Beelzebuddy
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2010
- Messages
- 10,593
On the other hand, the coordination of the signature brain waves during consciousness, and the parallels of experience during the losing and gaining of consciousness, these are observable.
PixyMisa said:Sure. But correlation is not causation.
But correlation is not causation. It doesn't matter how much you want the correlation to be causative, it most likely ain't. In this case we already have a dang good idea of what's causing the correlation: the same neural structures doing the thinking are making the waves. I can see how you might get turned around by the language used by some papers, but you need to read a little more critically to see that they're talking about the physical structures acting at those frequencies, not the electromagnetic waves their actions generate.Piggy said:But you're right, correlation isn't causation. All we have at the moment is a correlation, but it's a damn exciting one.
One last cite: if you hit the cortical inhibitory cells hard enough, the whole thing goes boinoioioing in the gamma band.
No there don't. An mp3 player running at one millionth speed still plays exactly the same music - just at one millionth speed. A plane-flying-program "flying" at one millionth speed in a simulation running at one millionth speed would fly perfectly well. Interfacing with the real world often imposes additional real-time constraints on particular implementations of an algorithm. That doesn't affect the algorithm itself.Computers that fly planes do so according to a real-time, interactive model, not the Turing computational model. A computer operating according to the Turing model would never be able to fly a plane, or play an MP3 file, or run a windowing system. This is the case no matter how powerful the computer. There has to be some kind of explicit temporal element - which is what Piggy has been describing in his post. It's this temporal element that the computationalists have consistently said is not needed - that it is possible to run the computation at one millionth of the speed and get exactly the same result. Clearly it's not possible to run the control program for a plane at a millionth of the speed and get the same results.
This does not, of course, imply that a real-time computer system is necessarily going to be able to produce consciousness. Just that a real-time computer system is the minimal requirement.
Dijkstra was a curmudgenly old coot, too greedy to take a random walk instead of the single shortest path.westprog said:Hence my signature. The field of computers is awash with language that's been lifted from the human world and applied to mechanical devices and mathematical abstractions. This has had the effect of anthropomorphising computers and their operations. As Dijkstra pointed out, this is a fundamentally childish and immature approach to a profession, and is guaranteed to warp thinking.