!Kaggen
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2009
- Messages
- 3,874
What about all the neurons in the billion brains interacting with the billion computers? Surely the web is conscious with all that activity.
Yes the web without humans is nonsense.
What about all the neurons in the billion brains interacting with the billion computers? Surely the web is conscious with all that activity.
So, basically, the brain has 100,000,000,000 neurons.
The internet has (conservatively) 10,000,000,000,000,000,000 transistors.
Line the two numbers up:
100,000,000,000 neurons
10,000,000,000,000,000,000 transistors
You can see just how vast and complex the internet is when considered as a system. Even though transistors are much simpler than neurons, there are just so many more of them that the numbers swamp everything else.
Do clean yourself off when you're done wallowing in the logical fallacies, there's a good chap.Shifting the goal posts is yet ANOTHER theistic deceit tactic.
I'm happy to answer that question, if you'll tell me what you think it means, and why you think the two parts of the question are connected.why with all that amazing complexity did the internet not develop consciousness yet? Or has it?
I was asking if you did, because if so, you failed to make it.Yes all the DNA in every cell is identical.
All the atoms in adenine are identical.
All the electrons in every atom are identical.
Etc Etc
You have a point?
Close. Computation, rather than static data.As its a busy thread I'll focus on a couple of points.
"A simulation is a model", is this model in the form of data?
Yes, of course, because that's what it is.Second point, you are including some kind of subjective content in computation. Going back to my mention of Carl Sagan's Blue dot.
The subjective experience of watching the Blue dot is a rather complex and subtle phenomena. Do you envisage computation representing this in any form?
You misunderstand. When I say that consciousness is illusory, I don't mean that there's nothing happening - I mean that there's something happening, but it's not what it looks like. Consciousness produces (or to a strict behaviourist, is) a real, distinct set of behaviours. Conscious systems exhibit novel and complex patterns of behaviour that distinguish them from non-conscious systems.Oh and one more thing, not a question, rather an observation. Everything you have been describing in both brains and computers makes sense and can happen entirely without consciousness, why not just dispense with consciousness entirely, it is "illusory" after all.
I was asking if you did, because if so, you failed to make it.
What I'm saying is that consciousness is not unique to life, but to a certain class of information processing system. Until the last century, the only working examples of such systems were indeed living brains, but that's no longer the case.
All those behaviours by which we distinguish consciousness are now replicated in computers. Still for the most part in a more basic way than in humans, but the difference is quantitative and not qualitative.
That's slightly off-topic, but an interesting question. There is no reason in the computational model why a network of individually conscious components can't generate a separate and distinct consciousness belonging to the network itself.What about all the neurons in the billion brains interacting with the billion computers? Surely the web is conscious with all that activity.
Do clean yourself off when you're done wallowing in the logical fallacies, there's a good chap.
I'm happy to answer that question, if you'll tell me what you think it means, and why you think the two parts of the question are connected.
Anyway, why is a finely-engineered machine of wire and silicon less likely to be conscious than two pounds of warm meat?
Anyway, why is a finely-engineered machine of wire and silicon less likely to be conscious than two pounds of warm meat?
The internet, considered as a system, is vastly more complex than the human brain at this point.
You seem confused. I have committed no logical fallacies; you have done little else throughout this thread.You are absolutely right.... thanks for the suggestion…..I feel like I need a week in a spa to scrub off all the fallacies you have been flinging. I am beginning to reek from all the stinking fallacious you keep hurling.
Okay.For the sake of argument we will grant your assertion that the internet is more complex than the human brain.
No.I presume that you did so to make the point that since the internet is more complex than the human brain then the human brain is nothing special.
That's a pretty poor representation of what I've said.Also you maintain that the brain is merely a computational device and by your reckoning no more than a computer let alone an internet of computers.
And that is in fact the opposite of what I've been saying.And since the discussion at hand is consciousness then I am assuming that you are arguing that all it would take to achieve consciousness is a complex enough network of computers.
What I'm saying is that consciousness is not unique to life, but to a certain class of information processing system. Until the last century, the only working examples of such systems were indeed living brains, but that's no longer the case.
All those behaviours by which we distinguish consciousness are now replicated in computers. Still for the most part in a more basic way than in humans, but the difference is quantitative and not qualitative.
The human users of the internet are conscious; at least some of the applications typically found on a modern computer are conscious.


Yes, absolutely. I've written such programs myself. It's a common programming technique.Goodness gracious me..... so you do in fact believe that consciousness has already been achieved by computer programs.
That would be you, apparently.Who is the one with the Pixy Dust and magic beans now?
The human users of the internet are conscious; at least some of the applications typically found on a modern computer are conscious.
Whether the internet as an ecosystem is conscious is a complex question. One answer would be that it has multiple overlapping consciousnesses. There's no unifying mind, but there are conscious behaviours when you look at specific parts of the system.
Anyway, why is a finely-engineered machine of wire and silicon less likely to be conscious than two pounds of warm meat?
The human users of the internet are conscious; at least some of the applications typically found on a modern computer are conscious.

You are absolutely right.... thanks for the suggestion…..I feel like I need a week in a spa to scrub off all the fallacies you have been flinging. I am beginning to reek from all the stinking fallacious you keep hurling.
Unless you were to, you know, say something that made some sense.You cant reach him Leumas, he's entwined in a marvelous chrysalis. Any approach glances off the crystalline circular surface.
Not one iota. You're just not paying attention.You are shifting the goal posts AGAIN.
First, I didn't say that. Second, my response was to a completely different question that specifically included the users in the system.You cannot now claim that the internet is conscious as an ecosystem because the human brain is USING the computers in the internet.
Because it doesn't.You did not say anywhere that the “finely-engineered machine of wire and silicon” had to also be combined with the not so special consciousness of the “two pounds of warm meat” to be considered conscious.
Yes, I have already said.But all this is a moot point already since you have said
Well, that's hardly my problem.All I can say now is
Why are you asking me .... I am not the one who made that assertion.... it was PixyMisa…. Or at least he seems to imply it by mistakenly claiming that the internet is more complex than the human brain…..in fact I have no idea what he is claiming by his unsubstantiated assertion….. so address the question to him.
I personally have already stated my OPINIONS on the matter in various posts....go read them.
That's slightly off-topic, but an interesting question. There is no reason in the computational model why a network of individually conscious components can't generate a separate and distinct consciousness belonging to the network itself.
The human users of the internet are conscious; at least some of the applications typically found on a modern computer are conscious.
Whether the internet as an ecosystem is conscious is a complex question. One answer would be that it has multiple overlapping consciousnesses. There's no unifying mind, but there are conscious behaviours when you look at specific parts of the system.
Yeah sure attack the messenger.
Lets translate the picture for you then.
You see all the different structures making up a neuron cell?
Let us start with the DNA in the cell nucleus which holds sufficient information to participate rather dominantly in building a human body with 100 trillion cells.
You get the picture?
Yes, absolutely. I've written such programs myself. It's a common programming technique.
That would be you, apparently.