OK, here's an interesting thought experiment.
We all know that telepathy is as bogus as other so-called psychic phenomena. My point in this post is to discuss whether or not it is even physically possible.
We discard all the usual nonsense with regard to a phenomena that doesn't degrade with distance, and so forth. (Actually, I suppose it is theoretically possible that some as yet unknown wave will have those properties, but I'm not concerned with that here). As far as I am aware, brain activity involves electricity, which cannot help but produce electromagnetic waves (I assume this is how encephalography works).
Now, there are very real questions about how thinking actually happens. For example, it appears to me that my thoughts take on an ordered sequence as I'm typing this paragraph, but it is certainly possible that this is an after-the-fact rationalisation. Possibly I think of the last word in the sentence first, and then reorder them unconsciously prior to typing. It is also not at all certain that it is even theoretically possible to link specific wavelengths of brain electromagnetic radiation to the thoughts I perceive while producing that radiation. For the sake of argument, however, we will assume that the latter is indeed possible, and that the former does not occur.
The next question is: do we have a biological mechanism for detecting this electromagnetic radiation and classifying it in such a way that a mind could be "read"?
It seems to me that we can detect electromagnetic radiation already with our eyes. Granted our eyes can only perceive the visible spectrum, but this is quite possibly not an inherent limitation on DNA. One can imagine mutants that could "see" infrared or ultraviolet radiation, and that perhaps some biological advantage would be conferred that would cause natural selection to favour this. It is possible (but by no means necessary) that several iterations of such mutations would enable our eyes (or another adaptive patch of skin - new sensory organs, in effect) to "see" electromagnetic radiation of the proper wavelengths to detect "thought".
However, that is obviously the easy part. It is probable that the wavelengths we are talking about are quite common, and so to tune in on the wavelengths of a particular brain would be difficult because of the low signal-to-noise ratio. This would at the very least probably impose a severe range limitation on any such sense.
Is such a problem insurmountable? Not necessarily. If our brains became good enough at filtering out the noise, it is possible that we could detect the brain waves of a particular brain at some (probably short) distance. That just leaves the ability to interpret what we find; this last step could theoretically be done without any further genetic variation (it could be entirely learned behaviour, in other words).
This would seem to indicate that the ability to read brain waves is not beyond the abilities of a biological entity, even though it is certainly beyond our current abilities. Have I missed anything here?
We all know that telepathy is as bogus as other so-called psychic phenomena. My point in this post is to discuss whether or not it is even physically possible.
We discard all the usual nonsense with regard to a phenomena that doesn't degrade with distance, and so forth. (Actually, I suppose it is theoretically possible that some as yet unknown wave will have those properties, but I'm not concerned with that here). As far as I am aware, brain activity involves electricity, which cannot help but produce electromagnetic waves (I assume this is how encephalography works).
Now, there are very real questions about how thinking actually happens. For example, it appears to me that my thoughts take on an ordered sequence as I'm typing this paragraph, but it is certainly possible that this is an after-the-fact rationalisation. Possibly I think of the last word in the sentence first, and then reorder them unconsciously prior to typing. It is also not at all certain that it is even theoretically possible to link specific wavelengths of brain electromagnetic radiation to the thoughts I perceive while producing that radiation. For the sake of argument, however, we will assume that the latter is indeed possible, and that the former does not occur.
The next question is: do we have a biological mechanism for detecting this electromagnetic radiation and classifying it in such a way that a mind could be "read"?
It seems to me that we can detect electromagnetic radiation already with our eyes. Granted our eyes can only perceive the visible spectrum, but this is quite possibly not an inherent limitation on DNA. One can imagine mutants that could "see" infrared or ultraviolet radiation, and that perhaps some biological advantage would be conferred that would cause natural selection to favour this. It is possible (but by no means necessary) that several iterations of such mutations would enable our eyes (or another adaptive patch of skin - new sensory organs, in effect) to "see" electromagnetic radiation of the proper wavelengths to detect "thought".
However, that is obviously the easy part. It is probable that the wavelengths we are talking about are quite common, and so to tune in on the wavelengths of a particular brain would be difficult because of the low signal-to-noise ratio. This would at the very least probably impose a severe range limitation on any such sense.
Is such a problem insurmountable? Not necessarily. If our brains became good enough at filtering out the noise, it is possible that we could detect the brain waves of a particular brain at some (probably short) distance. That just leaves the ability to interpret what we find; this last step could theoretically be done without any further genetic variation (it could be entirely learned behaviour, in other words).
This would seem to indicate that the ability to read brain waves is not beyond the abilities of a biological entity, even though it is certainly beyond our current abilities. Have I missed anything here?