dlorde
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2007
- Messages
- 6,864
Me tooExactly..... and I am glad you said emulate not simulate.
The difference does seem to cause a remarkable amount of confusion.
Me tooExactly..... and I am glad you said emulate not simulate.
Wait a moment (I thought I might be making a mistake putting all that stuff in a single post).
I started with a black box that replaces the visual cortex, and you appeared to agree that if it could interface with the incoming and outgoing neurons appropriately and reproduce the same outputs given the same inputs, that this could work - the patient could see and remain conscious.
I then suggested a number of scenarios based on that, replacing more subsystems in the same way, and/or extending the scope of the original black box to encompass more of the brain function. Finally I suggested replacing the whole brain with a black box (half seriously, half in jest).
My purpose was to see, given you accepted visual cortex replacement (didn't you?), whether you feel there is a point beyond which replacing those subsystems with black boxes would 'break' consciousness, or whether you feel it is possible to have a human-like black box consciousness that doesn't necessarily function in terms of artificial neurons (this because of previous suggestions that the physical structure would need to be emulated).
These questions obviously require some knowledge and understanding of the functional architecture of the brain, and some idea or ideas of which parts of that architecture might be involved in consciousness (e.g. the frontal cortex, but not the cerebellum - which is an obvious black-box candidate). I assume you have enough knowledge of and opinions about these things, given your steadfast and authoritative statements in the thread.
In other words, I'm curious to know what extent of the brain you think it might be theoretically possible to replace in the way described, and still maintain conscious function. What do you think the constraints are, where do you feel problems might lie, etc. (given that we could produce such black boxes and connect them) ? I think it's germane to the thread, but I'll understand if you don't want to tackle it.
Part of my motivation is that I think it may soon be possible to do this kind of replacement for real with very simple brains - to monitor the substantive inputs and outputs of a neural subsystem, train a learning system to reproduce the functionality, ablate the monitored tissue, and use the monitoring probes to enable the learning system to replace it. Clearly it's a long way from the pure speculation above, but it was the stimulus for it (ha-ha).
Your line of reasoning is analogous to reasoning that we cannot build a flying contraption because all of the flying devices we know of are biological.
...My HUNCH is based on the fact that AS FAR AS WE KNOW HERE AND NOW (and not in imagined possible other realms and fiction) there is SO FAR no other physical process that has produced consciousness other than CEREBRAL CORTEXES and not even all of them at that.
Me too
The difference does seem to cause a remarkable amount of confusion.
Yes, but the point of contention is what we mean by 'exact replica' given the context. I have a music CD copied from another music CD. The data is an exact replica of the original data. The medium has exactly the same format but slightly different materials. Is that an 'exact replica' for the purposes of listening to the music? I would suggest it is. OTOH, if I had the same recording on vinyl or tape, it would not be an 'exact replica' for the purposes of listening, because the data is significantly different enough to hear the difference (although not everyone would necessarily agree).Indeed, the only thing that would do exactly what the brain does is an exact replica of the brain.
Yes; I'm asking for speculation, informed if possible.It's necessary to decide what can be discarded without losing anything important.
In what respect? surely not if the black box network is itself a computer implementation, but I assume you mean other than that?It should also be noted that replacing the artificial black box network with a computer implementation of same will lose functionality.
Yes, but the point of contention is what we mean by 'exact replica' given the context. I have a music CD copied from another music CD. The data is an exact replica of the original data. The medium has exactly the same format but slightly different materials. Is that an 'exact replica' for the purposes of listening to the music? I would suggest it is. OTOH, if I had the same recording on vinyl or tape, it would not be an 'exact replica' for the purposes of listening, because the data is significantly different enough to hear the difference (although not everyone would necessarily agree).
Yes; I'm asking for speculation, informed if possible.
In what respect? surely not if the black box network is itself a computer implementation, but I assume you mean other than that?
The problem with the brain is that we don't know, for a fact, what is and isn't essential. I think most people would be happy enough to have a vein replaced after a stroke. The mechanisms that do the thinking would be another matter.
It should also be noted that replacing the artificial black box network with a computer implementation of same will lose functionality.
No, that conclusion actually isn't implicit in what I was saying.
Of course that's the case with information processing.
But I hope you're not saying that we can do something equivalent with physical systems and still have them operate the same way they do now.
I'm not sure what Piggy was claiming. However, back when I was only myself, I don't believe that I ever claimed that a simulation wasn't conscious. I simply claimed that we have no evidence that a simulation is conscious. If we start with something that's conscious in the first place, then indeed it will be conscious when pretending to be something else. If we start with something that isn't conscious, then I see no reason that it becomes conscious by pretending to be someone else.
So you're just arguing from ignorance, then. We don't know yet, but neither have we run across anything unknowable yet. At least not that we know of. What we do know is that what we know so far about what is and isn't essential is all happily simulatable, even the nonessential bits. It stands to reason the trend will continue. Of course, if you know of something we don't know that is unknowable, I at least would liked to know of it.
I'm not sure what you mean by "functionality" here. If you mean "will produce the same outputs given the same inputs", then you are wrong. A computer implementation can have exactly the same functionality.
Congratulations, westprog. Now your avatar confuses the hell out of me. I'm sure yy2bggggs will be happy.
Can have. The claim is that it always will have.
There's a small claim - that hardware can be inserted in the brain to replace any given part of it. (In principle, of course - not in practice).
There's a large claim - that if the entire brain were mapped in such a way, that a computer program could result, which could, in principle, be run on any sufficiently powerful computer. It's quite obvious that any arbitrary computer can't be just stuffed into the brain cavity. Therefore it cannot have "exactly the same functionality".
Let me put it this way:
A map is not the territory, but a map of a map is a map.
And consciousness is a map.
If we start with something that's conscious in the first place, then indeed it will be conscious when pretending to be something else. If we start with something that isn't conscious, then I see no reason that it becomes conscious by pretending to be someone else.
Well there you go.
But a lot of folks haven't thought out the full implications of that fact, which eventually leads you to the conclusion that consciousness can't be programmed, it can only be built.
I'm confused. The way I read this, you're claiming that you can derive the fact that consciousness cannot be programmed, but must be built, from the fact that you cannot see how a simulation would be become conscious.But a lot of folks haven't thought out the full implications of that fact, which eventually leads you to the conclusion that consciousness can't be programmed, it can only be built.