-
Everyone carries a room about inside him. This fact can even be proved by means of the sense of hearing. If someone walks fast and one pricks up one's ears and listens, say in the night, when everything round about is quiet, one hears, for instance, the rattling of a mirror not quite firmly fastened to the wall.
-
– Kafka
- Follow Notes from a Room on WordPress.com
Categories
Archives
- May 2026 (7)
- April 2026 (4)
- March 2026 (1)
- February 2026 (6)
- January 2026 (4)
- December 2025 (2)
- November 2025 (1)
- October 2025 (3)
- July 2025 (2)
- May 2025 (3)
- March 2025 (1)
- January 2025 (1)
- December 2024 (1)
- November 2024 (3)
- October 2024 (4)
- September 2024 (3)
- July 2024 (4)
- June 2024 (1)
- May 2024 (6)
- April 2024 (4)
- March 2024 (5)
- February 2024 (2)
- January 2024 (11)
- November 2023 (6)
- October 2023 (2)
- September 2023 (2)
- June 2023 (1)
- May 2023 (1)
- April 2023 (14)
- March 2023 (23)
- February 2023 (1)
- January 2023 (7)
- December 2022 (6)
- November 2022 (12)
- October 2022 (6)
- September 2022 (3)
- August 2022 (4)
- July 2022 (6)
- June 2022 (2)
- May 2022 (5)
- April 2022 (2)
- March 2022 (2)
- January 2022 (3)
- December 2021 (5)
- October 2021 (2)
- September 2021 (2)
- August 2021 (6)
- July 2021 (1)
- June 2021 (1)
- May 2021 (4)
- April 2021 (10)
- March 2021 (4)
- February 2021 (18)
- January 2021 (8)
- December 2020 (17)
- November 2020 (4)
- October 2020 (7)
- September 2020 (6)
- August 2020 (12)
- July 2020 (18)
- June 2020 (48)
- May 2020 (12)
- March 2020 (3)
- February 2020 (1)
- January 2020 (3)
- December 2019 (9)
- November 2019 (4)
- October 2019 (3)
- September 2019 (3)
- July 2019 (4)
- June 2019 (3)
- May 2019 (1)
- March 2019 (1)
- February 2019 (6)
- January 2019 (4)
- December 2018 (5)
- November 2018 (6)
- August 2018 (3)
- April 2018 (4)
- March 2017 (2)
- September 2016 (5)
- August 2016 (2)
- February 2016 (1)
- December 2015 (2)
- November 2015 (3)
- October 2015 (2)
- August 2015 (1)
- June 2015 (2)
- April 2015 (1)
- July 2014 (3)
- April 2014 (1)
- December 2013 (1)
- November 2013 (2)
- October 2013 (3)
- September 2013 (1)
- August 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (1)
- January 2013 (6)
- December 2012 (10)
- November 2012 (27)
- October 2012 (14)
- September 2012 (14)
- August 2012 (18)
- May 2012 (1)
- April 2012 (2)
- March 2012 (7)
- February 2012 (8)
- January 2012 (10)
- December 2011 (1)
- November 2011 (11)
- October 2011 (19)
- September 2011 (18)
- August 2011 (38)
- July 2011 (21)
- June 2011 (21)
- May 2011 (9)
- April 2011 (12)
- March 2011 (8)
- February 2011 (13)
- January 2011 (18)
- December 2010 (3)
- November 2010 (7)
- October 2010 (28)
- September 2010 (26)
- August 2010 (35)
- July 2010 (32)
- June 2010 (34)
- May 2010 (10)
- April 2010 (7)
- March 2010 (12)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (1)
- December 2009 (27)
- November 2009 (20)
- October 2009 (10)
- September 2009 (12)
- August 2009 (7)
- July 2009 (14)
- June 2009 (31)
- May 2009 (38)
- April 2009 (13)
- March 2009 (17)
- February 2009 (19)
- January 2009 (18)
- December 2008 (18)
- November 2008 (8)
- October 2008 (2)
- September 2008 (2)
- August 2008 (15)
- July 2008 (5)
- June 2008 (8)
- May 2008 (2)
- April 2008 (1)
- March 2008 (5)
- February 2008 (4)
- January 2008 (8)
- December 2007 (4)
- November 2007 (12)
- October 2007 (6)
- September 2007 (2)
- July 2007 (1)
Sentience?
