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Are You Conscious?

Are you concious?

  • Of course, what a stupid question

    Votes: 89 61.8%
  • Maybe

    Votes: 40 27.8%
  • No

    Votes: 15 10.4%

  • Total voters
    144
Yes.

I want to add a caveat however since though since i made the mistake of setting myself up as a neuroscience expert that I don't speak for the neuroscience community on this. I'm not sure most of my colleagues would agree with me (though I think they would) and I know several with far more impressive resumes than I who would say I'm full of crap.


Understood.

This next part you might have a problem with.

The psychological process of harmonizing the tip with the center is what some would call the spiritual quest. The center and the tip must work together and must 'communicate' with each other throughout this lengthy process. The way the center communicates with the tip, once the tip has commited to this dangerous process, is primarily through symbolic imagery. Imagery in dream, artistic expression, visions, etc. This imagery is then mythologized and its nature is very often misunderstood.

Ok, holding here to see if you agree.
 
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Understood.

This next part you might have a problem with.

The psychological process of harmonizing the tip with the center is what some would call the spiritual quest. The center and the tip must work together and must 'communicate' with each other throughout this lengthy process. The way the center communicates with the tip, once the tip has commited to this dangerous process, is primarily through symbolic imagery. Imagery in dream, artistic expression, visions, etc. This imagery is then mythologized and its nature is very often misunderstood.

Ok, holding here to see if you agree.

You are really writing religious poetry Limbo and not a scientific theory.

However, there can be truth in aesthetics in which I at least partially include myth/religion (I largely agree with UE here) that is not easy and perhaps impossible to dissect scientifically, at least not based on our current scientific knowledge. In some ways art resonates more with human experience than science does. But because it subjective and lacks rigor it is much harder to verify and hold from self-delusion. And likewise, it is hard or impossible to turn art into science or make any scientific conclusions as you appear to be frequently asking me to do with such artful metaphors.

All I can say is a good deal of what you said "rings true" to my human intuition and experience. I'd be very careful not to expect I could explain or draw many objective conclusions with this however. It's completely subjective. Science is objective.
 
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Pixi,

Thanks for the detailed response to my questions. It was extremely enlightening about your views and the way you think.

Frankly, I was floored by your response. I’ve never seen a seemingly very intelligent person twist their own tail in so many knots as I intend to point out. I’ll be watching to see if anyone comes to your defense since you care so deeply about pointing out who wins and loses debates. In this case, I think it’s clearly game over. To paraphrase you about UE, perhaps I haven’t won, but you’ve just lost.
You know that you have to actually demonstrate this, not assert it? You do know that, right?

Let’s start with your first response in your post: In fact, I’m going to dedicate this entire long post of mine to your first two sentences.
Sure, go ahead.

Holy cow, Bingo, right off the bat… Game over.
Sorry, epic fail, right off the bat.

Generally, when people like you define the problem by their conclusion, they always get the right answer. It’s a tautology. It’s also nonsense.
Fail. I demonstrated that this is in fact how we define consciousness. I'll do it again: Decarte's cogito. I think, therefore I am. I think - process information - therefore I - self-reference - am - exist, as a conscious entity.

When you trim away the nonsense and unpack the uncertainties, this is really what all our definitions of consciousness as beings (not trivialities like being awake) reduce to.

As you know, I agree with you that consciousness is self-referential processing.
Good. We're done then.

Well, wait, from reading the rest of your stuff I don’t.
Then you have a problem. Not me.

I believe consciousness is a form of self-referential processing.
So you're shifting your definition. That's fine. What it doesn't do is make me wrong, or you right. It makes our definitions different.

Do you realize the huge mistake in logical argument you’ve made here?
No.

It also violates the very process of empirical science you claim to champion.
No.

I’m going to assume you don’t see it and hope your blinders are not so tightly affixed that you might actually understand why.
No blinders. If you would care to point out the mistake? I'll wait.

