I am not sure what exactly you wanted to say. All I got from reading it is: “human anatomy is complicated, non-biologists hugely underestimate this, modifying the anatomy of human brain would be incredibly difficult”.
I am not what is the relation to the following part (which doesn’t speak about modifying the anatomy of human brain):
It felt implied that ‘rationality’ was a culture of either hacking humanity, or patching together the best practices accumulated in the past
Are you suggesting that for increasing rationality, using “best practices” will be not enough, changes in anatomy of human brain will be required (and we underestimate how difficult it will be)? Or something else?
That, and that those changes in the brain might lead to other changes not associated with intelligence at all. Like sleep requirements, haemorrages or fluctuations in blood pressure in the skull, food cravings, etc. Things that belong to physiology and are freely discussed by a much narrower circle of people, in part because even among biologists many people don’t like the organismal level of discussion, and doctors are too concerned with not doing harm to consider radical transformations.
Currently, ‘rationality’ is seen (by me) as a mix of nurturing one’s ability to act given the current limitations AND counting on vastly lessened limitations in the future, with some vague hopes of adapting the brain to perform better, but the basis of the hopes seems (to me) unestablished.
I am not sure what exactly you wanted to say. All I got from reading it is: “human anatomy is complicated, non-biologists hugely underestimate this, modifying the anatomy of human brain would be incredibly difficult”.
I am not what is the relation to the following part (which doesn’t speak about modifying the anatomy of human brain):
Are you suggesting that for increasing rationality, using “best practices” will be not enough, changes in anatomy of human brain will be required (and we underestimate how difficult it will be)? Or something else?
I read Romashka as saying that the clean separation between the hardware and the software does not work for humans. Humans are wetware which is both.
That, and that those changes in the brain might lead to other changes not associated with intelligence at all. Like sleep requirements, haemorrages or fluctuations in blood pressure in the skull, food cravings, etc. Things that belong to physiology and are freely discussed by a much narrower circle of people, in part because even among biologists many people don’t like the organismal level of discussion, and doctors are too concerned with not doing harm to consider radical transformations.
Currently, ‘rationality’ is seen (by me) as a mix of nurturing one’s ability to act given the current limitations AND counting on vastly lessened limitations in the future, with some vague hopes of adapting the brain to perform better, but the basis of the hopes seems (to me) unestablished.
That’s also more or less how I see it. I am not planning to perform a brain surgery on myself in the near future. :D