AkuManiMani said:
There are very many questions that arise from all of these observations. What is it about these particular chemical interactions that causes them to have this property of "feeling"?
The way they interact with the whole system. A brain is just a computer, and a feeling is a program running on it.
I think thats a valid hypothesis. The only real problem is that, as of now we cant really
conclusively test it. At this point, there is no one who can definitely say they know how to create a "feeling" program. It will probably be a long time before that can be done precisely because the problem isn't as simple as some AI researchers would like to believe.
AkuManiMani said:
Do they have this quality outside of the context of the brain -- say in an animal without a brain?
[...]
Does a single cell have any kind of subjective experience? For what is the brain, but a huge collection of such cells working in concert?
Of course not. "Within a brain". The definition of "brain", however, can be quite loose (computer, network, etc).
[...]
No, unless it consists of the required number of connections, feedback loops, and computational components.
That's just the thing. Your criteria of computational elements and feedback loops are all met in single celled organisms -- infact they are essential to all life processes. Philosophically, what you're proposing is considerably more radical than you seem to realize. If one wants to accept the hypothesis that feeling is synonymous with computational feedback then they must also take seriously the possibility that a plant or even a bacterium have feeling and are therefore, conscious.
AkuManiMani said:
Does it come from them simply being organized in a certain way (i.e. context dependent)?
Please clarify.
Does feeling require "wetware" of some kind? Can the qualitative experience of specific feelings (say, sweetness, nausea, dizziness, etc.) be reproduced on a different medium than the organic molecules we are made of or does it simply arise "magically" from a particular computation process on any medium? In other words, is feeling a special kind of
physical phenomenon (i.e. based on of some deep physical principle we don't know of yet), a purely organizational phenomenon (i.e. software), or some of both?
You mentioned that emotion is a kind of computation in a "brain-like" system. The only problem is that all the criteria you mentioned are met in every living organism. Either we must broaden our definition of consciousness to include every living thing and/or figure out some more specific criteria.
If it contains a brain-like structure, sure. But then it isn't really inanimate anymore, is it?
Thats an interesting possibly. Of course then we would have to rethink what it means to be alive. Living organisms, as we know them, have special thermodynamic properties that inanimate objects and dead organisms don't have; so one calling anything "animate" should probably take this into account.
As far as a brain like structure goes, my guess is that in order to effectively simulate the brain [unless we can physically recreate biological structure] such a brain would would have to be a software construct to give it sufficient plasticity.
AkuManiMani said:
What is the subjective experience of feeling, anyway?
An emergent phenomenon wherein a brain modifies behaviour within itself. Sentience is an emergent phenomenon, as are 'feelings'.
Ah, we know that we consciously modify our behavior based on what we feel, but is it possible to have an intelligent system that
doesn't actually
feel sensory input? If so, what is it that make systems that do differ from ones that don't.
AkuManiMani said:
The understandings obtained from current neuroscience, while greatly invaluable, are only surface knowledge of a much deeper mystery; it's barely scratched the surface. It's one thing to say that X class of chemical is associated with Y feeling, but quite another to explain why that is so or even help understand how there is such a thing as feeling in the first place. With that in mind, its more that premature to conclusively say that feeling is identical with a certain class of chemical reactions. All we know is that there is a correlation; we don't know if it is a necessary correlation or even if it is a causal relation.
Of course it has only scratched the surface. The universe is a complex place. But at least we have knowledge, instead of arm-waving claiming "it's a special thing!".
Also, there is plenty of research which explains why specific chemicals have the reaction they do.
Feeling
is special. In all the vastness of space, the only entities that we conclusively know posses it exist on this infinitesimal blue speck of dust we call the earth. There is not a single living person alive today that can explain
how neurophysiology produces subjective experiences like sweetness, bitterness, nausea, dizziness, redness, greenness, ugliness, silliness or the whole panoply of subjective "nesses". There is also not a single person alive today who knows how to artificially recreate
any of those qualitative experience. The only arm-waving being done is by those claiming that they actually
do know how to reproduce such things. All we have are the barest beginnings of some working knowledge of how it happens, and even
that may be a generous estimate.
I think our attempts to recreate such things is comparable to the efforts of alchemists of ages past. They were essentially right in their belief that its possible to transmute other elements into gold -- they just didn't know that such a thing is only accomplished in super-massive stars or why this is the case. In hindsight, we know that their efforts were futile but, in principle, not necessarily impossible. That's pretty much the situation that AI researchers are in now, methinks. Our knowledge base simply isn't deep enough yet to allow us to accomplish the feat we wish to; namely, to create a feeling conscious entity.
Consciousness is probably one of the deepest scientific mysteries facing us today -- it ranks up there with the origin of the big bang and the genesis of life. To wave it off as a simple technical feat that any current technician knows how to reproduce is beyond hubris -- its downright absurd.
Wrong. We do know that it is a causal relationship. And I never said a feeling is identical with a certain class of chemical reactions, did I?
Yup.
Here:
Taffer said:
Or it could be that, after the scientific discovery, it was found that feelings are different interactions of chemicals within the brain.
and Here:
AkuManiMani said:
Is it just a very specific class of organic reactions that give rise to subjective experience? Does it really matter what chemicals are interacting?
Yes.
Edit: BTW, sorry for contributing to the derail, Jet.