If not, I know some people who’d be happy to sell you something called “The Ontological Argument for God” – it’s based on the same tautological reasoning.
No, the ontological argument is simply invalid - it commits the logical fallacy of equivocation. All you have offered so far is that you disagree with my definition. As I said, you can do that, but it doesn't make me wrong.

Consciousness is and was an observable phenomena long before humans had little if any understanding of computation and self-referential programming.
So?

In that sense it is a somewhat unique form of observable because long before Turing Machines were ever mentioned or understood (which put self-referentiality on deep formal footing for the first time via recursion less that a century ago), both ancient scientists and philosophers noticed it was a subjective observable, as opposed observing the external environment that everyone can experience.
So?

I guess in order to avoid being accused of the same mistake as you, I need to point out that I’m assuming your materialist stance for objective reality to make things easier for me to explain to you and to prevent distracting tangents.
Well, good.

I can see now why you have such a hard time accepting the idea of qualia, or allowing for my fairly basic attempts to define it.
Actually, you have made no real attempt to define it, merely wave your hands about. What do qualia do? You agreed that things need to be defined in terms of function. So what do qualia do?

Because to a large and possibly exclusive extent, qualia IS the subjective observable the ancients wanted to explain just as we do.
Well, that's just peachy. Not only can you not demonstrate they exist, you can't even tell me what they are, and yet they exclusively constitute subjective experience.

Well, let me suggest this: Subjective experience is made up of experiences. We need no new term, particularly not one so laden with immaterialist connotations - and utter lack of meaningful definitions.

That’s all it is. “Consciousness” didn’t magically appear on the scene only once somebody could define it as self-referential processing like you.
Really? I am shocked, shocked to find gambling... Material processes going on before they are understood.

Am I getting through to you yet?
I understand you just fine. You have a subtly different definition to me, which is fine, though you haven't explained why.

Still waiting for the point where you tell me I'm wrong, though.

I’ll assume no and try to give you a concrete example to think about.
Go on.

Let’s look at the process of digestion, something I think we’ll agree is a lot less controversial than consciousness.
I don't consider consciousness as controversial at all.

Why is it less controversial?
I don't think it is.

Because from multiple perspectives it’s is safe to say we really deeply understand digestion, at least it’s most essential elements. It’s been explained. We have learned from painstaking science over centuries that digesting is the process of well-definable biochemical dissolution and absorption of well-definable nutrients conveyed from food in our gut to our bloodstream and the concomitant elimination of waste.
You mean the digestive tract is less complex than the brain? Well, yes. Yes it is.

Am I entitled to use this explanation as a definition for digestion? Yes. Why? Because logic and empirical science has essentially proven it. All the essential gaps have been filled yet it is always possible via science that we will discover that digestion actually does other things too (and in fact, it does).
Yes. Your point?

And furthermore, before digestion was explained, it was still a purely observable phenomena that could be defined categorically if less completely in a number of ways. In this sense, digestion can be defined as the sequence of events that can be observed as food entering the stomach, getting really mushy, moving to and getting more icky in something we call intestines as various bodily glands add juices, and then comes out as poop and pee. What else is happening in there. Before modern science all we could do was hypothesize.
Well, before modern science we didn't hypothesize so much as guess, but otherwise, yes.

Would Plato have been correct in arguing with Socrates centuries ago that the definition of digestion is as I first stated above (involving biochemistry)? No, because even if Plato had a decent intuition of what biochemistry might be there was then insufficient evidence to prove that the explanation could be taken as a definition. I’m sure there were many competing ideas at the time and they lacked the science and knowledge to resolve it.
So you're arguing that the correct definition is incorrect if you can't also define your terms correctly?

What do qualia do?

As far as consciousness is concerned, the debate may be over in your mind but it clearly isn’t in the scientific community or in philosophy.
Two entirely different problems.

First, self-referential information processing is the correct minimal conceptual model of consciousness, not an explanation for everything that goes on in the brain. The point is that not only do we know from observation that immaterial and dualist approaches are wrong, but now we have a workable model of how consciousness can come about from unconscious matter, so we know those approaches are both wrong and unnecessary. That still leaves all the actual detail to be filled in by neuroscience, and neuroscience is happily doing exactly that - and confirming and reconfirming the computational model along the way.

