If I wasn't learning things from all the posts people are making, showing you how utterly wrong you are on all this stuff, I would have stopped reading this thread long ago.
That is how frustrating your empty arguments have become piggy.
Take this latest one for instance. Given that any computer we program must be "built" first by assembling the hardware, and the "programming" is done by changing physical properties of the hardware, and given that we know the brain typically develops over time more by changing synapse strength rather than actually growing neuron connections, which is very much closer to how we "program" computers rather than to how we "build" computers, but the brain must be "built" before it can be "programmed" anyway, I don't know wtf you are talking about when you try to distinguish between "building" something and "programming" something. According to *any* formal definition you could come up with, "programming" is merely fine-grained "building," -- there is zero qualitative difference between the two.
For someone who is trying to bark up the tree of equivocating physical processes when no "observer" is present, you sure do pull a lot of arbitrary and unexplained distinctions out of you-know-where.
I'm glad you brought this up, because I wasn't aware there was any confusion on this point. However, I can see why my too-narrow use of the word "built" may have caused it.
Brains are built and computers are built. That's true.
Which means that you are 100% correct that programming is "fine-grained building". What the programmer is doing at the keyboard is changing the structure of the machine it's connected to so that some of its parts behave in different ways when electricity runs through them than they did before.
(Fortunately, the programmer doesn't have to know what these physical changes are, or even be aware of them, to peform the operation remotely.)
But it is fine-grained building of a particular type. For instance, building a skyscraper isn't "programming it" in the sense we mean when we say computers are programmed.
Programming the computer involves manipulating it so that it moves in ways which are intended to mimic, in some useful form, a set of ideas in the head of the programmer, perhaps associated with some real-world system or some imaginary system... or perhaps randomly if anyone desires to be reminded of a random number or color or sound at any time in the future.
Computers can be made in many configurations, out of many types of materials, each with its own physical properties, some faster and easier to manage than others.
So the question is this: Can that kind of "building" alone allow us to take the material we're working in and turn it into a conscious object? Or will that end up being like programming a skyscraper into existence... the wrong kind of building?
Well, to answer that, we have to ask "What sort of building is necessary to make consciousness happen?"
The short answer to that, of course, is: We don't know.
There simply are no satisfactory answers right now.
That situation by itself means first that we cannot confirm that a machine which is not conscious can be made conscious by programming alone, without building some other structures designed for the purpose, not of supporting symbolic logic, but of enabling the phenomenon of conscious awareness.
But digging further, the brain is obviously doing some sort of real work to make the phenomenon happen. That's beyond doubt, and nobody in biology questions it that I know of.
If no work were involved, the phenomenon could not occur. Because there are no observable phenomena that have no real causes.
Are the signature waves noise, or are they doing some of the necessary work?
Nobody knows right now, but they're currently our best lead for a component of the work that has to happen somehow, the synchronization of patterns in disparate parts of the brain.
In any case, since we know that consciousness is the product of some sort of physical work of the brain, we're not going to get a human body, or a robot body either, conscious unless we've got some structures that are designed to do whatever minimum work turns out to be necessary.
This is what eliminates the possibility of a pure-programming solution.
It simply means that if the machine wasn't already equipped to perform this behavior to make the phenomenon occur in spacetime, you can't do the kind of fine-building called programming (which is intended to make the computer mimic some other system symbolically, regardless of the actual physical actions of the computer which could be any number of possibilities) and expect to make it perform that behavior.
It's like saying you can take a machine without a CD player and make it play CDs by programming alone.
Can't be done, because programming doesn't get you the real work you need.
Programming
and a laser and the other stuff, then yeah, you can perform the task and get a real phenomenon going, air molecules bouncing around.
Programming and the right hardware -- which will be more than just the hardware required to run the logic, because the laws of physics demand it -- will get you a real event of conscious awareness.
If you want to say, no, the brain or machine representing things to itself can
cause conscious awareness, then you're in trouble.
There are several reasons why, but one fatal reason is that the brain represents things to itself via feedback in many known ways which are not involved in conscious awareness, although some are. So this requires us to follow up by asking "What makes the difference between feedback loops involved in conscious experience, and those that aren't?"
That's kinda where we are now.