The Making of a Living Machine:
How to create a machine living or with life?
Autognorism - a system or process by which intuitive objects and embedded inscriptions work together to create a machine that is alive, aware, conscious, rational, living, and with life. The self-ability of a machine to know itself and its external sources or environments.
Autognoriztic - exhibiting self-knowledge or having properties of a self-knowledge being.
Before we discuss how to build a living machine, let us first redefine the words that come along with being alive or with life according to the study of Originemology. Then, let us use these new criteria of life in comparison with newborns and machines. And finally, let us identify one by one the essential ingredients in the realization of a living machine.
According to Lawsin, who conceptualized the Biotronics Project, there are six indicators of Life. They are categorized based on their states of being, from simple to complex life-forms.
- Alive = consumes energy without the need for neural reasoning (eat).
- Aware = sends and receives signals using sensors without the need for neural reasoning (grab).
- Conscious = match things with things without the need for neural reasoning (point/play).
- Rational = chooses this or that without the need for neural reasoning (trial and error).
- Self-knowledge = inlearns information(mama/papa)
- Self-living = experiences life
| Age |
Babies |
Machines |
| 1-2 |
alive |
alive |
| 2-3 |
aware |
aware |
| 3-5 |
conscious |
conscious |
| 6-7 |
rational |
rational |
| 8-9 |
self-knowledge |
self-knowledge |
| 10+ |
self-living |
self-living |
Let us look at the revised criteria of Life through the eyes of a newborn.
Lawsin redefined Alive or aliveness as the ability of an organism to self-consume energy from an external source. A newborn consumes energy from its mother's milk, an external source. A machine is also considered alive because it can get its energy from a charging station or a solar panel, another external source.
Awareness, meanwhile, is redefined based on two prerequisites. First, the object is alive, and second, it is equipped with intuitive sensors. A newborn is aware because he/she consumes energy and rigs with sensors like the ears, eyes, nose, and skin to name a few. However, these sensors function without the intervention of the brain at the early stage of the life of the baby. A machine is as well aware when it self-consumes energy and is automated with smart or wise sensors. The baby and the machine are alive and aware but not yet conscious, rational, self-knowledge, and self-living.
Consciousness, on the other, is redefined bound by three requirements, namely, aliveness, awareness, and match things. An object is conscious when it self-consumes energy, driven by sensors, and codifies things. Codification or codexation is the key factor in identifying when an object is conscious or not. Codexation is the self-ability of an organism to associate an object with another object. A machine is also conscious when it self-consumes energy, equips with sensors, and matches objects. A baby, at a certain point in her/his early life, unknowingly stacks colorful bricks without the help of the brain. This action shows that the baby can be alive, aware, and conscious even without the help of the brain. Here, the baby and the machine are alive, aware, and conscious, but not yet rational, self-knowledge, and self-living.
Intuitiveness or logic is redefined depending on four determinants: aliveness, awareness, consciousness, and rationality. An object is logical when it self-consumes energy, driven by sensors, codifies things, and able to choose. The self ability to choose is the key factor in identifying when an object is rational. This behavior is influenced by the Theory of the Second Option or the This or That precept. In this case, the baby and the machine are alive, aware, conscious, rational, but not yet self-knowledge, and self-living.
Self-knowledge or selfness is redefined contingent on five benchmarks: aliveness, awareness, consciousness, intuitiveness, and self-knowledge. An object is a self-knowledge when it self-consumes energy, driven by sensors, codifies things, chooses options, and realizes itself. The self-ability to realize itself and informed is the key factor that identifies when an object is self-knowledge or autognorist. In this scenario, the baby and the machine are alive, aware, conscious, rational, self-knowledge, but not living.
To be living, an object self-consumes energy, driven by sensors, codifies things, chooses options, realizes itself, and evolves.
Thus, to define life or consider an object with life, it must have one or all the following six criteria:
- Alive
- Aware
- Conscious
- Intuitive
- Self-knowledge
- Living
" Beautiful Things always come with Simple Equations" ~ joey Lawsin
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