Jeff Corey
New York Skeptic
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2001
- Messages
- 13,714
Arrrgh, Captn.
Yes. Life extension.
I'm in the 3% range.
The only thing not alive and conscious in this universe is my Mr. Coffee, and the a-holes that think it is conscious, even though they only recently allowed that blacks are human.
So, what is the answer? Or are you like other computer experts who merely assert that is simple because of their vast experience so that they claim they instantly comprehended the problem and immediately knew the answer without reading the question?
I call BS.
That level of abstract thought is vastly more complex than just having the subjective experience in the first place.You know, program a computer that would honestly wonder why red has that quality of redness, above and beyond the mere fact that it's a particular wavelength of light reaching its sensor.
Yes, but we know that's either wrong or useless, so we reject it.The subjective impression we get that gives us that nagging dualist leaning.
Why? I don't.If you have a computer that attains the level of human consciousness, wouldn't it, because of its intense subjective experiences, argue for dualism?
Let's start with getting a single coherent sentence out of him, and work our way up, okay?Quarky, this thread is in the science category, and you seem cock-sure consciousness is not just computation. Got any science to support your position?
Correct.It seems that there is SRIP happening in my brain that I am not aware of and SRIP happening in my brain that I am aware of.
SRIP is specifically self-awareness, not awareness generally.In other words SRIP is not the same as awareness.
Nope.Surely this awareness is more like the idea of consciousness and isn't it an important question to ask just what is it about the physical system of our brain and the patterns of neurons firing inside it which mean that some patterns produce awareness of their activity (or have awareness of their activity) and some do not?
Forgive me for asking a devil's advocate question:
You've defined consciousness in such a way that you can easily argue that it can be achieved with data processing. How would one program a computer that is reflective on its perception of its own qualia? If the idea of qualia is incoherent, then explain precisely why, then suggest a way a program might spontaneously experience something like this that has only incoherent definitions.
He did say he was playing Devil's advocate. Since the Devil in this case is precisely the lack of coherent definitions, he was bound by the laws of logic to ask a meaningless question.Pixy's definition whether you agree with it or not is coherent and offers something concrete to discuss. Isn't the actual problem that (often) other people won't provide a coherent definition of what they mean by conciousness?
Are you really retarded?
This thread is starting to feel like a spoof.
You hot-shots can't possibly be this stupid, can you?
Well,
blessings on you all.
I'm off to explore.
Ah, Soapy Sam.
That was a way cool post, imho. I'd nom it, but it might embarrass you later. I've had that happen.
All of this reminds me of a basic tenant that Einstein postulated:
You can't solve a problem from within the mind-set that created it.
This is the crux of my issue with various pragmatists attempting to describe the most obscure and subtle aspects of reality.
Is consciousness computational?
**** no. Not even close. Or at least, not even close to any of the computations illuminated in this thread. Its more of the usual nonsense. Its even lamer than cold fusion. Arrogance doesn't translate well as knowledge. Yet it tries and tries.
Too bad it chooses to not actually study consciousness.
I've studied it. I'm not sure what it is. I'm sure what it isn't.
He did say he was playing Devil's advocate. Since the Devil in this case is precisely the lack of coherent definitions, he was bound by the laws of logic to ask a meaningless question.
At least I think that's how this game works.
Pixy does, in the computing context. He says it's an emergent property of computation. The reason I invoked god above is because in the evolutionary context, by definition there can be no prediction of intelligence, as there is no intelligence there to predict it, until there is intelligence, by which time prediction is a tad post hoc. (Like all the best prophecy)Such as?
Who says conscious awareness is a predictable developmental property?
There's the rub. Lots of people are looking for fossils , but how do they interpret them? If we find a flint scraper in an Eocene lake bed, do we postulate a proto primate culture, or dismiss it as a result of earth movements or just a bizarre freaky bit of flint? Is anyone looking for prehuman archaeology, except for those we are apt to label "woo"?In the whole universe? - have you looked?
Fossil evidence of conscious awareness? how would that work?
Indeed. Interesting beasties.If you want a left-field potential candidate for conscious awareness, the octopus has some interesting behaviours that suggest some aspects. As a cephalopod mollusc, it has a very different neural architecture than mammals - but it is organic, there's no denying.
That's exactly why I made the ID comment. I assume you find nothing illogical about the question itself, but like most of us you would argue that evolution works by modifying existing body parts. I agree totally.Ah, this could be the problem. Sounds like the old anti-evolutionary canard, 'what use is half a xxx?' [insert feature of choice]
I think it's either there or it isn't. That does not stop it changing and growing within one life or over evolutionary history. But it's either there or it isn't. And here, I think we are getting closer to each other.Do you think that as children grow, their developing conscious awareness is useless until it is 'working 100%'? what do you even mean by 'conscious awareness working 100%'? are we humans now 100% consciously aware, have we attained maximum conscious awareness? conscious to the max?
None taken. I'm aware of (some of) my limits. But if consciousness is not an actual example of something which is either on or not on, I can't think of a better one. I admit I ain't the sharpest knife in this box. I'm here to learn and open to suggestions.Unsupported argument from ignorance (no offence). That you can't see how something working less than '100%' can have a selective advantage says more about you than the property in question.
It's the drink! But I think intelligence is a prerequisite for CaW in an evolutionary context. Whether it is in a computing context I have no idea.You seem to be either equating or confusing intelligence and conscious awareness, I'm not sure which.
There may be wholly physical processes which involve known components interacting in as yet unfamiliar ways. We need postulate no vital principles or spiritual essences to say "we think it may be more complicated than that."
Why "um"?Um, really?
The known component system clearly is sufficient.And while I understand you are talking about some small scale phenomena.
What is more complicated than a trillion neurons with each having on average 2,000 cross connections. Why isn't the known component system possibly sufficient?
I'm certainly not saying anything is impossible. I just want some evidence that it's probable.If you are just saying 'it is possible' that is fine.
It wouldn't be like that really. People built the Internet. We basically know how it does what it does. We didn't build brains and (unless it's something I haven't read of) we haven't built conscious computers either.But there is no reason to think there is anything extra at this point. It would be like saying that the internet might have something as yet unknown. There may well be, but I don't see any reason to believe so.
It seems to be rare, perhaps unique in nature. (see previous post). If it is unique, then it seems to be a hard thing for evolution to develop. That of course doesn't mean it's hard to develop artificially (think of the wheel), but it does suggest it is not simple to reproduce in any old hardware.So what reason or evidence do you have? (Unless this is in the : it is possible.)
It does mean that you don't understand the physics and mathematics behind it though.But on a personal level, I feel a tad more humility is in order from the computationists. Just because one suspects there may be a bit more to it than computation does not mean one is a spooky woo.
That's what I mean. There is no "more complicated than that", not in any fundamental sense. Once a system is Turing-complete, all you can do is make it bigger.There may be wholly physical processes which involve known components interacting in as yet unfamiliar ways. We need postulate no vital principles or spiritual essences to say "we think it may be more complicated than that."
But that position is baseless unless you can find a way to disprove the Church-Turing ThesisWP - which has held up for 80 years.At a time when materials science is finding new physical effects often, I think it premature to rule out the possibility that for consciousness to exist brains may have to be built in a particular way, which happens to be the way nature has recently started to build them.
"...both sides..."?
Correct.
SRIP is specifically self-awareness, not awareness generally.