Second, the fact that something is still debated in philosophy has no immediate relevance to the real world. Philosophers still debate the cosmological and ontological arguments, despite the fact that they are easily demonstrated to be invalid. They still debate Searle's Chinese Room and Jackson's Mary's Room despite the fact that they are likewise easily shown to be invalid. The philosophy department has no wastepaper baskets. They occasionally toss up an excellent idea - Hume, Popper, Dennett - but they never throw out the bad ones - Searle, Jackson, Chalmers.

Strange loops still have the status of hypothesis, not established theory or law.
They don't have the status of hypothesis because they are a conceptual model, not a scientific one. Consciousness is self-reference? Well, yes, sure, we all know that; now let me get on with my work.

The concept of self-referential information processing or strange loops gives us the mental tools to think clearly about consciousness and to construct clear definitions, rather than just waving our hands about. You're free to say that consciousnss as you define it is self-referential information processing and language; self-referential information processing of at least this order of complexity; self-referential information processing and interaction with the world. I have no problems with any of that. But you'll notice a certain common element to all of those.

There is as yet no consensus that “strange loops” are an answer to consciousness much less the definition.
Sorry, consensus is irrelevant, because this is indeed how we define consciousness. Our early intuitive understandings, predating this concept, unpack to precisely this concept. That's why it's so powerful.

There is no conclusive proof for it as a theory nor does it yet make abundant predictions capable of confirmation or deeper elucidation at present.
Proof? You just gave it the status of a scientific hypothesis and now you speak of proof? Okay, let's assume that you just chose your words carelessly.

Predictions? Sure. It predicts that all conscious information processing systems will be self-referential - and that no unconscious information processing system will be. That's a huge prediction. (Of course if you shift your definition of consciousness you have to shift the terms of the prediction likewise, otherwise you're falling into the fallacy of equivocation.)

We cannot yet even characterize or succinctly formalize all the necessary and sufficient conditions for something to act as a strange loop.
Of course we can. Self-reference. Done. Easy.

Did you really read Hofstadter?

We don’t understand the principles sufficiently to engineer AI of comparable conscious sentience to our own.
Well, of course we don't. Whoever suggested that we did? The human brain is the third, or fifth, or thereabouts depending on how picky you want to be, most complex system we know about. We're still exploring how it works, and tinkering with simulations of the brains of the smaller mammals. Give it the eternal twenty years and we'll be there.

For all these reasons and many more, you’re not entitled to define consciousness purely as a strange loop yet my friend or by the more amorphous and incomplete concept of self-referentiality that takes many forms known and possibly unknown.
Sure I am.

Firstly, because you have produced not a single valid objection.

Second, because that's already how it's commonly defined - once you unpack the definitions.

Third, because your description of self-reference is laughable. Self-reference is simple and well-defined.

I state this with confidence despite the fact that like you, I believe it will be proven to be the cause and explanation eventually.
So I'm right, but I'm wrong because you can't define your terms?

Wonderful.
 
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OK Pixi, I’m enjoying this, like I enjoy torturing kittens.
Yeah, yeah, ad hominem away. You appear incapable of torturing your way out of a wet paper bag, but don't let me stop you.

Let me continue analyzing your posts.
Okay.

My bold. You’ve already agreed with me I think (??? What does that last batch of gobbledygook even mean???), or certainly at least have not contradicted, that unconscious processes also involve self-referencing computation.
No, wrong, completely wrong. The things you label "unconscious" are conscious processes that are not part of your consciousness, the same way that my consciousness is not part of yours.

Which is precisely what I said last time, but you failed to grasp. Here it is again:

PixyMisa said:
They are perceived as conscious. By themselves. They're not perceived as conscious by you, simply because that information is not presented to your consciousness.
Got it this time?

So I see no distinction.
No, you don't. Look again.

And even if I did see it, how do you prove that self-reference in the form of a strange loop is the only difference, and that it is both sufficient and necessary?
Give me a suggestion as to how self-reference is either not necessary or not sufficient. The latter, as I said, I'll willingly entertain, though it merely shifts the definition, not the reality. The former, rather less likely.