Q: You’re seen as the Godfather of this industry. Do you have any concern about what you’ve wrought?
A: I do a bit. On the other hand, I think whatever going to happen is pretty much inevitable. One person stopping doing this research wouldn’t stop it happening. If my impact is to make it happen a month earlier, that’s about the limit of one person can do.
Q: We haven’t touched on job displacement. Is this going to eat up job after job?
A: I think it’s going to make jobs different. People are going to be doing more of the creative end and less of the routine end.
Q: This is the biggest technological advancement since… is this another industrial revolution, or how should people think of it?
A: I think it’s comparable in scale to the industrial revolution or electricity, or maybe the wheel.
Q: And sentience? I think you have complaints about how you even define that?
A: When it comes to sentience, I’m amazed that people can confidently pronounce that these things are not sentient, and when you ask them what they mean by sentient, they say they don’t really know. So how can you be confident about sentient if you don’t know what sentient means?
Q: So maybe they are already?
A: Who knows. I think whether they’re sentient or not depends on what you mean by sentient. So you better define what you mean by sentient before you answer the question of whether they’re sentient.
Q: Does it matter what we think, or does it only matter whether it effectively acts as if it is sentient?
A: That’s a very good question.
Q: And what’s your answer?
A: I don’t have one.
Q: Because if it’s not sentient, but it decides for whatever reason that it believes it is and that it needs to achieve some goal that’s contrary to our interests but it believes is in its interest, does it really matter in terms of any human reflection?
A: I think a good context to think about this thing is an autonomous lethal weapon. It’s all very well saying it’s not sentient, but when it’s hunting you down to shoot you, you’re going to start thinking it’s sentient.
Q: Or not really caring, not an important standard any more.
A: The kind of intelligence we’re developing is very different from our intelligence. It’s an idiot-savant kind of intelligence. It’s quite possible that if it is at all sentient, it’s sentient in a somewhat different way from us.
Comments Off on Sentience?
Posted in Writing
Pandora
Here’s a thought experiment for you. Suppose you’re sitting in a room, there’s a box on the table, and you believe there’s something in that box there’s a strong chance it will give glorious gifts to your family and to everyone. But there’s something in the small print on the box that says: Pandora. There’s a chance that this could unleash unimaginable evils on the world. Do you open that box?
Comments Off on Pandora
Posted in AI
The Bot
Why do I love the Bot? Because it frees me up. It appeals to the laziest parts of my mind. It does my work for me. It will wipe out my doubts. It will think and decide for me. It will kill who I thought I was, which I always secretly wanted.
