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Dag Sørebø
Bio [2007]
Dag Sørebø studied at the University of Bergen, Norway, doing mathematics
and computer
science at the undergraduate level, then switching to organization theory
and administration at
the intermediate level, and finally receiving the degree Candidatus
Philologiae in Philosophy (the
Norwegian equivalent to a master's in research) in 2004.
In 1998, he studied at the
University of Newcastle, Australia, successfully completing Professor Clifford
A. Hooker's honours
seminar in cognitive science while doing courses in rationality theory and
the philosophy of
science. After graduating from the University of Bergen in 2004, he
studied technopreneurship
at the University of Oslo and the National University of Singapore. Dag was
part of the first NKS
Summer School in 2003, and he gave presentations at the NKS conferences in
2004 and 2005.
Currently, his academic plan is to write a project description for a PhD
in cognitive science.
Professionally, Dag first worked for six years in the Norwegian Army and
then five years part-time as
an IT consultant. Among his assignments were three oil companies, a TV
station, a high school,
a start-up enterprise in language technology, and general work as a
computer instructor. He has
worked as an assistant teacher in Philosophy at the University of Bergen
and as a substitute
teacher at elementary schools in Western Norway and in Oslo. Since 2001 he
has his own startup
enterprise, "Norsk Sikkerhetsinstitutt", which offers advise, tuition and
consulting services in
security and safety issues, and total quality management. Dag currently works
as an environmental
therapist in a rehabilitation unit for schizophrenic patients with a
double diagnosis.
Project Title Evolved Intelligence--Programmed Design
Project
Motivation
In his 2002 book A New Kind of Science, Stephen Wolfram observes
that "...
the fact that we may be able to interpret a system as achieving some
purpose does not necessarily mean that the system was really created with
that purpose in mind ..." (NKS, p. 831). I think that Wolfram's statements
highlight philosophically interesting--and controversial--questions in
Western thought about how humans are able to distinguish forms in nature
from designed artifacts. I plan to investivate the philosophical
implications of Wolfram's statement by means of methods, truth-proxies,
and concepts which, according to the literature I have studied, are
relevant to philosophy and science alike.
Method
If we adopt the view of evolutionary epistomology as a basic
naturalist/realist philosophical framework (Hooker, Reason, Regulation,
and Realism (1995), p.9), in what way(s) could we use the methodologies
and computational tools of NKS to explore a system and its relationship to
human purposes? I think that a meaningful approach to this question should
include a discussion of the traditional distinction between "natural" and
"artificial" forms in Western thought--a longstanding issue for empirical
scientific observations. I started by sorting pictures of objects into
three series: natural forms, artificial forms, or "hybrid" forms--objects
which display characteristics of both the natural and artificial forms. I
used Mathematica first to organize these pictures and then to
search for a
cellular automaton in the computational universe that, at some point in
its evolution, displays a space-time form similar to at least one of the
objects. If such a hypothetical CA can be found, I make the conjecture
that in some cases, CAs can be seen as probes sent into "human design"
space.
Favorite Outer Totalistic 3-Color Rule
Rule chosen: 8118948
I think 3-color, outer CA 8118948 is interesting. Straight lines "build from the side" 45 degree angles, without starting
from long,
horizontal lines as in many other CAs.
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