There is still so much we don’t know about neural computation.
Like... What?

To focus on the gobbledygook part, you appear to suggest there that my unconscious, or at least big parts of it, are actually conscious.
Yes!

But somehow its not perceptible to me.
Yes!

What does that even mean?
It means what it says. Are my thoughts perceptible to you? No? Well, then, where's the problem?

Who is “me”?
You is you.

Do I have split personalities now I’m not aware of?
You ask this as a "respected AI/neuronscientist"?

Of course you do!

You gave the example of blindsight, which is a failure of integration of these split personalities. I gave the example of split-brain patients. There are yet other personalities in there that are not integrated at all; just like the blindsight example, you are not consciously aware of them, but they are still there doing their job.

Which one of my conscious parts do I recognize when I wake up in the morning and which one(s) have be chatting with you?
The one that is you is the one that is you. What else would it be?

Of course, it's a synthesis of other processes, and we know this because that synthesis sometimes fails.

Didn’t you agree in earlier posts that to be conscious is to be self–aware and engaged in experience.
Sure.

Why do my unconscious parts require self-awareness and what are they doing with it if they’re not experiencing and sharing that awareness with “me”?
Why should they share it with you? They feed you data, just as I feed you data. But they are not part of the synthesis that is you.

Pixi, come on man, this is incoherent.
Well, yes, but that's your problem, not mine.

But let me simplify things a bit going forward. I’m not very interested right now in investigating your unsupportable claim that I have a conscious unconscious that “my” consciousness is unaware of it (I’m laughing my ass off as I write this).
I'm glad that your failure to grasp basic concepts amuses you.

The only part of consciousness I, scientists, and philosophers want explained is the part you call “me”/”you”/”I” that can experience, in a sentient and self-aware manner, seeing, thinking, and writing this response to you right now.
No. No, that is not all that scientists and philosophers want explained. You, perhaps. Others, no. Scientists in particular want to know what happens, not what you think happens.

Oh my, I suggest you write to Terry Winograd, a buddy of mine and a brilliant and wonderful fellow, and ask him – he created it.
I can do that, sure. But I notice that once again you have completely failed to answer the point, so here it is: I would like you to explain to me exactly what behaviour it is that is definitional to consciousness that SHRDLU does not display.

All you have said is that your definition of consciousness is different to mine, but still based on self-reference. Different how? And how does it make my definition wrong?

You might want to check out what he and his associate Hubert Dreyfus (a philosophy professor who’s still at Berkeley I think) have written about consciousness first. Not only does it rip your arguments to shreds but they even present a significant and worthy challenge to mine.
Really? What does it say? And how does it "rip [my] arguments to shreds"?

Thanks.

No Pixi, no matter how many times you say it, Self-Awareness DOES NOT EQUAL Self-Reference.
Nor is that what I said. Self-awareness is self-referential information processing.

Though self-referencing, in perhaps many forms, is probably required to generate self-awareness, they are not the same.
Yes. So?

Simple recursion is a form of self-reference.
So is this sentence is false.

So what?

Neither is performing self-referential information processing; neither is reflective.

If you've misunderstood me, no problem, glad to clear this up.

If not, then just drop the strawmen, okay?

If you insist that it or anything like is is self-aware than all I can say is that this is a form of self-awareness I don’t care about. It doesn’t explain how I experience my form of self-awareness.
That's not in any way what I am talking about; it's not reflective, and it's not what SHRDLU does. So stop looking for chances to spring out and shout "HAHA! GOTCHA!" and start trying to understand.

You can hand-wave all you like and say my self-awareness is more complex or is an emergent property of several forms of your kind of self-awareness converging (how, on what?). But then you'd be leaving out the essential meat of the process and giving us nothing but conjecture.
Which is why I don't do that.

It’s worth remembering what Aristotle said also, “there comes a point where a difference in degree becomes a difference in kind”.
Aristotle, or possibly Marx. I know I get the two confused all the time.

