Belz...
Fiend God
My point is that you can't do this for people and then decide it doesn't apply to computers.
That's the crux of the problem, isn't it ? Some people actually do this.
My point is that you can't do this for people and then decide it doesn't apply to computers.
The only reasons to assume that another person might have personal experience are that they look like I do, and I have it - and they claim to have it.
What you are actually calling "private observation" is not this at all. Your consciousness cannot be observed by anyone else in principle.
But isn't it the case that as long as you've been aware of anything at all - that is that you have observed anything at all - that you were observing your consciousness? Consciousness is not a thing you observe. It is the fact that you observe anything at all.
I don't really understand. I'm currently observing a computer screen. There's nobody else here. If somebody else was here then they could observe it too. I am also currently observing my consciousness and at the moment it contains, among other things, a computer screen.
They aren't practical problems. They are conceptual problems.
The problem for materialism, in one sentence, is that consciousness shouldn't exist, but clearly does.
We know the meaning of the word because of our intimate, first-hand experience of consciousness
Thanks. Those studies, and the mechanical servers driven by brain impulses, are exploring the easy part, awareness.
Awareness of awareness: where is awareness of awareness? Hint. There isn't.
I understand that by my definition, infants are not fully conscious, and I would argue that is true up until a certain age.
Wanna know how many times I've tried to explain this, and it's relevance, to people calling themselves "skeptics", and got ridiculed as for saying it? Especially on this board.
UE: "Zero = Infinity"
mob of skeptics: "He's a woo! Woooooooo! Zero does not equal infinity! Go away and come back when you've learned something about mathematics!"
What we think of as zero or nothingness does not, cannot and never has existed.
Yep. It depends on exactly how you define it, but human cognition doesn't fully develop until the age of 10 to 12.So would I. Certainly my "sense of self" wasn't very well defined until I was about four. At least that's how I perceive it now, and how I perceived it around that age, already.
Well, I don't see how an anlog one based on recurrent artificial neural networks would exceed Turing equivalence either.
I'll recommend Godel, Escher, Bach again.It's not very technical, but it's very thorough, and an enjoyable read. And it's a good place to start before moving on to the more technical treatments of the subject.
"When I was a freshman I postulated to one of my professors, that the language of computers (i.e. information) was far better suited describing the universe than current physical constructs. I thought I'd made a compelling and convincing case. He laughed me out of his office. Today, more than 20 years later, Seth Lloyd is making the rounds with the same idea. As he mentions in his insightful book, Programming the Universe. He credits his recent acceptance and success to the widespread use of computer technology. Apparently, timing is everything.
[...]
Looking at computers as metaphor, where did computer technology come from that gave these new more powerful ideas? Obviously it emerged out of ongoing historical technological trends. However, all of this progress is the result of scientific minds working on things. Whose minds were they, and what was inspiring them to work on the things they did? I think this is the more important question.
When you examine the historical roots of the PC revolution you'll find that things like PC's and the World Wide Web came from a very particular group of people. As pointed out in What the Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer, it was the insights gained from higher states of consciousness, specifically those unique to LSD, that gave rise to the PC revolution. As many people who have taken LSD, you experience your brain has a large set of programs, that you in turn can program, and better still, metaprogram "who" and "what" you want to become.
Please read our online book by John Lilly, Programming and Metaprogramming the Human Biocomputer, for a pioneering work in this area. It's also no secret that the 60's is often equated with a turn to Eastern mysticism for guidance. There's was good reason for this embrace, as many very intelligent people felt current Western ideas on the nature of reality were woefully incomplete in describing, let alone assisting in integrating these sometimes powerful and overwhelming transpersonal experiences."
http://astranaut.org/blog/archives/2006_06_uniting_consciousness_east_wes.php
Okay, without grinding through the maths, the obvious problem is the assumption that the Universe is continuous. Physics disagrees. While it's not clear that spacetime is quantised, the Planck length and Planck time are the smallest meaningful units. So in our Universe at least, a Turing machine is equivalent to any realisable computer.Here ya go Pixy:
Hava Siegelmann. Neural Networks and Analog Computation: Beyond the Turing Limit Boston: Birkhäuser.
