rocketdodger
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2005
- Messages
- 6,946
I can send virtual computers via the internet, LAN, or portable disk because they are software. I cannot do the same with computer hardware.
Irrelevant. When a virtual computer is running on a computer, the atoms of both are exactly the same atoms. They might be used differently by each, but nonetheless they are the same.
A simulation of a molecule, no matter how accurate, is just a representation. Thats what makes it a simulation -- it's not the thing in itself. If one wants a physically efficacious molecule, at some point they are going to have to physically create an actual molecule. The same holds true for consciousness.
Clearly.
Luckally, every single simulation ever created is made of actual molecules.
I really don't understand why you don't get this -- do you think the simulated world of Grand Theft Auto IV is computed in some magical void and beamed to your Xbox via faerie-waves? Of course not -- it takes place on the actual molecules of the Xbox hardware.
My point is that unless its actual consciousness it couldn't be said to KNOW anything. A simulated bucket can't hold water.
Aside from the glaring fallacy of circular reasoning you are commiting -- who cares?
If you ask the simulated consciousness if it knows it is conscious, and it says yes, what more can you do?
Your proposal has a couple of fundamental flaws.
One: You presume the ability to produce simulated consciousness without knowledge of what actual consciousness is.
I know consciousness is form rather than substance, as you would say, and that is enough. Why? Because when you are genuinely unconscious, the substance of your brain is exactly the same. The only difference from when you are conscious is the form.
The only possible logically valid argument you can make is that there is something unique to the substance of a biological brain that allows the form of consciousness to arise only there. That is, that the form of consciousness might not be able to arise on silicon or any other substrate.
Of course, that argument is wrong as well -- we have the maths and science to prove it.
Two: You assume that simulation is the same as actualization.
No, I don't assume anything at all.
I know that if there is form instantiated upon some substance, and there is another form instantiated within that form instantiated upon that substance, that both forms are still forms are and thus equivalent in being form rather than substance. Form is form, regardless of how nested or buried the form.
Your grand assumption is that consciousness is a thing that you can hold in your hands, rather than a pattern of behaviors of things. There is no evidence to support such an assumption other than your own ignorance of the issue.
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