I think Professor Pagel’s specific attempts to articulate the mechanics of human ideation isn’t the most interesting take-away from this video. His tone makes it clear that he is playing around with a perspective that is new to him, a rough understanding of human intelligence that deserves further exploration.
The concept that I think is important, and which is certainly not universally accepted by a wider audience of reasonably intelligent and educated people, is that our creativity is not “special”. That new ideas aren’t magically willed into being by some ineffable desire to innovate, but are instead arrived at via conscious and subconscious pattern-seeking, and a mental “auditioning” of potential solutions.
And natural selection is a decent conversational analogy here. There are people who accept that there is no external intelligent agency which governs the “creation” of advanced biological organisms, but still hold on to the idea that the human mind is somehow captained by an irreducible agent, that there is a ghost in the machine. Drawing a comparison between these two processes is a strong and accessible argument against such a notion.
I think Professor Pagel’s specific attempts to articulate the mechanics of human ideation isn’t the most interesting take-away from this video. His tone makes it clear that he is playing around with a perspective that is new to him, a rough understanding of human intelligence that deserves further exploration.
The concept that I think is important, and which is certainly not universally accepted by a wider audience of reasonably intelligent and educated people, is that our creativity is not “special”. That new ideas aren’t magically willed into being by some ineffable desire to innovate, but are instead arrived at via conscious and subconscious pattern-seeking, and a mental “auditioning” of potential solutions.
And natural selection is a decent conversational analogy here. There are people who accept that there is no external intelligent agency which governs the “creation” of advanced biological organisms, but still hold on to the idea that the human mind is somehow captained by an irreducible agent, that there is a ghost in the machine. Drawing a comparison between these two processes is a strong and accessible argument against such a notion.