We can't say that something is possible as a matter of absolute certainty when we don't fully understand the processes involved.
I see what you did there, but it doesn't follow that any one of several meanings of the root a word derives from is necessarily applicable to the derived word.
But that doesn't answer my question, necessarily.
"Conscious machines are possible in theory" is a pretty broad statement.
I can see why a sensible person would want to stop short of claiming that humans will eventually build a conscious machine.
But it's very difficult to understand why there should be any objection to the notion that consciousness should be a behavior somehow prohibited to any configuration of matter (whether it turns out humans can manufacture it or not) that is not a human or its relative.
It often does, I agree - but it is also used to describe systems with elements that interact to do work, that have a coordinated effect, e.g. "the machinery of the cell". One can anthropomorphise purpose, invention, intent, or design into such systems, but it is actually redundant. Complex interacting systems can arise without explicit purpose, invention, intent, or design.True. But even in the modern sense of the word, "machine" implies invention.
If you get hung up on the exact semantics of a word like 'machine', you will get confused, sure. I really don't see why a chicken-egg relationship is a problem. Consciousness is the product of the brain, and the brain can be considered to be a biological machine. One question in this thread is whether a non-biological machine can produce consciousness.If one then applies the term "machine" to organisms you end up with a kind of chicken-egg relationship between consciousness and machines. The only difference is that while we've got the "machine" part down pretty well, we're still up in the air about the whole consciousness part of the equation.
AkuManiMani said:True. But even in the modern sense of the word, "machine" implies invention.
It often does, I agree - but it is also used to describe systems with elements that interact to do work, that have a coordinated effect, e.g. "the machinery of the cell". One can anthropomorphise purpose, invention, intent, or design into such systems, but it is actually redundant. Complex interacting systems can arise without explicit purpose, invention, intent, or design.
If one then applies the term "machine" to organisms you end up with a kind of chicken-egg relationship between consciousness and machines. The only difference is that while we've got the "machine" part down pretty well, we're still up in the air about the whole consciousness part of the equation.
If you get hung up on the exact semantics of a word like 'machine', you will get confused, sure. I really don't see why a chicken-egg relationship is a problem. Consciousness is the product of the brain, and the brain can be considered to be a biological machine. One question in this thread is whether a non-biological machine can produce consciousness.
Perhaps it would cause less confusion if we called them 'complex mechanisms'... ?
That isn't what I am saying.True.
I'm not convinced of this. The behavior of a huge collection of particles is NOT simply the net result of the combined behavior of the individual particles. The pattern of relationships of each particle to each other particle makes a huge difference.
See above. As you add more and more particles, the number of possible relationships between them increases exponentially and the ability to predict the expected behavior of those particles decreases. Given that fact, I don't get how you can be so certain of your conclusion. I'm certainly not.![]()
No one is claiming it's because of some magic in the void. Why do you keep making this assumption about others?That isn't what I am saying.
I am saying that if you take a set of n particles, and add another one, to make it n + 1, nobody who knows anything about physics is going to say that all of a sudden the behavior of the set will change in some drastic way that can't be accounted for by the addition of the n + 1th particle.
n + 1 particles behaves like n + 1 particles, including their interactions with each other. There might be some drastic nonlinear change in behavior when you add the n + 1th, but it is because of the extra particle and the way it interacts with the rest, it is because the set is now different than it was before. It isn't because of some magic in the void.
I do. If you can't make accurate predictions, then your understanding is not sufficient to support the claims you have been making.Who care's if you can't predict the behavior?
Again, no one is claiming 'magic' is happening. This claim of 'magic' is nothing more than a convenient way to dismiss the opinions of those who disagree with you.The whole point of my post was that I am comfortable with the implications of mathematical induction -- if adding a particle to a small set gives results that my mind doesn't interpret as "magic," then adding more and more and more -- until I have a very large set, like a person -- shouldn't ever be interpreted as "magic" either. There is no room for magic in the void when the collection of particles is small. There is no room for magic in the void when you add a single particle. So why is there room for magic in the void when the collection of particles is large? That is completely inconsistent with notion of mathematical induction.
How does this reframe the issue? I believe that the behavior of a set of n particles is entirely due to the properties of those particles AND to the pattern of relationships of the particles. If the pattern of the relationships is changed, the behavior may change despite the set still being composed of the same n particles as before.Let me frame the issue another way -- would you say you are certain that the behavior of a set of n particles is entirely due to the behavior of a set of n particles?
Btw, why do you always refer to "conscious robots"? A conscious machine need not be a robot.
