I
originally said that approaching consciousness from the biological/neurological perspective was the way to go, and that computationalism is flawed because it ignores the significance of the physics that underpins consciousness. Everything I've said since then has been in defense of this statement since you seem to've taken umbrage at my suggestion that computation is not adequate to explain consciousness.
I already told you that my current point is not in reference to that hypothesis
[though I don't rule it out
], but to the fact that we need a solid understanding of what physical capacity allows our brains to produce consciousness.
I never argued against consciousness necessarily being instantiated in a physical system. I argued against your use of words. You made a few statements in defense of your position that were wrong -- namely that computation is only an abstract concept and the implication that if we can simulate what occurs in combustion on a computer that this implies that we can only simulate what a neuron does as well and the two senses of 'simulation' were somehow identical.
Both of these issues depend on equivocation over the words 'computation' and 'simulation'. The point of switching to 'duplication' was my attempt to highlight the equivocation.
While it is true that we use the word computation as an abstract concept and that almost every instance of computation we see in the real world is observer dependent, there is a special case of what has also been labelled computation -- namely the summation that neurons do -- that is an intrinsic property of neurons/neural networks.
So, to say that computation is only an abstraction is not correct since there is a physical process that does the same. The point behind current AI as I understand it is to recreate the salient feature of this process -- moving electrical charge through a network of nodes. The hypothesis is that a computer should be able to recreate consciousness if we follow the same wiring diagram as in a human brain and run electric charges through it -- though the engineering feat of doing what synapses do is going to be nigh on impossible, I think.
The same issue arises over the word 'simulation'. While some simulations are far from the original, others are so close to the process being 'repeated' that we can use the word 'duplicate', though strictly speaking that is not entirely correct either. The important point is that when it comes to artificial neural networks, we try to 'duplicate' the salient feature of what neurons do -- summate inputs and respond with a single output -- and that this is not the same use of the word 'simulate' as when we model physical processes in a computer -- like a simulation of combustion. Both examples use the same word, but they are different types of 'simulation' or 'duplication'. One represents a model that can help us understand a process (such as combustion) and the other is so close to the original that the actions performed have the possibility of reproducing the actual process under investigation.
Thats the central premise of computationalism and the position taken by all of the Strong AI proponents in this discussion. In their view, simulating a brain on any computer system is sufficient to produce consciousness. If this is not your position then why are you arguing against my objections to it?
See above. I'm arguing against the equivocations in your use of these words.
I said an operational definition is not possible until we have a scieintfic understanding of what consciousness is.
OK, I disagree, but if that's your stance, then fine. Of course we cannot have a final operational definition of consciousness until we understand it scientifically, but we can always work to refine the definitions that we do have based on our current state of knowledge and by 'playing the philosophy game'. That is what I was after in my thread and essentially what Pixy asked you.
When did I ever speak of "breaking down" awareness into "individual parts"? If you're going to continue basing your counter arguments on confabulated recollections we really have nothing to discuss.
I didn't say that you did. I said that you commented on my attempt to do so by saying the above -- that we can't get to any sort of operational definition, which requires understanding the 'parts' of consciousness. I disagree.
Alright. I see no reason to continue wasting my time trying to engage in a depth discussion with you when you're barely making a casual attempt to keep up with whats being argued. You've hardly even been following that I've said in the posts you're responding to. Your heart is clearly not in this.
Fine, have it your way; I have no particular desire to read insults hurled at me. But I caution you against continued equivocation with these words. And my comment above was directed at your earlier reference to your particular posting history. I'm sorry that I don't read all your posts. I don't read all of anyone's posts. That does not invalidate the criticism directed at your equivocation with these words, however.
I am also not at all certain that everyone with whom you are arguing holds the position that you think they hold. The general consensus seems to be that we have a chance to emulate consciousness in a computer system by re-enacting the movement of charge through a particular type of network. The old sense of 'computationalism' (like the old view of behaviorism), as I understand it, is dead, though there may be a few here who subscribe to that old view.
If by 'it's the physics' you simply mean the same thing -- understanding the way that electrical charge moves through the network to 'produce' consciousness -- then we have no basic disagreement except over the equivocal use of certain words. If you mean something more, then we do have a basic disagreement. We need to understand the networking, which is not a description at the level of physics, but at the level of biology. Of course, it would be great to understand this at the level of the physics, but there is nothing in the problem that screams that we could not arrive at an operational definition of consciousness with a mere biological understanding of the 'wiring diagram'.