If you’re right, and I do believe many of your conjectures will one day be proven correct, I think it will require an explanation for Aristotle’s distinction in kind that you have not supplied and our best science has yet to deliver. We simply don’t know yet.
Self-reference is a qualitative, not just quantitative, difference.

And finally, while I’m at it, I’ve got to get another nagging error of yours out of the way. You don’t even have Hofstadter right. He would not agree with you that self-reference = self-awareness.[/qutoe]
I don't agree with that either. Which is why I never said it in the first place.

His “strange loop” IS not self-reference. It INVOLVES a special FORM of self-referencing to which he would probably concede he doesn’t know all the necessary or possible pieces of yet.
It's self-referential information processing.

I may have simply said self-reference at some point, rather than the full pharse, but I use the full phrase often enough that it should be clear. If this is merely a misunderstanding between us, then no problem; otherwise, I'd ask you again to stop with the strawmen.

Nor would he claim there may not be other computational components required to be added on to strange loops to yield consciousness.
Other computational components? Other computational components, other than computation?

Or do you mean behaviours?

As I said, if you want to define consciousness as self-referential information processing plus language, or self-referential information processing plus interaction with the world, or some such, sure. Then our definitions differ. Than doesn't make either of us wrong, nor does it make any of your objections coherent.

Hofstadter’s strange loops (which differ a little from mine but I won’t bore you) require self-referentialism of a form that creates recurrent cycling through hierarchical abstraction layers that collapse input and output upon each other in a paradoxical way. Furthermore, Hofstadter would admit that he doesn’t know what minimum properties and requirements of the hierarchical abstraction layers are necessary to generate self-awareness.
If you have self-referential information processing, you have self-awareness. How can you not have self-awareness? Please tell me exactly what is, or could be, missing here?

In a century of neuroscience, we still do not have even one complete description of such a hierarchy in the brain even though most of us believe they exist and we think we have pieces of it.
True. Not relevant.

And when you discard your ridiculous tautological definition
I suggest you look up the definition for tautology. Also ridiculous.

for consciousness you will realize you don’t know how to program these abstraction hierarchies either.
To simulate a human brain, a human mind? Don't need to. Just need to get the wiring right.

Doesn't mean it's not a worthwhile avenue of study, of couse. Nor does it mean that I am wrong.

When you figure it out, then I’d predict we’d have sentient robots soon after and you’d get your Nobel Prize.
Are you quite finished with the strawmen now?

If you have anything intelligent or event polite to say, I'm sure someone will quote you, and I'll resume the conversation. In the mean time, you can go on ignore; I have better things to do.
 
FedUpWithFaith said:
Even in this deep dark unconscious realm I could lay before you a raft of studies similar to the ones you argued before to map consciousness to physical observations that show not only that the much of the brain remains functional and highly computationally active when unconscious BUT, more importantly for my argument with you, that many of these unconscious functional processes are known to exhibit and be based on recursive, recurrent, and other self-referential forms of computation, in some cases highly analogous if not identical in function to, and likely far more complex and powerful than, your reflective programs are, probably by orders of magnitude. What prevents all those forms of mental processing from being perceived as conscious?
PixyMisa said:
They are perceived as conscious. By themselves. They're not perceived as conscious by you, simply because that information is not presented to your consciousness.
You're asking why doesn't the program running on computer A affect the operation of the program running on computer B. Answer: Computer A is not computer B.

I think here we have an eg of a non standard definition which has caused me confusion and I expect has confused others. "Conscious" in general discussion (Possibly not in papers on AI programming) refers to a person. To a single conscious mind , associated with one body. What you refer to here seems more like a network, or perhaps a quad processor PC where multiple programs run in parallel within what (from the outside) looks like the one box.
My own model of thought has been that while the brain does multitask- and not by time slicing, but by allowing physical subsystems to handle specific processes- which DO interfere with one another; that only one process could be conscious at any time, because there had to be something else to BE conscious of the activity.
What you are saying is that's not the case: the case is that the self-referencing processes running at the same time my conscious mind is typing this, are themselves conscious. I'm just unaware of them.
That's a fascinating POV, even if it should turn out to be wrong.

