- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
136 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
136 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3464
|
|
Title: HPR3464: Being irrational
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3464/hpr3464.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-24 23:57:33
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3464 for Thursday, the 11th of November 2021.
|
|
Today's show is entitled, Being Irrational.
|
|
It is hosted by Andrew Conway, and is about 13 minutes long, and carries a clean flag.
|
|
The summary is Being Irrational, Is Rational.
|
|
Hello Hacker Public Radio people. This is McNalloo, also known as Andrew.
|
|
And in this episode I wanted to talk to you about something that has been rattling around
|
|
inside my mind for a while, and that is being irrational, that is not being rational.
|
|
Now these thoughts were prompted, well, I'm really riffing on some ideas that came to mind while
|
|
listening to a recent episode by Clatu, where he was talking about science and evidence and
|
|
so forth, although I'm not going to go into Covid stuff again. Dave and I, I think,
|
|
covered that to my satisfaction in the previous episode. No, in this one, I want to tackle
|
|
the strange flip side of how we approach science, maths or even computer programming,
|
|
which I think would be most relevant to hackers here, and essentially my thought line goes like this.
|
|
So let's consider playing a game of chess. Now chess is a completely deterministic game.
|
|
You don't roll a dice, the rules don't change, you don't argue or debate over the rules,
|
|
you don't say well, sometimes a rook can turn left, no rook always goes in a straight line
|
|
across the squares, bishops always go diagonally, knights always go in an L shape and so forth.
|
|
You know, in a role playing game like Dungeons & Dragons, you can quibble with a dungeon master
|
|
but how you might interpret the rules, nothing like that in chess. Also, as I said, no dice rolls,
|
|
so it's completely deterministic. Given the state of the board right now, you can actually write
|
|
down a list of the next possible moves. Isn't that long a list? Now, the thing that's about chess,
|
|
of course, is that a computer would be very good at analysing moves ahead, because there are,
|
|
let's say there's only a set number of moves, legitimate moves you can make from any setup of the
|
|
board. And a computer can look at that and then look at what the other player might move,
|
|
but very quickly end up with an exponential explosion. So it's deterministic but actually
|
|
harder than you may think. So our first computers, the computers I grew up with in the 1980s,
|
|
the 8-bit computers I had a BBC Micro, but if you're thinking ZX Spectrum or Commodore 64,
|
|
that's the kind of thing I'm talking about. They couldn't be that good at chess, because they just
|
|
weren't powerful enough, but now my smartphone can easily beat me at chess. But I can do something
|
|
my smartphone cannot do. I can get better at chess, I can practice, and maybe there's some chess
|
|
programs that can learn, yes. But when I got my very first smartphone, which was a Google G1,
|
|
I used to play it, I got a chess app for that, and it used to beat me every single time,
|
|
even in the easiest difficulty setting, and I felt so humbled, because I thought, you know,
|
|
pretty good at chess, you know, you know, it gets humans anyway, you know, I've never played it
|
|
that seriously, but I thought I was an okay player, but no, my smartphone, the dumbest smartphone,
|
|
admittedly, but it's still a smartphone, could easily beat me in the easiest difficulty setting.
|
|
So, then, after weeks of trying, one night, I'm sat on the train in the station waiting to go home,
|
|
so I've been at the pub in Glasgow, quite a few pints to drink, so I'm, let's face it, I'm a
|
|
little bit drunk, and I'm sitting on the train waiting for it to depart, and I, to my utter
|
|
astonishment, I beat my phone at chess while I'm drunk, I've never managed to do while I'm sober.
|
|
Okay, so maybe luck, maybe luck, certainly, next day I play it when I'm sober, I lose again.
|
|
Now, obviously, some science is required, a scientific experiment, I need to reproduce this result,
|
|
and drink lots of beer again, but putting that aside, the serious point I'm making here is,
|
|
it's probably true to say that when I'm not thinking directly, I can be a better chess player
|
|
than when I'm thinking completely rationally and logically, and indeed, the way that computers
|
|
used to play chess, I've had the way they still play chess, which is by essentially brute force
|
|
looking ahead, is quite capable of beating all but the best players, and I think now even the best
|
|
players in the world. So, you have to, I have to start asking myself, well, how do I play chess?
|
|
When you play chess, you're not just looking at the next, the next move you will probably think
|
|
through, look, do a look ahead, and the smaller number of moves you can consider it, and also the
|
|
number of moves that your opponent might do, but then when you consider the moves you might
|
|
do in response to that, that's starting to get a little bit, but certainly beyond my abilities to
|
|
annuity all the possibilities. That's not how an experienced chess player plays though,
|
|
an experienced chess player speeds that up measurably by using their experience, a bit of pattern
|
|
recognition and some human intuition, so they don't really step through all those steps, they
|
|
shortcut them. Now, actually, this shouldn't be a surprise to anybody, because if you play a sport
|
|
like football or cricket or baseball, you know, it's not like you solve all the equations of
|
|
motion and Newton's law of gravitation in order to hit a ball, you know, use your experience,
|
|
your intuition, your practice, you have to do all of that. So, and this is really what I'm getting at,
|
|
that I think sometimes in, with all the advances we've made with science, all the technology around
|
|
us, we fool ourselves into thinking that our irrational mode of thought is somehow inconvenient,
|
|
and that irrational, as a word, irrational, as built with an eye, is a pejorative word.
