There are undercurrents to all of this. It's all rooted in the fact that I've known since early childhood that my mind is different from others'. And being autistic also conferred a rigid desire for epistemological certainty, which, through repeated and painful failure, taught me deep lessons about the nature of truth, knowledge, reality, and the fundamental limitations of the human mind.
Since I was a young boy, I've wanted to understand how minds work, how they can be different from each other, what they must have in common, how they coordinate with each other, what they are capable of, what they accomplish, and why they exist.
Along the way, I've had some interesting realizations. Evolution is a learning algorithm. The brain is a learning algorithm. Human society is a learning algorithm. They are organized hierarchically. Monetary systems, the scientific method, the internet, and social media are "mods" we've plugged into the massive learning algorithm we all participate in, and, in the process, introduced bugs into the system.
Human minds can never touch the Truth. They can only grasp the image of it through our perceptions... Plato's shadows. And yet our minds are the source of all meaning, without which the Truth cannot matter.
@hosford42 So in a way, either only humans can “touch” truth because we are the ones who invented truth. Or truth cannot ever possibly be attained because it only exists in abstraction. 2/2
@tylerbranston I often make the distinction between (absolute/objective) Truth -- the abstract notion of the way things really are, apart from how any one person perceives them -- and (personal) truth -- the sieve by which we individually determine which statements we agree with.
@tylerbranston As I see it, the job of the observational/predictive component of the mind is to reconcile the models we maintain of our environment with the new data we receive about it through our senses. Along the way, the structure of the model must be refactored to better match the structure of reality, making Truth an unreachable asymptotic objective of intelligence.