statements to precipitate. Hell, the statements don't even have to be in plain English, they can be in "headless/token less" vector format, with a thousand, or even ten thousand different neural dimensions all jumbled together in the way a "nonverbal" person does it.
Again, Occam's razor would suggest the situation where it's physically explained using existing observed phenomena is more compelling than the equally explanatory but much more complex situation where people are tickling alternative parallel realities.