punshhh
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2010
- Messages
- 5,295
Yes I see your point, my relevance was that the simulator is effectively a sensory or representational apparatus. As opposed to a generator of a conscious mind. If there is a conscious mind involved in the simulation, it will operate as a separate entity independent of the simulator, either within a piece of neural net hardware or software.I agree.
However this is irrelevant, because if we analyze what is going on anywhere, we see that only an observer is aware of the resemblance of a real tornado to a real tornado as well.
Who is the observer?Simulated tornado, real tornado, to be called "tornadoes" they both require an observer capable of recognizing that they have a resemblance to the notion of "tornado" that the observer understands.
If you are proposing a computer as observer, it takes us right back to the question can a computer be conscious. Because for it to truly be a conscious observer it requires being, otherwise it is an automaton mimicking observation.
Being is what is provided by life in the example of consciousness we have to study.
What spark of being is provided in an intelligent computer for it to be a truly conscious being?
Surely it isn't a threshold of complexity?