Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
I don't want to spend too much time on it, but I do have to come back for a loose end regarding conscious machines....
From time to time there's a discussion about machines or critters that behave exactly as if they're conscious, but they're not.
The problem is, there are a lot of assumptions built into that, making it a badly formed and unproductive thought experiment.
So instead, let's take a machine and wire him up. We can call him Compy, and we'll wire up a controlling computer to some legs, some arms, some sort of eyes and ears, nose and tongue, a balancer, tactile sensors, even mechanisms that control his internal temperature and the pressure of the fluids used to work his robot parts, and so forth.
Once we've got all that done, we'll program his brain so he can remember and learn from his interactions with the world.
So there's Compy. Is he conscious?
No, he's not, because we haven't included any mechanism for that.
Just like every other bodily function that happens in 4-D spacetime, consciousness has some sort of physical cause that must be implemented with some sort of hardware in order to occur, and we haven't included any of that, or connected it up right with the computer signals.
It's tempting to forget this last bit, because as we hook Compy's computer up with all these other apparati that do what our bodies do, we can see what the hardware/software combo is, but when we come to our brains we see that it doesn't employ any other organ to produce Sofia, so we think, well, there must be no specific physical mechanism then, except what's being used to "run the program" so to speak.
But that would mean that there would be no direct physical cause of a phenomenon locatable in space and time, because there is no spare physical activity over and above what's being used to essentially run a simulation, and this violates the known laws of physics, so we reject it.
Instead, we conclude that the brain itself contains sufficient hardware to do it.
Right now, nobody knows how the brain accomplishes consciousness, how it generates Sofia. So we have no idea how to take the final step of completing Compy's brain so that he's conscious.
Which brings us to the next question.... Does Compy behave as if he's conscious?
Almost certainly no.
How do we know that? Well, consciousness is resource-intensive, and it's not a peacock's tail, so it must be doing something very important for it to have evolved and to be so prominent in such a dominant species as ours (on our level of magnification, admittedly).
We won't know exactly or precisely how important until we can define a sure signature of consciousness in the brain and begin making conclusions about other species. But given how prominent it is in us, and how we've managed to overtake the planet, it's probably no slouch.
So without it, Compy most likely has very little chance of passing for anything like a normal, sober, conscious person.
From time to time there's a discussion about machines or critters that behave exactly as if they're conscious, but they're not.
The problem is, there are a lot of assumptions built into that, making it a badly formed and unproductive thought experiment.
So instead, let's take a machine and wire him up. We can call him Compy, and we'll wire up a controlling computer to some legs, some arms, some sort of eyes and ears, nose and tongue, a balancer, tactile sensors, even mechanisms that control his internal temperature and the pressure of the fluids used to work his robot parts, and so forth.
Once we've got all that done, we'll program his brain so he can remember and learn from his interactions with the world.
So there's Compy. Is he conscious?
No, he's not, because we haven't included any mechanism for that.
Just like every other bodily function that happens in 4-D spacetime, consciousness has some sort of physical cause that must be implemented with some sort of hardware in order to occur, and we haven't included any of that, or connected it up right with the computer signals.
It's tempting to forget this last bit, because as we hook Compy's computer up with all these other apparati that do what our bodies do, we can see what the hardware/software combo is, but when we come to our brains we see that it doesn't employ any other organ to produce Sofia, so we think, well, there must be no specific physical mechanism then, except what's being used to "run the program" so to speak.
But that would mean that there would be no direct physical cause of a phenomenon locatable in space and time, because there is no spare physical activity over and above what's being used to essentially run a simulation, and this violates the known laws of physics, so we reject it.
Instead, we conclude that the brain itself contains sufficient hardware to do it.
Right now, nobody knows how the brain accomplishes consciousness, how it generates Sofia. So we have no idea how to take the final step of completing Compy's brain so that he's conscious.
Which brings us to the next question.... Does Compy behave as if he's conscious?
Almost certainly no.
How do we know that? Well, consciousness is resource-intensive, and it's not a peacock's tail, so it must be doing something very important for it to have evolved and to be so prominent in such a dominant species as ours (on our level of magnification, admittedly).
We won't know exactly or precisely how important until we can define a sure signature of consciousness in the brain and begin making conclusions about other species. But given how prominent it is in us, and how we've managed to overtake the planet, it's probably no slouch.
So without it, Compy most likely has very little chance of passing for anything like a normal, sober, conscious person.