|
|
You're being irrational, as almost akin to saying you're being stupid, you've lost, you've lost
|
|
control of yourself. But I'd like to reclaim that word a little bit, because I think being
|
|
irrational is actually a very important mode of our thought. In fact, in many ways, for many things,
|
|
especially when it comes to being creative, it is really the only way that we can proceed. You can't,
|
|
you can't compute what makes a great painting, or a lovely piece of music. Another example is
|
|
that if any of you play a musical instrument, I play the guitar, although I don't play as much as I
|
|
used to, you might recognize the strange phenomenon when you're trying to learn a new, you know,
|
|
saying the guitar, I'm trying to learn a new chord or chord sequence or fingering or finger
|
|
plucking or whatever. And you're doing it slowly and you're learning, and then you get, you feel
|
|
that you're getting better after maybe an hour of practice, but then you start to get worse, you
|
|
over-practice. So you put your guitar down, you go off, maybe chill out for a bit, go to bed,
|
|
wake up the next day, pick up the guitar, and wow, you can play it, but you haven't practiced overnight,
|
|
well, at least you haven't practiced physically overnight, but perhaps I think during my sleep,
|
|
I have practiced that certain strengthening of synapses or whatever has been going on in the
|
|
brain while I've slept. I don't know what goes on in my sleep, I'm not sure anyone does really,
|
|
but certainly something good happens, and it's certainly not conscious, rational thought. It's
|
|
certainly unconscious if you're asleep by definition. So that's my second example. So the first
|
|
one was chess, the second one would be playing a musical instrument. Again, there's a certain,
|
|
you know, people talk about Bach, JS Bach, as having some mathematical quality,
|
|
having a mathematical quality to it. I don't really know what to make of that. I kind of see what they
|
|
mean. I'm not a huge fan of Bach, I have to say, but I do see what's good about it. You know,
|
|
I do find it intriguing, but is it the same bit of me that is interested in maths, or I'm not sure
|
|
it is, I'm not sure, but maybe, maybe it could be. So this leads me into the third example I
|
|
wanted to talk about, which is possibly, I think, the most rational mode of human endeavour and
|
|
structuring human thought. Now, you could say it's science and scientific method, but actually,
|
|
it's probably, in my opinion, in any way, it's mathematics. In fact, there is literally a
|
|
branch of mathematics about logic, boolean logic and other forms of logic. But I won't talk about
|
|
mathematics in general. So mathematics, if you're doing mathematics, you're, you're right on an
|
|
equation, and then there's only a series of operations that you can do in that equation that will
|
|
produce the next step. And again, like the game of chess, is an optional, there's no, well, I feel
|
|
like this today, so the next step is going to be, I'll put an extra Y in the right hand side,
|
|
but not on the left. No, can't do that. There's only a series of, there's only a certain
|
|
number of rules that can apply in math on operations you can do in turning one step of a mathematical
|
|
argument into the next step. They're ruthlessly logical and rigorous, and it's very difficult sometimes
|
|
for our puny non-rational human brains, or other brains that are not geared up, I think,
|
|
to think rationally, to comprehend mathematics. For that reason, that's why so many people find it
|
|
difficult. Now, so perhaps mathematics, perhaps that's the thing that's pure rationality. There
|
|
is no creativity, there's no room for, you know, there's no room for any of that pattern recognition
|
|
stuff going on in chess, or is there? Well, it is true that, say you have a theorem in mathematics
|
|
that statement that is said to be correct is true rather, that you will then seek to find the
|
|
proof to verify that that theorem, that statement is true. And that process of producing a proof
|
|
is not rational. If you look at the way a mathematician will go about finding a proof, and it doesn't
|
|
need to be in a high-floating mathematician, you could do this. Try yourself, try and prove that
|
|
Pythagoras is true, for example, that x squared plus y squared equals z squared, where z is the
|
|
longest side of a rectangle triangle, next and y, of the two shorter sides. Now, it's actually not
|
|
that difficult to prove, if you've got a little bit of maths, if you've got no maths whatsoever,
|
|
I guess it's very, very hard to prove. But actually, when you stop and think about how you do it,
|
|
how you derive it, approve how you generate a proof, that's not a rational process. The proof
|
|
itself has got to be rational, it's got to be the step follows from the step follows from the
|
|
step with no ifs buts or randomness involved at all. But in order to find it, you have to do
|
|
something creative, and you have to use your irrational mode of thought to do it.
|
|
And I think when people stop and realise that about mathematics, then you really do realise
|
|
that we really can't escape their irrational side of our minds, even when we try to, we're stuck
|
|
with it, and we have to live with it. Now, I'm not doing down the rational side of things at all,
|
|
I'm not saying that a computer programme should sometimes give a different result,
|
|
because the CPU decides, I'm going to do a different instruction today, he asked me to copy that,
|
|
but of memory from there to there, but I'm not going to do that, I'm just going to make up a number.
|
|
You know, we don't want computers to do that, and I'm not advocating it. There's definitely a
|
|
place for rational, logical, sequence thought, and processing, definitely as. What I'm saying is
|
|
really next time you say that's irrational, maybe think twice, because I don't think
|
|
being a rational should be as pejorative as it has come to be.
|
|
You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at HeckerPublicRadio.org. Today's show was
|
|
contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
|
then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR is kindly
|
|
provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our sync.net. Unless otherwise stated,
|
|
today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLike, 3.0 license.
|