You're using the words "conscious" and "aware" differently than I am. When you use the terms you simply mean any IP system that referencing data about it's environment
[aware] or itself
[conscious/self-aware]. When I use those words I'm referring to lucid/semi-lucid states when our minds translate the data, or some portion of it, into
qualia. So when when I use the word "observe" I don't just mean that system-p is referencing some stream of data, but that the data is producing a subjective experience of some kind within system-p.
Why would you do that ? Why would "observe" be synonymous with "subjective experience" ? Of course, if you use them that way, thermostats and cameras don't "observe". But then why didn't you say so in the first place ?
Because when I use the term "observe" I take for granted that its referring to mentally focusing one's attention to some sensible object or event. If I expand the meaning of the term any wider
[like in the instance of a camera or audio recorder] then any transfer of information from one system to another could be classified as "observation". I just assumed that you understood the word in the same sense. My badnik. Looks like we're going to have to qualify our word usage even more than I thought :-X
Likewise, if the computer were simply mining, processing, and refining raw data, as per the designs of conscious scientists who intend to read an interpret it later, then it's being -used for- the purpose of science but is not -doing science- itself.
Agreed. But a computer is able, in principle, to read data on its own, analyse it and reach conclusions without human intervention. In fact, a bunch of computers could communicate to one another without any human action
In principle I think such a thing is possible. We have plenty of automated systems now that can manage themselves to some degree without human intervention; but the kicker is that they were intentionally designed by conscious agent(s) to perform the tasks they carry out. The systems themselves, however, are essentially blind to what they're doing.
In everyday life we must make the distinction between events that are initiated with conscious intent and those that aren't. Its how we distinguish crimes from accidents and natural disasters. If we didn't draw this distinction there would be no contention over whether life evolved blindly via natural processes or was "intelligently designed" by some deliberate conscious agency; there wouldn't be any real difference between the two. The question of intentionality isn't something trivial that can be disregarded, its absolutely vital to the question of consciousness.
Because while computing an output and formulating a conclusion are both examples of information processing, they are qualitatively different. In the former example there isn't any subjective component to the operation; in the latter case there is.
Your explanation sounds circular to me. Why do you think there is no subjective experience ?
Because of what we've learned from our own biology and neurophysiology we know that just because a system is processing information does not mean that theres a subjective component to it. The overwhelming majority of information processing in our own bodies is completely
unconscious [i.e. no subjective component]. This clearly demonstrates that information processing IAOI is not the same as, or even necessarily produces, conscious thought.
Sorry for the temper, but I get kinda tired of answering the same question over and over again. I already made it abundantly clear that I am absolutely certain I'm experiencing my experiences. If you're not sure of your own thats your affair.
It's precisely when you're really certain about something that you should doubt it the most.
How can one hold empirical science to be true and reliable when they doubt the very basis of empiricism?
Can every phenomenon be simulated/described by a computation?
Perhaps. You mean a simulation or a model ?
I mean both actually. I've a very specific reason for asking that question since it comes right down to the crux of an issue that I'm not sure I've communicated effectively so far. We agree that not every phenomenon is a computation. I assume we also agree that while this may be the case, those phenomena can still be mathematically described or modeled in some way, whether it be by some set of equations or a computer simulation based on those equations.
With that being said, this establishes that there is a difference between a phenomenon and a computational
model of said phenomenon. Which brings me back to a point I've been attempting to explain. Below I going to try to lay out my line of reasoning:
[P1] - Not all phenomena are computations, although abstracted features of them may be mathematically modeled and simulated on computer systems.
[P2] - Computational simulations are not identical to the systems they're modeling. They only provide abstracted descriptions to aid in our understanding of them.
[P3] - We know from the example of our own biology that processing information
[even self-referencing IP] does not necessarily equate with there being a subjective component. Whatever consciousness is, its a product of the physical conditions of the brain/body.
[P4] - Right now neuroscientists are still hard at work trying to understand what it is about brain activity that produces what we call consciousness and the subjective experiences that accompany it. Until we have such an understanding we have no way of technically designing such a feature into our current technology.
[C] - Given the above, it is not justified to assume that computational simulations of brain function will necessarily produce consciousness.
How does my inability to directly access the subjective states of others establish, or even imply, that I've none of my own?
That's not what I said. I said that you have no idea if other humans are conscious (since you said there is no test to determine consciousness) so why do you still reach the conclusion that they are ?
Because it's an instinctive feature of humans to identify with the external behaviors of others and equate those behaviors with our own consciousness
[humans with conditions like autism seem to lack this instinct]. But, just like all instincts, they are not necessarily accurate. For example, objects roughly of a particular size and shape can fool many species of birds into treating them like their own eggs, even tho they aren't eggs at all. Likewise, human intuitions about what behaviors indicate consciousness can be fooled.
I asked you WHY you are so certain of it. THAT was my question and all you've done is tell me that you are certain.
I'm certain that I'm experiencing my experiences for the same reason I am certain 1+1=2: Because its unequivocally
-demonstrated- to me that it is so. In fact, it's not even possible for me to know that 1+1=2 unless I
-experience- in my own mind the
a priori fact that one and one are equal to two. Its not a matter of faith, or even a matter of inference -- the manifest proof of an experience is the experience itself. You're essentially asking for proof of proof. Why on earth would you need this explained to you?