If it's right, - are all consciousnesses equivalent in complexity / duration etc? Do "I" switch from one to another, simply retaining the illusion of being the same consciousness? (Because I grew up thinking I was the only one in here). Is there actually an "I" at all? If so, how does it differ from the others- and can one of the others take over the role of "I"?
My assumption, hitherto, has been that the "I" is a continuous process running in one area of hard (wet) ware, which is handed part-chewed information by other processes, (which I have hitherto supposed to be unconscious because "I" was unaware of them). If they ARE conscious, are they ghosts in the machine? Consciousnesses that handle a task , then vanish like a snuffed candle flame, having either passed their output to "Me", to another autonomous system (balance/ homeothermy) and then quit? Are these system calls that interrupt "Me" with a newsflash?

This is quite a different twist on Dennet's theatre from the one I had.

Bugger, Pixy, you're screwing with my mind.


FUWF said:
If you're right, most of our unconscious neural processing should be conscious.

PixyMisa said:

YOu do need to watch how you use that word. Most folk would not use "conscious" that way. Most folk use it to mean "something the "I" is aware of. You are using it to mean something that's aware of itself, with the "I " being just one particular instance.
We need to specify which usage is at issue.
 
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. In the mean time, you can go on ignore; I have better things to do.

Sounds good to me. It isn't entertaining anymore, just pathetic. I'll leave the fun of arguing with you to the next naive newbie who enjoys self-flagellation.

BTW, for your information 1 + 1 "is" or "=" 2 . So much for your phony semantic distinctions and quibbling.
 
Sounds good to me. It isn't entertaining anymore, just pathetic. I'll leave the fun of arguing with you to the next naive newbie who enjoys self-flagellation.

BTW, for your information 1 + 1 "is" or "=" 2 . So much for your phony semantic distinctions and quibbling.

You don't understand, FUWF. PixyMisa has put you on IGNORE, which means you are now excommunicated from reality. Oh, the horror!!! ;)
 
"semantic distinctions and quibbling" possibly.

In all these years I've seen nothing to make me think they are "phony" .

Wrong, perhaps. But not...consciously wrong.
 
I think here we have an eg of a non standard definition which has caused me confusion and I expect has confused others. "Conscious" in general discussion (Possibly not in papers on AI programming) refers to a person. To a single conscious mind , associated with one body.
Yes; the problem is that this is not actually what's going on. Consciousness, as we see with blindsight and split-brain patients, is a synthesis. What's more, there are other processes going on in the brain which we would describe as conscious except that they are not accessible to us.

What you refer to here seems more like a network, or perhaps a quad processor PC where multiple programs run in parallel within what (from the outside) looks like the one box.
It is indeed a network.

My own model of thought has been that while the brain does multitask- and not by time slicing, but by allowing physical subsystems to handle specific processes- which DO interfere with one another; that only one process could be conscious at any time, because there had to be something else to BE conscious of the activity.
No, that's the trap of the Cartesian Theatre again. There isn't necessarily something else being conscious of the activity. The process including the activity can be conscious.

And of course two separate subsystems can both be conscious, just as two separate people can be.

What you are saying is that's not the case: the case is that the self-referencing processes running at the same time my conscious mind is typing this, are themselves conscious. I'm just unaware of them.
Precisely.

That's a fascinating POV, even if it should turn out to be wrong.
Well, by my definition it's just true, but there are other - and useful - definitions by which it might not be the case. (Which doesn't mean I'm wrong, since we've changed definitions.)

If it's right, - are all consciousnesses equivalent in complexity / duration etc?
No, not at all. Consciousness can be extremely simple (a few dozen NAND gates can do it) or immensely complex.

Do "I" switch from one to another, simply retaining the illusion of being the same consciousness?
Not as such; the independent conscious processes remain independent. You can lose parts of your conscious mind though - and even regain them aferwards. (Blindsight and split-brain come to the fore again!)

