Ichneumonwasp
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2006
- Messages
- 6,240
Agreed.
I see your point here, but do not agree that captures the essence of what has gone on in this and in similar threads.
If PixyMisa and RD agree that this is what they have been saying, I'll stand corrected.
Pixy did mention his thermostat (which doesn't have SRIP) isn't conscious, but his toaster I believe still is. As are programs he and many others have coded.
As I asked RD, what meaning does abstracted consciousness have?
ps. I'm sorry nothing approaching closure was reached in your Awareness thread. I still like 'awareness of awareness'.
You'll have to ask them, but I can't imagine Pixy or RD saying that a non-existent abstraction is conscious. I would bet they are using it as evidence that consciousness is computable in the abstract, so it can be realized in other physical systems theoretically.
As to thermostats and toasters, that is now and has always been an exercise in definitions. Why does everyone not see that? Pixy proposed a definition and applied it. He asked others to say what else was needed for consciousness and, according to him, received no useful replies (he knows darn well that that definition does not constitute a sufficient definition for human consciousness). I don't follow these threads closely enough to know if that assessment is accurate, but I would bet based on my own attempts to get people to arrive at a definition of several of the words involved that it is.
I don't pretend that any of this is easy, but answers that amount to "you can't get there from here" based on specious reasoning are simply unhelpful.
So, what has been helpful as criticism in the past? The Chinese Room argument, for one. That argument showed that simple syntactical computations cannot in and of themselves produce understanding. Granted, the argument cheated a bit in its conception, but the point is well made. Semantics are a necessary part of understanding any complex system. The question then moves to semantics and how do we get there from here.
What arguments have been misguided and hurt progress? One is the argument that computation is a purely abstract process. It isn't. It may be abstracted, as evidenced with Turing machines and the mathematics involved, but computation is a real-world process that we can see, and which occurs independent of observers. Neurons just happen to compute whatever anyone thinks of them.
Another of the distracting arguments is that Turing machines, acting independent of time, cannot be conscious since consciousness as a real world issue (as far as we know since we only have the one example) necessarily involves time dependence. I don't think anyone argues that non-existent abstractions are conscious. They simply are capable of modelling the processes that constitute the real world computations that are consciousness and demonstrate that other systems should be capable of producing the same effects.
If we can move past these trivial issues and get to the meat of the matter -- what is 'feeling', 'awareness', 'attention', 'meaning', then we can move forward. Otherwise, we can just keep going round the bend and argue the same points using different words over and over.