Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Why would a simulated consciousness be conscious in our frame?
How do you tell if another person is conscioous?
What if you can only talk to them on the phone?
Why would a simulated consciousness be conscious in our frame?
I wondered if that might be the come-back. So much for the suggestion (Pixy iirc) that we'd be interacting with a simulation in our reality.
If a woman watches a Pilates DVD, and precisely matches the information, she will be doing Pilates. The DVD won't be doing Pilates. If we say "the woman on the screen is doing Pilates" then we don't really think that Pilates is taking place.
We assume that other people think and feel like us because they look and behave like us. The less like us an artificial being would be, the less confidence we would have.
A simulation of an orange exists in the physical world too (assuming it is implemented by something). Something can not be considered to be both "real" and not real in "our world". There is no actual "digital orange", although there can be a digital perfect description of an orange. The simulation exists in our world, in that it is carried out by some physical system.
We could, but there is no body, just a description. Something that doesn't actually exist can't technically run, although it may be useful to talk about it that way in non-philosophical situations.
I don't think you've been following this thread closely enough.
Nobody here is arguing that computer simulations can't help us figure out how the brain produces consciousness.
But there are people here who are saying that the digital simulation would indeed be conscious in reality, not just in the simulated (imaginary) space.
PixyMisa said:Yes. And that's the physical constant that defines precise physical measurements.Planck's constant is a physical constant.
Well, no. In the sense that you mean, in the sense that an observer is somehow different from any other physical system, no.The observer remains, sir.
How do you tell if you are conscious? You see no division between your subjectivity and what others might objectify as "DD's private behaviors"?How do you tell if another person is conscious?
With call-centers scattered worldwide I do sometimes wonder if what I'm talking to is conscious.What if you can only talk to them on the phone?
The action/behavior of conscious awareness won't happen to the machine just because it runs a simulation (however accurate) of a brain, because its physical actions haven't really changed.
I can't smell an orange that is in new york when I am in seattle. I can't taste it or squirt it's juice in my eye. Is it also not a real orange?
And most people just assume that they are conscious, without thinking that the same problem applies to others as well, you judge your own consciouness teh same way you judge consciousness in others.
From the behavioral perspective we all just show the behaviors of consciousness.
A well-run simulation of an orange is not a description. It is a complex action. Within its 'world' that sort of complex action should function identically to the way an orange in the 'real world' acts.
So, it's not just a consciousness molecule, it's an invisible magical consciousness molecule?Now you're also committing entification.
If you're looking to replicate in spacetime the result of an action in spacetime (which is what consciousness must be), then you need to reproduce some sort of direct physical cause in spacetime.
If you run a simulation of a racecar, none of the actions of the racecar happen in reality. That only happens if you build a model racecar.
The action/behavior of conscious awareness won't happen to the machine just because it runs a simulation (however accurate) of a brain, because its physical actions haven't really changed.
If it was conscious before, it'll be conscious when it runs the simulation. If it wasn't, it won't be.
But its "world" does not really exist. So the only action that is taking place is in the real world (at the implementation level). And that action is distinct from the actions of the system being simulated. That's why I think description is a better term. Descriptions capture or represent reality at an abstract/conceptual level, but they are not the same as that reality. The simulation is only the same in that it can result in isomorphic outputs, but isomorphic != same.
Yep. The Chinese Room is deeply deceptive, though I don't think Searle understands that; I think instead he's deceived himself.So, the obvious counters for this discussion from my limited experience are Deep Blue and the Chinese Room argument (neither of which concern consciousness but rather 'understanding'). I have gone over the Chinese Room argument several times and find myself less convinced by Searle's argument every time I encounter it. I'm not sure what we mean by understanding Chinese except that someone can use it properly. I know one of the things that is missing from his example and that he uses to sway opinion, and that is the 'aha' moment. A system that simply manipulates symbols never has a feeling of understanding anything because feeling is not a part of how it is programmed. But is that what understanding is? Is it proper use with a feeling that you have used language properly? If that is the case, what's the problem with a bigger program that includes that aspect of it?
I know very well that brute force symbol manipulation of the type proposed in the Chinese Room is not the way our brains deal with language issues; but I am less certain that we can clearly separate this way of doing things from the idea that such a system understands. What does understanding mean?
Mind you, the reason we're talking about a Planck scale simulation is that it's a reductio ad absurdum counter to the position of, well, the other half of this thread. We've duplicated the Universe exactly. Now can we have a conscious mind? If you still say no, then you believe in magic. In which case it's time for us to just shrug and walk away.What they seem to be talking about, though, is a robust 'world' (which, yes, does not exist in a 'real sense') that is based on the 'real world' down to the atomic level. That simulated world is itself an action, not a description. We can use it as a description, but its nature is as action -- steps being carried out within the computer. That is why it has no location, no extension, etc.
Yep. I usually describe it as a process, because that better gives the idea of an ongoing... process.Descartes considered the soul to be an immaterial 'thing' because it had the same 'properties' -- no extension, no location, etc.; but the mistake he made was in calling it a substance. It is not a substance but an action. Actions are realized in particular locations, just as simulations (which are actions) are realized in particular locations.
Yep. The Chinese Room is deeply deceptive, though I don't think Searle understands that; I think instead he's deceived himself.
The Room by definition understands Chinese; it is also, as Searle describes it, utterly impossible. To understand what we're talking about with regards to simulations you first have to understand that the Chinese Room (and likewise, Frank Jackson's "Mary's Room") are complete impossibilities.
And so on - if Searle started the argument that way no-one would have a problem with it. No-one would give it a second thought either, of course, and Searle would be out of a job, but them's the breaks.Imaginary Searle said:Imagine a room, bigger than the observable Universe, filled with books. Inside the room is a man. Through a slot in the wall come pieces of paper filled with mysterious signs. Following the instructions in the books, the man looks up the symbols on the piece of paper and writes more symbols on another piece of paper, and passes the new paper back out through the slot, only the whole thing takes hundreds of trillions of years because the process is so complicated and the room is so large that even traveling at a constant 1G acceleration....
Mind you, the reason we're talking about a Planck scale simulation is that it's a reductio ad absurdum counter to the position of, well, the other half of this thread. We've duplicated the Universe exactly. Now can we have a conscious mind? If you still say no, then you believe in magic. In which case it's time for us to just shrug and walk away.