I do. If you can't make accurate predictions, then your understanding is not sufficient to support the claims you have been making.
How does this reframe the issue? I believe that the behavior of a set of n particles is entirely due to the properties of those particles AND to the pattern of relationships of the particles. If the pattern of the relationships is changed, the behavior may change despite the set still being composed of the same n particles as before.
Do you think there's a difference between the use of reason to decide how to act vs the use of reason to decide what to believe?
When something is only observed in one configuration of matter, and we don't know how it arises, I feel unable to insist that it is possible under other configurations of matter. When we know how consciousness arises, then we can state with confidence that reproducing the necessary causes is sufficient. As it is, we don't know what can be left out.
Incidentally, by "possible" I mean here "not conflicting with the laws of nature". I don't mean "we can't prove it to be impossible" or "we could do it if we really tried". As the Wasp has said, "possible" is a potential weasel word, and it's better to explain what we really mean rather than insist that the words are unambiguous when they aren't.
What!?
I can make a very accurate prediction that there is nothing in your brain besides particles.
My claim is that your consciousness is due to the behavior of a set of particles.
How is my understanding insufficient?
It reframes the issue because it doesn't allow for anything other than the particles.
It sounds like you don't think there is any magic in there.
But don't you dispute the claim that we can be certain our consciousness comes from the behavior of the particles in our brain?
You cannot explain how consciousness results from the set of particles in your brain. Given a set of particles, you cannot determine whether it is conscious or not.
I dispute the claim that we can be certain that it is possible to create conscious devices. That isn't quite the same claim. Even if someone accepts that consciousness arises from the behavior of the particles in our brain that doesn't imply that it's possible for us to discover the pattern of activity that constitutes consciousness and reproduce it in some other substrate.
I think it is particles plus a pattern of relationships between the particles that will allow consciousness to occur. That's something more than 'just particles' IMO.But that is not the claim we are talking about.
The claim we are talking about is whether or not consciousness comes from just particles, or particles plus something else.
Yes.You are just taking a very conservative view -- there is nothing inherently dualist about that.
Are you talking about a star trek transporter type construction creating an adult that walks and talks and has a complete memory of his/her existance before being transported - that person is clearly conscious.But I ask you this -- if we constructed a computer that was not conscious but just very meticulous, and the computer in turn constructed a person out of raw materials such that the person was indistinguishable from a natural born human -- it followed an existing "blueprint" down to the molecular level -- would that person be conscious?
In other words, forget about the issue of substrate -- it would be the same as you and me -- and forget about the issue of understanding -- we don't need to understand anything since the computer just basically copied some existing blueprint -- and focus on the "soul" thing.
Are you certain such a person would be conscious? Or do you still hold some uncertainty that the computer would "miss" something when it was constructing the person?
If you still hold uncertainty, then I have to ask what you think the computer could possibly miss when it constructed the person. What is there to miss, besides some kind of immaterial soul?
EDIT: Note that westprog's refusal to directly answer this simple question is what convinced me that he has a religious view of this whole consciousness issue. Do you, as well?
I think it is particles plus a pattern of relationships between the particles that will allow consciousness to occur. That's something more than 'just particles' IMO.
A human body is essentially the same set of particles immediately after death as it was just before death, but one is conscious and the other is not. To me, that implies that consciousness is more than 'just particles'.
Are you talking about a star trek transporter type construction creating an adult that walks and talks and has a complete memory of his/her existance before being transported - that person is clearly conscious.
Within biological lifeforms anyway; for higher levels of consciousness, correctly structured neuron networks are needed.Indeed. Consciousness survives across a huge range of ever-changing configurations and conditions. It is clearly robust and generaliseable.
If you are willing to include any use of quantum effects (such as moving information backward through time), extra dimensions (such as those speculated in string theory), or particles we don't currently know how to detect, then sure. But at that point you have included stuff that is considered "supernatural" now.I mean "no fundamental building blocks besides particles." So all interactions between particles, and the patterns of the interactions, and the interactions of the patterns, and so on and so forth, is included.
Agree?
Fun movie even if not particularly realistic. Sure, if you could do that, you would have created a conscious being. I'm not convinced that is a possible achievement. On the other hand, I can't say it's impossible either. As I said, I just don't consider it to be a certainty that it is possible.I mean more like what was in the 5th Element:
The important concept is that we are recreating the body's particle configuration. If there was some supernatural soul, it clearly isn't retained. Just the flesh and blood and all the organic stuff in between.