Abstract
This paper concerns the Black Box. It is not the engineer’s black box that can be opened to reveal its mechanism, but rather one whose operations are inferred through input from (and output to) a
companion observer. We are observers ourselves, and we attempt to understand minds through
interactions with their host organisms. To this end, Ranulph Glanville followed W. Ross Ashby in
elaborating the Black Box. The Black Box and its observer together form a system having different
properties than either component alone, making it a greater Black Box to any further-external
observer. How far into this greater box can a further-external observer probe? The answer is
crucial to understanding Black Boxes, and so an answer is offered here. It employs von Foerster’s
machines, abstract entities having mechano-electrical bases, just like putative Black Boxes. Von
Foerster follows Turing, Ashby, E. F. Moore, and G. H. Mealy in recognizing archetype machines that
he calls trivial (predictable) and non-trivial (non-predictable). It is argued here that
non-trivial machines are the only true Black Boxes. But non-trivial machines can be concatenated
from trivial machines. Hence, the utter core of any greater Black Box (a non-trivial machine) may
involve two (or more) White Boxes (trivial machines). This is how an unpredictable thing emerges
from predictable parts. Interactions of White Boxes—of trivial machines—may be the ultimate source
of the mind.
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