(Because I grew up thinking I was the only one in here). Is there actually an "I" at all? If so, how does it differ from the others- and can one of the others take over the role of "I"?
In the sense that I'm talking about, the principle I is really a we - a synthesis - but usually maintains some degree of cohesion. The other, lesser, "I"s to which we never have direct access are quite autonomous.

My assumption, hitherto, has been that the "I" is a continuous process running in one area of hard (wet) ware, which is handed part-chewed information by other processes, (which I have hitherto supposed to be unconscious because "I" was unaware of them).
That doesn't seem to be the case; rather it's the operation of multiple parts of the brain together that gives rise to consciousness - since we can cut away different parts of the brain and lose of dissociate different parts of consciousness.

If they ARE conscious, are they ghosts in the machine? Consciousnesses that handle a task , then vanish like a snuffed candle flame, having either passed their output to "Me", to another autonomous system (balance/ homeothermy) and then quit? Are these system calls that interrupt "Me" with a newsflash?
I think they are themselves continuous, just not you. Other than that, yes.

This is quite a different twist on Dennet's theatre from the one I had.

Bugger, Pixy, you're screwing with my mind.
You're welcome!

YOu do need to watch how you use that word. Most folk would not use "conscious" that way. Most folk use it to mean "something the "I" is aware of. You are using it to mean something that's aware of itself, with the "I " being just one particular instance.
I'd say it's other people being sloppy, saying "conscious of" when they mean "aware of". But yes, definitions are important.

Must dash, but happy to continue this later.
 
You don't understand, FUWF. PixyMisa has put you on IGNORE, which means you are now excommunicated from reality. Oh, the horror!!! ;)
Yeah yeah. Look, I even read your posts from time to time, though I'm not sure why. Well, I do: Some of your posts are in fact quite reasonable. So were some - most - of his, but he seems to have fallen off the wagon.

If he says something intelligible, it will bubble up and I'll see it and reply to it. I'm just too busy right now to continue responding to someone whose posts to me consist almost entirely of ad hominems, strawmen, and arguments from authority. Oh, and an ongoing refusal to define his terms. If I wanted that, I could talk to... Any of half a dozen of the participants in this thread.

If he wants to discuss digital physics, though, that might be interesting.
 
FedUpWithFaith, three quick questions for you:

What do qualia do?
Precisely what behaviour is it that we ascribe to consciousness that SHRDLU does not exhibit?
Precisely what behaviour is it that you consider (definitively) necessary for consciousness beyond self-referential information processing?

Clearly the answers to 2 and 3 might be the same, and both might be connected to the answer to 1, but to have any meaningful discussion you need to answer these, as clearly and precisely as you can, rather than just misconstruing my opinions and arguing against positions I do not hold.

Your argument at the moment appears to boil down to an assertion that while I may be right, I'm definitely wrong, and therefore an idiot. Could you please try for a little more clarity and civility both. I'll be back tomorrow.
 
I think here we have an eg of a non standard definition which has caused me confusion and I expect has confused others. "Conscious" in general discussion (Possibly not in papers on AI programming) refers to a person. To a single conscious mind , associated with one body. What you refer to here seems more like a network, or perhaps a quad processor PC where multiple programs run in parallel within what (from the outside) looks like the one box.
It is indeed a network.


A network in relation to what?

One problem in making a network the subject in a subject-object relationship is... locating the object.
 
Well this is the nub of the matter.
In Pixy's view, the network is the object- or at least the hardware that generates the object. The object is self-referencing information processing.

That's the paradigm shift that he maybe never went through because he's a creature of the computer age. Dinosaurs like me (and thee by the looks of it) presuppose there must be a something that resides. A watcher in the dark.

Pixy feels the watcher and the watching are one.
 
Yes. I was 16 and already a keen computer hobbyist when I first read Godel, Escher, Bach. So I never really had a paradigm that needed shifting.

And having read many of the responses to the computational model, don't really see any coherent alternative.

And now I'm off to my Christmas party. :)
 
PixyMisa said:
Not as such; the independent conscious processes remain independent. You can lose parts of your conscious mind though - and even regain them aferwards. (Blindsight and split-brain come to the fore again!)

