Piggy:
Arth was moving from artificial neurons to slower artificial neurons, so we're talking about fundamental limitations, not biological ones.
Stall in this case means either a bug or rejection of a prior accepted premise.
Well, I think to understand the problem, you have to begin with the premise of the comp.lits, which is that consciousness literally results from logical computations alone, irrespective of the physical substrate.
(I'll note here that neurobiology has proven that this is false, as even Dennett now admits, but we'll leave that fact aside for the moment.)
In other words, they believe that as long as you have enough matter and energy to "run the logic" (and no more) you get
two results: You get to run the logic,
and a real instance of conscious experience is created.
(This causes another problem, namely the violation of the laws of conservation of matter and energy. Any real event which has a duration in time and is locatable in space -- as all real events do and are -- requires some involvement of matter and energy. This is why my truck has to work harder to turn the wheels and move down the road than it does simply to turn the wheels on a lift, for instance. It is impossible that you can cause real events A and B with only enough matter and energy to cause either A or B. But we'll leave this aside, as well.)
OK, so if it's true that consciousness is the result of logical computation alone, then this has some serious implications about the possible impact of time on the system.
Logical computations run the same every time, no matter what speed they're performed at. You can take 10 seconds to add a column of numbers or 10 years, the result won't change.
Physical computations do not behave like that. Running them at different speeds often produces very different results.
This means that if the comp.lits are right, consciousness will be maintained regardless of how fast or slow the physical substrate "running the logic" operates. In fact, they insist that this would be true of a conscious "robot"... it would be conscious at any operating speed because its conscious awareness is not the direct result of physical computations, but rather is exclusively the result of some kind of logical overlay (the nature of which is quite murky) on those computations.
But of course, what's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. Human beings are biological machines, and our brains are producing the physical computations which the biological model sees as the cause of consciousness, but which for comp.lits are merely the "substrate" which is being used to "run the logic" which is the actual cause of consciousness.
So if the comp.lits are right, as long as the physical systems of the brain are operating
at all, you must be conscious. The only way to make you unconscious would be to stop the physical computations underlying the logical computations altogether, or at least to stop enough of them to skew the results of the computation. Because if those physical computations are operating at all, you'll be conscious.