Piggy said:
Your primary error is to look at the functioning of a physical organ of the body, which can only be reproduced by building a machine that performs similar physical functions
No -- I fully understand that.
Your error is to look at the brain and conclude that its primary function can only be reproduced by making something that appears like a brain.
No, it would not have to "appear like a brain" as long as it works like a brain.
But you seem to understand the word "works" to pertain to something symbolic rather than physical, yet you've offered no justification for that metaphysics.
I assume that the brain works like every other organ in the body, every other known object in the universe, obeying only the laws of physics.
This is the point of disagreement, piggy. I think the required physical functioning is limited to causal relationships between neural activation. You think the required physical functioning is <everything else>. You have zero evidence of this, other than your magic bean theories.
I don't need any beans, or any magic.
Your "causal relationships" are entifications. Plain and simple.
Physical states are real. "Relationships" between those states are abstractions.
If you use a non-similar physical medium to record information about a system, the fact that you're using it for that purpose is irrelevant to everything that's real about that medium.
That's why I can't move into a blueprint of my house. Even if I recorded every piece of information about the house in the blueprint, and even if the blueprint changed in real time with my house, down to the molecule.
And that's why you're wrong when you claim that you can reproduce the real behavior of a real brain by preserving merely the relationships between state changes of the brain.
The relationships are abstractions, and they are preserved in a medium which does not behave physically like a brain.
That's why they can no more
be a brain than a drawing can
be a waterfall.
So yes, we disagree, but I have nothing to prove.
If you want to claim that preserving information about a system's causal relationships is tantamount to reproducing the system itself, then you're the one who has some evidence to provide.
All one needs to do is observe that when people are unconscious, the causal relationships between neural activation just about ceases. The neurons are still alive, still doing that <everything else> magic bean stuff of yours, yet the person isn't conscious.
Common sense should lead any rational person to conclude that it is the causal relationships between neural activation that is responsible for consciousness, then.
Common sense.
Yes, there are differences in brain behavior that distinguish between conscious and unconscious states.
And yes, the neurons are still alive during all of this.
But no, this does not in any way imply that the "causal relationships" themselves are causing anything at all.
Like the laws of physics themselves, these relationships are abstractions from physical reality.
Preserving the relationships in a different medium isn't going to make the medium -- which is all that's real -- behave like the thing that you're encoding information about.
And that's all that matters at the end of the day.
How about this, piggy, just answer one simple question -- if we took a brain, and moved the neurons around so they were all lying flat on a big sheet, in such a way that their synapses and axons and dendrites retained the same connectivity, etc, would the brain still work properly? Would it still support consciousness? And don't give me some stupid dodge like "well, we don't know how the body would react to that...how would the head enclose such a large shape ? Wouldn't the person be top heavy?" Just use your imagination.
Of course it wouldn't behave the same way.
Why in the world would you think that it would?