Mr. Scott
Under the Amazing One's Wing
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2005
- Messages
- 2,546
I once concocted what we can call "Mr. Scott's three laws of computability." They are summarized as follows:
Any computer (the standard model, like the one I'm typing this on, that computer science can distill to the universal Turing Machine) can do ANY TASK if:
1) Programmers have the will and talent to program the task.
2) There is enough time and memory to execute the program.
3) Appropriate input/output devices are supplied.
When asked if a computer could be conscious, the consensus of our software team was that it was an output device problem. This intuition, which I'm practically certain is incorrect, is where dualist assumptions come from. There's something about the internal experience of consciousness that makes us feel it's an output function of the brain, like sugar is an output function of chloroplasts. There isn't the tiniest shred of evidence that this is the case. The dualist conclusion merely speaks to the power of the internal subjective experience. Consciousness is not an output in and of itself. It's a process.
PS: When I asked, "Can we make a computer that would die, then be reborn as a beautiful butterfly?" it immediately invoked the obvious answer, "output device issue."
Any computer (the standard model, like the one I'm typing this on, that computer science can distill to the universal Turing Machine) can do ANY TASK if:
1) Programmers have the will and talent to program the task.
2) There is enough time and memory to execute the program.
3) Appropriate input/output devices are supplied.
When asked if a computer could be conscious, the consensus of our software team was that it was an output device problem. This intuition, which I'm practically certain is incorrect, is where dualist assumptions come from. There's something about the internal experience of consciousness that makes us feel it's an output function of the brain, like sugar is an output function of chloroplasts. There isn't the tiniest shred of evidence that this is the case. The dualist conclusion merely speaks to the power of the internal subjective experience. Consciousness is not an output in and of itself. It's a process.
PS: When I asked, "Can we make a computer that would die, then be reborn as a beautiful butterfly?" it immediately invoked the obvious answer, "output device issue."