by Joey Lawsin
Lawsinium's Katz |
In this experiment, an imaginary cat named UNO serves as the ideal subject for investigation. UNO is placed in a large, transparent water-filled tank and left to struggle for a few minutes. Following this distressing experience, UNO is guided to swim towards a ladder positioned at the opposite end of the tank. Upon reaching the ladder, UNO climbs out of the water and is safely taken good care to a dry platform. The experiment meticulously examines UNO’s actions in slow motion, frame by frame, to understand how individual instructions sequentially self-develop into a comprehensive procedure.
The entire modular algorithmic package of information, which is a detailed list of well-defined individual instructions converging sequentially through inlearning, is termed a ‘prior-procedure’ (Lawsin, 1988). A prior-procedure (pp) is defined as the convergence of instructions that evolve as a single group, naturally rearranging into an orderly serial program. This intricate algorithmic task, codenamed CAT, is activated to perform a specific task at a predetermined time. The algorithm is automatically activated in a step-by-step manner when triggered, executing the commands on the list.
The procedure, exemplified by the simple task of the cat exiting the water, is switched on by the call of necessity, with each instruction on the list executed individually. The convergence of these instructions merges into a singular procedure program for the cat. Unknowingly to the cat, it self-creates this set of instructions, effectively programming itself. This self-modular procedure becomes the “mind” — the tactical intelligence that self-executes when required by the cat. It is the inlearned instructions that self-program the cat.
This theoretical experiment suggests that information can be stored as discrete units, translated into instructions, compiled into a modular procedure, and ultimately transformed into intelligence. The process of unfolding information into a linear, self-programmable instruction is termed as the “Cumulative Acquisition of TransInformation,” or “C.A.T.” The accumulation of information, the compilation of instructions, and the translation of procedures into a program are the three fundamental elements in the formation of intelligence. Intelligence is the product of Inlearning, a process through which the emergence and convergence of instructions develop into a self-programming procedure, residing in every memory cell as mechanical aneural intelligence.
Upon deeper analysis of the thought experiment, it becomes evident that a newborn kitten’s survival is not due to instinct or intelligence, as it possesses neither at such a young age. When the kitten encounters a similar horrifying situation again, the individual instruction from the procedure that it acquired from the initial experiment will ensure its survival in the future. This is not due to inborn instinct, as commonly believed, but rather the prior-procedure that was subconsciously stored in the kitten’s mind. This prior-procedure remains transient in the brain and only becomes permanently stored when the same event recurs. At this point, the prior-procedure becomes an after-procedure, marking the transition that allows the prior-procedure to permanently reside in the brain. This permanency eventually transforms into what is perceived as “inborn” intelligence, or instinctive intelligence.
Kittens, much like all young creatures, do not have even the slightest idea about the meaning of life or in this matter even death. They don't even have the slightest idea of what drowning is. The task of saving one's dear life is therefore not inborn or instinct and not even engraved in animal genes as people bluntly believe. It is not genetically inherited. Information must be acquired to generate a set of self-creating instructional procedures or tasks (SCRIPT). It is the SCRIPT that programs the cat to perform actions automatically or instinctively. The cat is self-programmed by instructions. This principle applies to all creations — humans, genes, and molecules all self-program. Humans are programmed by instructions to construct. They even self-create, just as nature self-creates. Instruction is the intelligence that self-programs everything. Instruction shapes Creation (Creation by Laws).
The Lawsinium Cat Experiment provides compelling evidence that UNO, the subject of the experiment, was guided by a series of instructions. By meticulously analyzing the sequence of events within the water tank in slow motion, we can deduce that energy can be converted into information, transformed into serial instructions, and eventually into a single procedure.
During the experiment, as UNO first began to sink into the water, he likely experienced an unfamiliar environment characterized by wetness and cold. With the aid of buoyancy, he managed to resurface, take a deep breath, and instinctively expel the air from his lungs. These sensations of wetness, resurfacing, breath-holding, and exhaling were individual pieces of information. These four informational energies were sequentially channeled and converted into instructions. As UNO had no alternative escape route from the tank, he resorted to kicking, swimming, and floating until exhaustion. These seven primary instructions - sinking, resurfacing, breath-holding, exhaling, kicking, swimming, and floating - sequentially aligned within an “infochannelkeeper,” forming a procedure — a procedure tasks to stay afloat.
Exhausted and depleted, the kitten was once again pulled underwater by his own weight. As he inhaled a large volume of water, it came into contact with his palate and eventually reached his voice box. The ensuing laryngeal spasm and oxygen deprivation, which typically lead to cardiac arrest and reduced brain blood supply if not promptly corrected, caused his bodily functions to decline and his larynx to open, allowing more water to enter his lungs. While only a small amount of aspirated water is needed to significantly impair lung function, the prolonged submersion and shortness of breath were the primary factors that induced the sensation of suffocation. This pain served as the signal that prompted the kitten to paddle towards a familiar and comfortable environment - a dry area. The prior-procedure tasks associated with remaining in a dry environment were executed automatically or instinctively.
The procedure of exiting the water, which is the sum of the task of staying afloat and the task of reaching dry land, forms the “program” that ensures the cat’s safety. The wet environment and the pain of suffocation are the critical pieces of information that influenced or activated the cat’s instinct to paddle out of the water. The discomfort experienced by the cat, ranging from the wet environment to difficulty breathing, choking, confusion, and panic, are generally classified as pain. These inputs serve as the switching energies that activate inlearned procedures. Pain is one of the trigger mechanisms that serve as input energy to activate a procedure. Procedures or Systemic Instructions, which should be respected by both evolutionists and creationists, are the intelligence that created all things. It is not God or Evolution that created the solar system or its extended universe; it is the Laws of Information.
Definition:
1. Think Factor - acquisition of information through the senses.
2. Think Effect - determines the levels or hierarchy of intelligence.
3. Inlearning Konstant- produces instructions through experiences.
4. C.A.T. - stores the algorithm as a program.
5. Zizo Effect - triggers a particular procedure.
6. Life - processes a program to produce a result.
"Instruction and Material shape Creation and Evolution" ~ Joey Lawsin
Disclaimer: The articles on this site are intended for a balanced education. Since it is constantly edited, updated, and improved, therefore I recommend that you check back regularly for new items. If you want to use anything here for the purpose of scholarly discussion, please inform the author by email or cite the author's name or source as follows: A Journal of a Creative Mind, Joey Lawsin, 1988, USA.