In blindsight, while unable to see the light source, the patient can still point to it- ie the eyes work, so there is an input, but at some point in the visual process cascade the output is discarded / lost. However, some part of the output, perhaps processed by another physical area and/or a sub program enables the patient to point to the source.
The patient , though unaware of how he does so "knows" in some sense, where the light is.

That implies the processes do not remain independent- or that the "returned value" of the process is stored somewhere accessible to some part of the collective "I".

I think the programming analogy (mine I admit, not yours) should not be pushed too far. Computers and Operating Systems have been carefully designed to protect themselves from interaction, to stop the equivalent of computer synaesthesia. Clearly brains would evolve similar systems- which are exactly the sort of systems a stroke might bugger up- but evolution is a contingent kludge- and mother nature's a tight bitch. I'd expect a lot more data crossover and a lot more of the one module performing several functions than we see in chips. (Part efficiency, part inability to reverse engineer).
I walked into a mobile crane this morning, because I was thinking about this stuff instead of looking where I was going. How's that for bloody self-reference?

Enjoy the party!

ETA- I would be about 33 when I read GEB- and while I recognised it as an exceptional book, it didn't have the Damascene effect that "The Selfish Gene" did, about 12 years earlier. Too old maybe. Or too dim.
 
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I'm beginning to think that Pixy is David Chalmers, who I had an eerily similar exchange with once.

David, is that you???? Do you still think rocks might be conscious? If so, I promise I won't throw any. I wouldn't want to be a murderer.

I think you'll find that while toasters, microwaves and thermostats are conscious*, rocks aren't. Because that would be silly, apparently.

But you can confirm this in your "discussions".

*Or aware, or something like that.
 
Thanks Aku.


I'm new here Aku so i don't know what you consider to be part of the strong AI cult. Who knows, we may butt heads too.

I think that what is considered part of the Strong AI cult in this particular discussion group is not necessarily what supporters of Strong AI in the outside world believe. You can explore in detail with Pixy and Rocketdodger precisely what they believe to be true, but basically they are asserting that the problem of consciousness has been entirely solved, that it is a matter of algorithmic processing, and that there is simply no legitimate doubt on the matter. You'll also find that they regard disagreement as indicative of ignorance and mysticism. They don't view this sequence of arguments as a discussion between equals in any sense - rather, it's an opportunity for them to lecture the rest of us. Pointing out supposed flaws in their arguments is not just foolish and wrong, it's deeply ungrateful, when they are giving of their time to enlighten us.


I do believe strong AI is possible and that mankind can create it. Furthermore, I believe we can do so on computers without creating a biological organism. We may have to supply an artificial (or human) society for it to interact with though to some degree.

I also believe, but this is where my degree of certainty goes down a little, that we can create strong AI on a universal Turing machine-type computers not too dissimilar from current computers. However we may have to implement (or at least simulate) information processes biophysicly discovered from wetware connectionist systems first until we discover alternative or isomorphic computational methods. However, it could turn out that we do this in reverse analogous to how we discovered how to fly via the principle of constructing airplanes before constructing bird or insect-like flight.

The big question is - when a computer shows the appearance of intelligence, does that imply that it has a conscious experience?

I don't believe, unlike Penrose/Hammeroff, that the basis for conscious computation is a quantum computer of any sort. Not only is the evidence lacking but there is also physical theory that directly contradicts it. However, I'm not sure the brain doesn't utilize a form of hypercomputation beyond Turing, as per the paper I cited in an earlier post. I wouldn't bet on it because it's still rather fringe. I simply have to say I don't know and leave it at that.

There is also the possibility that what goes on in the brain is not expressible in computing terms, any more than what goes on in a car engine is expressible in computing terms - and that a computer simulation of what happens in the brain does not duplicate all the functionality any more than a simulation of a car engine allows us to drive to the shops.

That's my POV, which is compatible with your own in the sense that we are both claiming ignorance, not only on our own behalf but on everyone else's as well.
 

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