Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
The niggling doubt that I have in the back of my mind is that I am not sure that the way a computer would run a sim of a human thinking would necessarily match the pattern in a human too, which is one of the reasons why I don't sign onto this unreservedly; but I don't see why that wouldn't be the easiest solution.
Of course the computer will be acting like a computer, but the basic point is that if we could get the computer, acting like a computer to recreate the same patterns that occur in human brains when they are conscious, and hook that computer up to the proper I/O ports and peripherals, why wouldn't the computer be conscious? We'd have proper input coming to the processors; we'd process information in just the same way; we'd have proper output. IN what way wouldn't it be conscious.
As I mentioned in several earlier posts and in my last one to Malerin, maybe I misunderstand RD and Pixy's argument, but my understanding of the simulation exercise is that they were trying to get people over the last objections to the idea that we could recreate that sort of pattern in a computer. I don't think it matters all that much if the way of doing it is through a simulation or some other type of programming; but since programming is just our way from the top-down to get the logic gates to open how we want them to, what would be the barrier to recreating the pattern of brain activity we see in conscious folk?
You have to go back to my thought experiment with Guy.
The computer can't take the place of the brain, because a computer does physically what a computer does not what a brain does.
[ETA: See westprog's recent re-posting of the example of the power plant.]
The brain is a chunk of matter. You can replace it with a functional model, sure.
But that functional model has to be able to carry out all the physical actions of the brain in 4-D spacetime, just as a functional model of a leg has to be able to do the same.
You can't get that through programming.
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