is that an important qualification to ur definition, that a process is only intelligent if it produces more of itself *forever*?
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let me put it this way, the more it goes on, all the while self-sophisticating, the intelligenterer it obviously is or, alternatively: if it stops, it also stops being intelligent (unless its beginning and end are just part of a larger process, that is)
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where do you fit humans into this schema? are humans intelligent beings?
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The problem with that way of framing it imo is that it conceives of intelligence as an individual property of clearly distinguishable entities, when I'd prefer to view it as a process that operates via the complex interactions of any such identifiable things, including humans ofc
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in other words, a process - such as a war or a financial bubble - involving humans can be intelligent (if it exhibits the escalatory, "self-enhancing" principle), but individual humans cannot
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humans are processes too u know... and no, processes are not so much intelligent, as intelligence is itself a process, actualized through processes
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so capital (indeed any process) is not, in the final analysis, intelligent?
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with capital, it gets a bit more complicated I guess (when you try to grasp it as an entity or process, things get *weird*), at the very least it comes pretty close to being identical with intelligence as it happens now -which may ofc change, but that's hard for us to conceive of
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hmm not sure I follow you. are you saying now that intelligence is not a quality (defined by local intensification) attributable to processes, but rather is itself a social process, like capital (or war, etc), which is in fact identical to capital?
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