by
AkuManiMani
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.
[\quote]
This is just silly AkuManiMani, you can't show that there is anything superordinary to consciousness, there is nothing special about it unless you are some sort of dualist.
This is all just semantics claiming that consciousness is priviledged and it is not. It may be a special patterns of material interactions and that seems likely, until someone shows consciousness not associated with special material patterns,
But I will use substitution to show why your statements are just about priviledge that you want to impose upon something.
But really you show why there is something 'so special' about feelings and consciousness, then you will make your point. Otherwise you might as well recite poetry. (Not that there is anything wrong with poetry)
"
Organic chemistry 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."
This statement appears true on the surface as well, and it was very true up until 50 years ago. But until we detected organic compound in molecular clouds it stayed true. It is a god of the gaps statement and one that is anthropocentric.
Your statement
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".
Is true worthy of it’s own thread, this is so loaded with ignorance of modern psychology it is just amazing, and then it veers off into philosophical assertions that you have not demonstrated. Just because you want to pretend that you know nada about sensations and perception does not mean that there are not partial understandings of things.
But here is the substitution for you:
“There is not a single living person alive today that can explain
how organisms produces offspring like flowers, flies, dogs, mushrooms, trees, fish, lizards, butterflies or the whole panoply of subjective "beings".”
This statement was true up until the 17th century and really has only been understood well in the last thirty years.
Then your editorial piece delves into true spinning:
I think our attempts to recreate such things is comparable to the efforts of alchemists of ages past.
Sure AMM, just make up whatever you want, that is the way to have a debate, are you kidding?
Do you ever read at all, or do you just like to make things up?
We can model simple parts of systems, including fuzzy logic and feedback to motivate insect style limbs. We can model the way neurons work better and better.
So please, just assert and never show your evidence!
More later.