PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Then you either haven't read anything I wrote, or haven't read anything David Chalmers wrote, or both.I'm beginning to think that Pixy is David Chalmers, who I had an eerily similar exchange with once.
Then you either haven't read anything I wrote, or haven't read anything David Chalmers wrote, or both.I'm beginning to think that Pixy is David Chalmers, who I had an eerily similar exchange with once.
Really? Nice assertion. But you get no points unless you show your work.The ironic part is that Pixy often harps on about how ridiculous philosophers like Chalmers are yet he can't see that his own beliefs logically lead to the same absurdities.
Not all of them, and not intrinsically, but yes.Deja Vu...
Some of my favorite Pixy claims:
- Car engines, washing machines, and toasters are conscious
Setting aside your snide oxymoron, yes.- Anesthetized patients are unconsciously conscious
I've corrected you on this more than once. No.- Self-aware thermostats
You seem to tune out the moment anyone disagrees with you. Makes discussions unproductive, to say the least.- Consciousness IS self referential something something. I kind of tune out at that point.
As with AkuManiMani, you can find humour where you like, but you have to actually show that it's nonsensical.Others can feel free to add more. It's all hilariously nonsensical, more so since Pixy actually believes this stuff.
Are you talking about your magic fairy field theory of quantum consciousness? It was, and remains, complete nonsense on every level.
Malerin said:Others can feel free to add more. It's all hilariously nonsensical, more so since Pixy actually believes this stuff.
As with AkuManiMani, you can find humour where you like, but you have to actually show that it's nonsensical.
You can start on that any time you like.
Yes.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 do believe strong AI is possible and that mankind can create it.
Now you have Westprog offside. He'll start complaining about virtual oranges in a moment.Furthermore, I believe we can do so on computers without creating a biological organism.
Certainly. Some sort of world with which to interact, anyway.We may have to supply an artificial (or human) society for it to interact with though to some degree.
And there goes Malerin.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.
Precisely the point I've been making. We don't need to know how the brain creates the mind, we just need to get the wiring right. An accurate simulation of the brain will produce a mind.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.
Yes. It's worth pursuing both approaches.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.
And there goes AkuManiMani.I don't believe, unlike Penrose/Hammeroff, that the basis for conscious computation is a quantum computer of any sort.
Right. Tegmark has a thing or two to say on this question. (In brief, that Penrose and Hammeroff are out by at least ten orders of magnitude in the time domain.)Not only is the evidence lacking but there is also physical theory that directly contradicts it.
Yeah. I don't think much of that, because it relies on the assumptions that the Universe is meaningfully continuous (which seems to contradict QM), that this actually produces a more powerful computational engine (not so much an assumption as maths that needs to be rigorously checked; I'm not aware of anyone else in the field who takes this seriously, but I'm not up on all the literature by a long shot), and that this actually makes a difference in the real world.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.
Yeah; I find it extremely dubious for all the reasons I list above. However, what it does mean is that we can still model brains computationally, we just need a different type of computer.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.
Taking a look now.Can someone let Pixy know I replied to the questions he asked me after he said he put me on ignore.
Can someone let Pixy know I replied to the questions he asked me after he said he put me on ignore.
You could actually point out my errors.If you're a thoroughly self-deluded fool how else would you know it but for the scoffing laughter of others?
Namely?But derision aside, you have been shown the logical flaws in your position in numerous ways by numerous individuals.
Yes, fine, ascribe whatever motives you wish. But could you actually point out where I am wrong?You're just strongly invested in not accepting anything that challenges the foundations of your ideology.
Really? Nice assertion. But you get no points unless you show your work.
Metaphor, AkuManiManu. Since I explained precisely what I meant by the metaphor, it should be obvious to anyone interested in an honest discussion.For someone who allegedly abhors magical concepts, you sure do like to invoke them
See previous point.Wrong![]()
Originally Posted by Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
The folks who want an immaterial soul, or libertarian free will, or whatever, are never going to reach any sort of agreement with the folks who don't need those things.
UE:
Not quite. Those who need those things will never reach agreement with those who need them not to exist. Since there is no way of supporting the claim that they necessarily don't exist, I see no reason why conflict is inevitable. The materialists/determinists need to accept that they can't ever force the believers to abandon their belief. None of it makes any difference to science, which has no meaning for those terms anyway.
Second is the same test we always use to check if a system is conscious: Ask it. SHRDLU is not a particularly complex or sophisticated program by modern standards, but I would like you to explain to me exactly what behaviour it is that is definitional to consciousness that SHRDLU does not display.
I am interested in responses to my posts.He isn't really interested in your replies, which is why he put you on Ignore to begin with. Its clear that hes thoroughly invested in the idea that his tautology is valid and will willfully deny any fact, argument, or person contrary to his belief.
Troll-like typing detected.Aku's post reminded me I never followed up on your SHRDLU challenge. So I went over to the website and asked SHRDLU if it was conscious. It answered "yes" and then offered me a number of very enticing sexual favors I could access by calling a 1-900 number.
Yes, very droll. No, what's the opposite of droll? Fatuous. That's the one.So I was completely ready to concede defeat to you and then, for the hell of it I asked if it knew PixyMisa and it also said "yes". The website begin to act a little bizarre, the screen images inverted and did all sorts of crazy things. Then I asked it if you were conscious and it replied "No, and please don't ask me about him again!". I replied "why, is there a problem with PixyMisa?".
Then the website did really wacky stuff and went black.
I think SHRDLU committed suicide.
Metaphor, AkuManiManu. Since I explained precisely what I meant by the metaphor, it should be obvious to anyone interested in an honest discussion.
If you're just interested in scoring points - or rather, imagining that you've scored points - then you needn't bother reading the explanation. Or anything else.
Pain is a behavioural modification mechanism. Instantiate that as you wish. A neural network could be a good place to start, though there are certainly other techniques available.Okay, so which magical SRIP constitutes pain and how would I instanitate it on my desktop CPU?
And as I have noted, you can ascribe motives as you see fit, but you need to actually show me where I am wrong. I'll wait. I've been waiting for some time.Its not a matter of scoring points. I just get a kick out of mocking you because I think you're willfully self-deceptive and I've no respect for such people.
Troll-like typing detected.
Yes, very droll. No, what's the opposite of droll? Fatuous. That's the one.