I'm probably going to drop this line of argument after this because it gets us nowhere and you keep accusing me of setting it up as a strawman and I'm doing nothing of the sort. But anyway, your definition is "stacked" with you conclusions
Again, no.
But let it pass, let it pass, since later in the post you get to the meat of the matter in a meaningful way, so I'll skip ahead:
Anyway, I'm not sure we know yet what all the components of conscious self-awareness are yet but I'd claim that they include:
Yes, thank you!
1. variable attention and focus over some minimum degrees of freedom.
Okay. SHRDLU knows its blockworld and the conversation. It knows everything about the blockworld and the conversation. It knows nothing else. SHRDLU has (in effect) two senses and can attend to each perfectly. Humans are quite different.
There is evidence to believe that if humans are deprived of sensory input early enough, before they can memorize some form of sensory -acquired experience, they exhibit no consciousness or consciousness is seriously impaired.
Not surprising, I'd say.
A certain minimum integration of sensory information is needed AND there must be a critical level of variability in the experiences being sensed as well!
Sure.
Consciousness needs to have something to switch focus between or it cannot exist.
Yes. One of my requirements when we discussed an absolutely minimal consciousness some months back was that there be more than one input, each having multiple states. It's arguable what the exact minimum is, but there's certainly a minimum below which it's not meaningful to describe a system as conscious.
SHRDLU only has one degree of freedom (arguably more but not many) for attention and focus (placing blocks) and only one sense - typed input.
Well, two senses. It knows where the blocks are, which would at least seem akin to proprioception.
It's got insufficient degrees of freedom for self-awareness to maneuver.
I'd argue that it has more than one, but let's set attention and degrees of freedom as point 1 for now.
2. Anticipation and Volition across a critical threshold of degrees of freedom that are subject to constant change.
Self-awareness requires the ability to anticipate events and make "free" choices that also anticipate the actions of your own volition. Brains are naturally modeling and forecasting engines that not only forecast external events but internal ones. A paper was published a few years ago that demonstrated that not only do humans do this for their own minds but for the minds of others they know well and this is also related to distinguish me from you in some regards.
Brains certainly construct models. SHRDLU does too. But I certainly agree that SHRDLU does not anticipate.
Volition is a messy area that I'd like to avoid for now, but modelling and anticipation, definitely. Let's make that point 2.
SHRDLU cannot anticipate anything nrt does it have real volition.
Agreed.
Seeing the next step in the routine or reflecting on the last step is not anticipation.
They can form the basis for anticipation, but SHRDLU does not even exhibit that.
It has no freedom to will itself along any trajectory that is not already hardcoded into it.
Aguably, neither do we, which is why I want to avoid that one.
And even if it did, there are few degrees of freedom. I don't know what the critical level is but I feel pretty confident SHRDLU doesn't come close.
Okay.
3. Recognizing identity: self vs.other. Self-awareness involves some idea and ability to both fix and generalize what we are.
Yes, thank you. You mentioned generalisation in a comment to Frank earlier. SHRDLU has a fixed initial set of categories. It can create a new category if you tell it to, but (as far as I know) it can't construct categories on its own. It cannot even do this for its blockworld, and certainly can't for itself and its conversational partners.
It is easy to take this for granted but its not that easy and we cannot assume we have a separate sense of self from day one. Studies with infants and animals suggests that self-identity is not something you have in the womb.
Thus the recurrent surprise when babies of various species realise that when I bite this thing over here, it hurts! Or, for babies of some species somewhat later on, that this thing in the mirror is me!
Baby ducks will imprint on the first head configuration meeting certain criteria that they see. They can imprint to a human and apparently assume they're human by reflection. They will tend to associate with humans.
Yup.
People with severe sensory deprivation will report that they lose sense of self and the ability to maintain self-awareness. Remember the isolation studies for astronauts in the 50's and 60's. Some people went nuts.
Yes. Mind you, if you study any group of people long enough, some of them will go nuts...
There is clearly a special capability and interaction with the environment required to yield self identity and mental separation distinction.
Not sure I like the word
special there. It begs to be seized by the dualists.
There is no evidence that SHRDLU meets this criteria at all.
Agreed. Never mind the ability, it doesn't exhibit the behaviour.
4+ I believe there are others but I don't have time to think of them all - this is a start. Pixi will probably dismiss them all as handwaving and BS anyway so I don't want to make more effort until I discover otherwise.
Good grief man, will you
please give up the reflexive ad hominems and strawmen for a while? This is what I was asking for. You provided it.
I agree with your points.
This doesn't mean I necessarily agree that all these points must be added to the definition of consciousness, but I do agree that all these points are worth serious consideration in the construction any such definition.
As I said (several times) I created a minimal definition - necessary but not sufficient - and explained my reasoning.
You haven't been here for long, and I don't know what the discussions are like over at the Dawkins forums, but here we have (or have had, variously) people seriously arguing that consciousness is:
- The fundamental existent of all reality.
- An immortal immaterial entity that beams data into our brains like a radio broadcast.
- Propagated immediately throughout the brain by an electromagnetic field.
- Quantum. (Never any details, but definitely quantum.)
Let me think...
- A property found even in subatomic particles.
- Not computable, that's a popular one.
- Tied to specific physical properties that are also not computable.
There are others, but they're too weird for me to recall at this late hour.
So I drew a line in the sand and said:
This is my definition of consciousness, and this is why I define it that way. If you think differently, tell me what your definition is and why.
Which no-one ever did. Well, no-one that disagreed with me. Well, not coherently.
We do agree on the fundamentals (subject to some minor semantic tweaking), so I'm afraid you don't count either, but you
have raised some well-defined and worthwhile points, which was all I ever wanted.
That and a pony.