Hava Siegelmann. The simple dynamics of super Turing theories; Theoretical Computer Science Volume 168, Issue 2, 20 November 1996, Pages 461-472.
You can find the second paper here:
http://binds.cs.umass.edu/papers/1996_Siegelmann_TheorCompSci.pdf
I don't like the term "higher states of consciousness" for several reasons. First, we can barely agree on what consciousness is much less break it down into states.
And it suggests all sorts of woo-woo mysticism, as if we're accessing something beyond our own minds etc.
Where you and I agree is that the are means and attitudes by which our minds can be more creative and receptive to new ideas and ways of thinking. At the same time, many of these means also make us more susceptible to believing BS. That's why it helps to have a skeptical outlook and to critically question everything you believe. You will also find that to be a common theme for those who brought us the computer revolution. Don't leave that out. A highly disproportionate number of them are/were atheists too. What does that tell you?
Or as a large plate of lemon jello. Or fifteen singing lobsters.When you examine the historical roots of the PC revolution you'll find that things like PC's and the World Wide Web came from a very particular group of people. As pointed out in What the Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer, it was the insights gained from higher states of consciousness, specifically those unique to LSD, that gave rise to the PC revolution. As many people who have taken LSD, you experience your brain has a large set of programs, that you in turn can program, and better still, metaprogram "who" and "what" you want to become.
Since you ask so politely, no. It's also no secret that 60's and 70's drug culture faded out without producing anything more than dead musicians. Talented, but dead.Please read our online book by John Lilly, Programming and Metaprogramming the Human Biocomputer, for a pioneering work in this area. It's also no secret that the 60's is often equated with a turn to Eastern mysticism for guidance. There's was good reason for this embrace, as many very intelligent people felt current Western ideas on the nature of reality were woefully incomplete in describing, let alone assisting in integrating these sometimes powerful and overwhelming transpersonal experiences."
An interesting claim. Care to back that up ?
What does that even mean?Prove to us that the qualia you perceive as blue doesn't appear to UE as red or that you feel hot pain exactly the same as he does.
What does that even mean?
UE: The Man's distinction of equivalence and equality are valid. That's why I used "equivalence" and it's actually more complicated than that. There are different types of infinities with different forms of symmetrical equivalences.
Your reply did jog my memory though about your claims of believing information being the essence of existence. I recall now that you believe(d) in aspects of Hindu mysticism, a foundation of which is the "Brahmin"
which is the being/nothingness of zero/infinity that somehow conjoins with "information" (I'm not sure you and I agree on what information is) to produce reality.
While I, like many physicists, find an intuitive fascination with elements of Hindu mysticism (I guess if you study enough religions you're bound to at least come by insights that mirror some deep aspect of reality - if only by accident.) the concept is too namby-pamby for me to build a philosophy around. What does that really mean?
The epiphany for me came when I read both Zuse and Tegmark and later others who presented conceptually plausible mechanisms and/or frameworks whereby math/information/computation can actually yield "reality". Now I would be the first to concede that the mechanisms Zuse, Tegmark, loyd, Scmihuber and others have postulated are incomplete and could be dead wrong. This is a nascent science/philosophy. In that sense, they present a status not unlike string theory which I also tend to believe is true. They can be supported by rational logic and present a harmony of congruance and convergence with many physical theories known to be true as well as resonance with rational philosophical guidelines.
What I now recall about our differences, but I could be wrong so please correct me, is that you wanted to insist that the foundational information plane, which I think you believed to be confined to the noumena, could have no physical explanation in the sense of being scientifically accessible, testable, or logically defined. Somehow, it was a plane potentially understandable, tied to, or at least communicable with, only consciousness. You never really supported these ideas other than to claim it was consistent with Kant and Wittgenstein (possibly true though I recall you got hit hard on that part too) and I considered your views to be a rather lackluster form of mysticism that can't be expected to explain very much. They can only be retrofitted into some pre-conceived hierarchy of ideas - like Kant's.
Have you read any Tegmark, Schmidhuber, Chaitin etc. Have you seen that they have actually made some potentially testable predictions (though not possible via current technology yet) in physics and math, i.e., how much information the universe can hold and the implications thereof, computable reversibility, the discrete nature of space and time, and, in certain forms of digital physics, the impossibility of real infinities, to name a few?