Mr. Scott
Under the Amazing One's Wing
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2005
- Messages
- 2,546
You can talk rubbish all day long, but I am not impressed yet.
I'm still waiting for you to impress me, too. Why do you bother with this thread?
You can talk rubbish all day long, but I am not impressed yet.
I'm still waiting for you to impress me, too. Why do you bother with this thread?
What is this thing you imagine consciousness to be?
I am not the one making claims of machine consciousness.
I bother because making humans dumb is not the way to get machine consciousness accepted as gospel.
You would call a non-working human brain an "it." After we fire it up with oxygenated blood containing nutrition and energy so that it functions just like yours and mine, you'd call it some-thing, rather than an "it." Why?
Would you say something like this about one of the proto-conscious robots? Turned off, it's an it, but turned on, it's some-thing?
You can talk rubbish all day long, but I am not impressed yet.
As I thought "it" is no-thing at all.
Unlike a human which certainly is some-thing.
I am not the one making claims of machine consciousness.
I bother because making humans dumb is not the way to get machine consciousness accepted as gospel.
The two winning programs, or bots, relied on strategies of direct human mimicry to win an annual software tournament called BotPrize – and beat an intriguing rival based on a stripped-down model of human consciousness
Though the character inhabits the first-person shoot 'em up video game, Unreal Tournament, there's no human player in the driving seat. This warrior, called Neurobot, is a character controlled entirely by a biologically inspired model of consciousness. The feat could help us to build more human-like machines, and even shed light on the workings of consciousness itself, one of the biggest mysteries in science.
As I thought "it" is no-thing at all.
Unlike a human which certainly is some-thing.
Just like all the girls in Germany "it" will remain an it until it passes puberty, then we will call her a she.
If your best counter-argument revolves around the gender of personal pronouns I will consider myself justified in not taking you seriously, and admit to being somewhat disappointed in you.
I've inferred you claimed machines can never be conscious because they can't write poetry or wing glide or some such thing. Didn't you make that claim?
How am I, or whoever else, making humans dumb? We know making smart machines is titanically difficult, but we've had some astonishing successes in specific areas. Deep Blue and Watson are smarter than us in their fields. Maybe your defensiveness comes from insecurity. You really feel that if a machine is smarter than you, then that would mean you are dumb?
You didn't answer any of the question in my previous post, and I emphasized they were not rhetorical. I'll repeat them:
As far as I can tell that post wasn't an attempt to impress you, it was an attempt to engage you in dialog so as to better understand your viewpoint.
Saying that it's rubbish doesn't accomplish much in the way of mutual understanding.
I was just thinking how often it is that machines, even simple ones, appear conscious. Indeed, recently some computer game enemy intelligence algorithms passed a Turing Test (see below). Perhaps humans are too dumb to reliably recognize consciousness or unconsciousness in machines by their behavior alone. Actually, I think it's because we are genetically programmed to lean towards false positives in detecting agency (Agency (philosophy)WP).
Mimicry beats consciousness in gaming's Turing test
Why would anyone want it accepted as magical stories?
I was just thinking how often it is that machines, even simple ones, appear conscious. Indeed, recently some computer game enemy intelligence algorithms passed a Turing Test (see below). Perhaps humans are too dumb to reliably recognize consciousness or unconsciousness in machines by their behavior alone. Actually, I think it's because we are genetically programmed to lean towards false positives in detecting agency (Agency (philosophy)WP).
Mimicry beats consciousness in gaming's Turing test
That's like giving a super computer a mathematical problem and claiming it can complete the calculation quicker than most people so it must be conscious.
We've had supercomputers that quick for decades. Still no sign of the computers doing more than we program to, even if the code is a feedback loop and indeterminate; they are still following commands and not showing any sign of non algorithmic consciousness.
Even if the coding can be programmed to evolve by artificial selection, it's still not conscious. It's still following selection criterion we program into it.
What's more amazing is why you think this shows consciousness. Can be be more exact? I want the exact part of the code or the exact behavior of the coding that demonstrates it is conscious.
No.So can a calculator.