Comments Off on The Bot
Posted in Writing
The Future
Give me back my broken night
My mirrored room, my secret life
It’s lonely here
There’s no one left to torture
Give me absolute control
Over every living soul
And lie beside me, baby
That’s an order
Give me crack and anal sex
Take the only tree that’s left
And stuff it up the hole
In your culture
Give me back the Berlin wall
Give me Stalin and St. Paul
I’ve seen the future, brother
It is murder
Things are gonna slide in all directions
Won’t be nothing you can measure anymore
The blizzard of the world has crossed the threshold
And it’s overturned the order of the soul
When they said repent
I wonder what they meant
You don’t know me from the wind
You never will, you never did
I’m the little Jew who wrote the Bible
I’ve seen the nations rise and fall
I’ve heard their stories, heard them all
But love’s the only engine of survival
Your servant here, he has been told
To say it clear, to say it cold
It’s over, it ain’t going any further
And now the wheels of heaven stop
You feel the devil’s riding crop
Get ready for the future
It is murder
Things are going to slide in all directions
Won’t be nothing you can measure anymore
The blizzard of the world has crossed the threshold
And it’s overturned the order of the soul
When they said repent
I wonder what they meant
There’ll be the breaking of the ancient western code
Your private life will suddenly explode
There’ll be phantoms, there’ll be fires on the road
And the white man dancing
You’ll see a woman hanging upside down
Her features covered by her fallen gown
And all the lousy little poets coming round
Trying to sound like Charlie Manson
Give me back the Berlin wall
Give me Stalin and Saint Paul
Give me Christ or give me Hiroshima
Destroy another fetus now
We don’t like children anyhow
I’ve seen the future, baby
It is murder
When they said repent
I wonder what they meant
Comments Off on The Future
Posted in Leonard Cohen
I and I
Been so long since a strange woman has slept in my bed
Look how sweet she sleeps, how free must be her dreams
In another lifetime she must have owned the world or been faithfully wed
To some righteous king who wrote psalms beside moonlit streams
I and I
In creation where one’s nature neither honors nor forgives
I and I
One said to the other, “No man sees my face and lives”
Think I’ll go out and go for a walk
Not much happening here, nothing ever does
Besides, if she wakes up now, she’ll just want me to talk
I got nothing to say, especially about whatever it was
I and I
In creation where one’s nature neither honors nor forgives
I and I
One said to the other, no man sees my face and lives
Took an untrodden path once, where the swift don’t win the race
It goes to the worthy, who can divine the word of truth
Took a stranger to teach me, to look into justice’s beautiful face
And to see an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth
I and I
In creation where one’s nature neither honors nor forgives
I and I
One said to the other, no man sees my face and lives
Outside of two men on a train platform there’s nobody in sight
They’re waiting for spring to come, smoking down the track
The world could come to an end tonight, but that’s all right
She should still be there sleeping when I get back
I and I
In creation where one’s nature neither honors nor forgives
I and I
One said to the other, “No man sees my face and lives”
Noontime, and I’m still pushing myself along the road, the darkest part
Into the narrow lanes, I can’t stumble or stay put
Someone else is speaking with my mouth, but I’m listening only to my heart
I’ve made shoes for everyone, even you, while I still go barefoot
Comments Off on I and I
Posted in Bob Dylan
That’s my real story
“By the time I finished my tour in 1993, I was in some condition of anguish that deepened and deepened. Prozac didn’t work. Paxil didn’t work. Zoloft didn’t work. Wellbutrin didn’t work. In fact, the only comic element in the whole thing was when I was taking Prozac, I came to believe that I had overcome my [sexual] desires. I didn’t know that it has that side effect. I thought it was a spiritual achievement.”
The daily regimen of life at the Zen center was sometimes preoccupation enough. “Think of a Boy Scout camp,” Cohen said. “There are a lot of small cabins, a mess hall and some kind of recreation hall that had been converted into a Zen meditation hall. Just maintenance took the whole day just to keep the thing going. Pipes would burst in the winter. You get up at 2:30 or 3 in the morning, depending on your duties. I ended up as one of Roshi’s personal assistants, and I was cooking for him.” After a year, Cohen was ordained as a Buddhist monk. “None of this represented the solution to a crisis of faith,” Cohen told me. “I looked at it as a demonstration of solidarity with the community. I was never looking for a new religion. I was perfectly satisfied with my old religion.”
Other times, the Zen life wasn’t enough. “I was sitting in the meditation hall one afternoon,” said Cohen, “and I thought, ‘This sucks. This whole scene sucks.’ And I moved from that into cataloging the various negative feelings I had for the mother of my children. I found myself descending into a bonfire of hatred, you know – that bitch, what she’d done to me, what she left me with, how she wrecked the whole fucking scene. I was in there, I was in my robes, and the furthest thing from my mind was spiritual advancement. The furthest. I mean, I was consumed with rage.”
