Intelligence itself may be a virus, literally. The chemical activity in your brain is not that unlike viral activity. The reason humans can do math may be that some kind of salamander-like creature millions of years ago contracted a brain virus, that virus happened to produce behavioral effects that helped it spread and ultimately become symbiotic. We may be little more than a pitched battle between what we would call bacteria, viral load, and the cells that we would like to think of as our own but which are really combinations of earlier forms of life that joined together for practical reasons.
On this view, we are not exquisitely designed machines but rather accidental pitched battles occurring in nature. The question is does this ontological view produce new predictive capacity? Can you see yourself as a being entirely driven by microscopic life, rationalizing everything after the fact so that you are the master of your destiny? Is intelligence something that you partake in rather than possess? What is technology and what does it want from us?
This triggered two main thoughts for me. First - this virus centric take is not so different to the one taken in Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari in which he claims that we didn’t so much domesticate crops as become domesticated _by_ crops. While I think it’s healthy to consider less human centric views of what we are, there as here I think the value of questioning the intent of entities that don’t have end goals may not lead to very profound answers. The second thought is that I once read that the activity of our brain is dancing on the edge of chaos, and that either direction causes it to cease functioning. Similarly our immune systems are dialled close to the limit, to the point where it can take itself and its owner out by accident. All this to say our existence is already at or near the crossover between so many gradients, which most likely are in essence the pitched battles you’re referring to.
On this view, we are not exquisitely designed machines but rather accidental pitched battles occurring in nature. The question is does this ontological view produce new predictive capacity? Can you see yourself as a being entirely driven by microscopic life, rationalizing everything after the fact so that you are the master of your destiny? Is intelligence something that you partake in rather than possess? What is technology and what does it want from us?