That day, Cohen’s rage gave way to a moment of unexpected grace, a kind of temporary epiphany. “There was sunlight on the floor of the cabin, where we were waiting to go see Roshi,” he said. “There were leaves outside and the shadow of these leaves was on the floor. The wind moved, something moved, and I disappeared into this movement. . . . The whole scene blew up. A dog started barking, and I was barking. And everything that arose was the content of my being. Everything that moved was me. . . . In certain blessed moments, we experience ourselves as the reality that is manifesting as everything. There’s no ‘I am one with the universe,’ which is the cheapest mystical slogan.” Cohen paused. “There is that moment,” he continued, “and it decides that life is worth living. I was barking with the dog, but there really was no dog.”
But dread still arose, and it could obliterate the self. After several years at the camp, Cohen had decided it was time to leave. He was driving to the airport, and, he said, “the bottom dropped out. This floor that was supposed to be there wasn’t there. It was dreadful. I pulled my car over to the side of the road. I reached back and I got my shaving kit, and I took out all the medication and threw it out the window and I said, ‘Fuck this. If I’m going to go down, I want to go down clear-eyed.’ So, I went back to the camp and I did those next few weeks, which were pure hell, and during that time, I picked up a book by an Indian writer by the name of Balsekar.”
Ramesh Balsekar was a Hindu mentor who lived in Mumbai and wrote about a concept called “non-dualism,” developed in Hindu and Buddhist traditions. In 1999, Cohen departed Mount Baldy and headed to Mumbai. He spent a year studying with Balsekar. “The model I finally understood,” he recalled, “suggested that there really is no fixed self. The conventional therapeutic wisdom today encourages the sufferer to get in touch with his inner feelings – as if there were an inner self, a true self, the real self that we have glimmerings of in dreams and insights. . . . There is no real inner self to command your loyalty and the tyranny of your investigation. What happened to me was not that I got any answers, but that the questions dissolved. As one of Balsekar’s students said, ‘I believe in cause and effect, but I don’t know which is which.’”
Slowly, the depression eased. “By imperceptible degrees, something happened, and it lifted,” Cohen continued. “It lifted, and it hasn’t come back for two and a half years. That’s my real story. I don’t feel like saying, ‘I’ve been saved,’ throwing my crutches up in the air. But I have been. Since that depression has lifted – and I don’t know whether it’s permanent or temporary – I still have the same appetite to write.” Ten New Songs was perhaps the loveliest and most gracious album Cohen had made. “The Future came out of suffering,” he said. “This came out of celebration.”
Comments Off on That’s my real story
Posted in Leonard Cohen
Ah my heart is full tonight
A light solitary pub crawl. The Duke of Wellington, the Marlborough Arms, the Cottage. Half a mild in each while I try to figure out my Danish taxes on my laptop, logging into the Danish systems, getting nowhere, feeling childish.
Home, to the White Lion. It’s music night: about fifty people from all over Norfolk come together to play folk music with all sorts of instruments, from concertinas to clarinets. They’re old hands, it’s clear they’ve played for years. The youngsters stand on the outskirts with their instruments, learning.
I play billiards with Oscar the landlord before we’re crowded out by the musicians. He tells me he’s won City Pub of the Year, finally ending the hegemony of the Fat Cat. I stop up, cue in hand, moved. You deserve it, I say. We had the award event here on Saturday, he says, didn’t you know? I was away for the funeral, I say.
At the bar I speak to an old-timer from the Norwich Society who leads guided walks though the city. He tells me about Bishop’s Bridge, the plague house in Tombland, the Jewish blood libel, and I tell him about Danish place names. I make a mental note to join his walk in May. You can learn a lot from people like him.
Julian, an ex-Labour councillor with a big white beard, comes in and orders two pints, as he usually does just before closing time. I tell him the news, but of course he already knows: he knows all there is to know about Norwich pubs. We chat for a bit about what they must have been like, the pubs on Oak Street from the 1700s onwards. No doubt there were taverns here centuries before then, we agree, even before the Cathedral was built, even before the Vikings came. We chat a bit more, he tells me how to vote in the upcoming local elections. I raise my hand towards the bar to general goodnights and walk home.
Ah my heart is full tonight.
Comments Off on Ah my heart is full tonight
Posted in The White Lion