Earthborn
Terrestrial Intelligence
More like "that golliboggelotz right there" while not being in same room with you to see what you are pointing at.My definition is every bit as clear as "That cat right there".
More like "that golliboggelotz right there" while not being in same room with you to see what you are pointing at.My definition is every bit as clear as "That cat right there".
yours seems to be 'Yeah, but no, but everyone knows what I mean!' which is unsatisfactory for a discussion.
Can someone link me to the posts where PixyMisa's interpretation of the Church-Turing thesis was destroyed? All I've seen so far is it being denied. The closest to an argument for this was someone knew a bloke who met Church in the pub 50 years ago and he said it was wrong. I'm not sure I'm qualified to understand the refutation, but I'd like to read it.
How about string? I am big on string.
Yes, to be more precise, there are two kinds of hypercomputer: Those that work by magic - i.e. they have some component that is simply asserted to allow hypercomputation; and those that work by containing actual infinities - not just potential infinities, as in a Turing machine allowed to run as long as it needs to finish a program, but infinities of space, that allow the hypercomputer to complete infinite work in finite time.As I understand it, even the physicists who favour the idea of a Turing machine Universe admit that it is still an open question whether hypercomputation is physically impossible or not. However for it to be possible, some pretty bizarre and inelegant physics would need to be true and because of that theoretical physicists tend to prefer to think that is most likely physically impossible.
A definition could be imprecise, overly broad, or contrary to popular use.I'm not sure a definition can be false. It can be wrong, it can also be unproductive.
My symbol manipulator and tape can do everything string can do. Save your money and I'll simulate some for you. Or, better yet, how about some beers?
I think you're on the right track here. It's all about goals (needs, wants, etc). Water can move pebbles around, and even sort them by size, but what is most of interest is not the mere fact that the pebbles are being moved, it's why.I wonder if the consciousness resulting from moving peebles in the sand in the proper way likes beer?
Sigh, simulated string is just not the same, sorry I only drink simulated beer as well.
Referencing of course http://xkcd.com/505/Dymanic said:I think you're on the right track here. It's all about goals (needs, wants, etc). Water can move pebbles around, and even sort them by size, but what is most of interest is not the mere fact that the pebbles are being moved, it's why.I wonder if the consciousness resulting from moving peebles in the sand in the proper way likes beer?
I don't, seriously, I really don't understand exactly what it is that you and Piggy are talking about, unless it's the little guy that seems to be inside my head, but I don't think he's real.Pixy's definition is not a definition - it's an assertion and an explanation. Saying that consciousness is SRIP says nothing about the nature of consciousness.
It might be unsatisfactory that nobody has managed to define consciousness, but that's the state of play at the moment. And yes, everyone does know what we mean.
Thanks for that, it's more what I was looking for, and it certainly shows that PixyMisa's opinion is not universal. However even the author of the piece seems to admit that the brain is Turing equivalent provided it doesn't use any non computable functions in it's operation. From my perspective this means that PixyMisa may be overstating the level of proof of his position, but it is far from a 'destruction' of his point.The erroneous interpretations of Church-Turing.
This article is a fairly thorough-going examination of what CT says, and the specific part of the article I've linked to demolishes all the extravagant claims that misinterpret what it actually means.
I don't know, if I defined happiness as the feeling produced by a specific group of neurochemicals, I doubt very much I'd get the same amount of opposition that those saying consciousness is the result of self referential information processing get.It is satisfactory for a discussion between people who know what he means. Can you define happiness without resorting to synonyms? I'd wager not. Can you discuss it? I'm sure you can. If you were discussing it and someone said you have to precisely define happiness, because they didn't understand what it was what would you do?
I know what I wrote was a bit hyperbolic, but as you yourself admit, it was a very lame refutation of the point. Even if Church were alive he wouldn't be the final arbiter of what his theory proves.Your memory is certainly not kind to those you have philosophical differences with. Be careful you aren't falling too far under the influence of confirmation bias. I commented that I ran PM's claim past my adviser, who was a student of Church's and holds Phds in mathematics and cognitive science and he said that Church would laugh at such a claim if he were still around. I didn't expect that to sway anyone. Actually there had already been sources supporting PM being wrong and nothing supporting him being right.
Thanks for that, it's more what I was looking for, and it certainly shows that PixyMisa's opinion is not universal. However even the author of the piece seems to admit that the brain is Turing equivalent provided it doesn't use any non computable functions in it's operation. From my perspective this means that PixyMisa may be overstating the level of proof of his position, but it is far from a 'destruction' of his point.
(bolding added)The Church-Turing thesis does not entail that the brain (or the mind, or consciousness) can be modelled by a Turing machine program, not even in conjunction with the belief that the brain (or mind, etc.) is scientifically explicable, or exhibits a systematic pattern of responses to the environment, or is ‘rule-governed’ (etc.). Each of the authors quoted seems to be assuming the truth of a close cousin of thesis M, which I will call
Thesis S: Any process that can be given a mathematical description (or that is scientifically describable or scientifically explicable) can be simulated by a Turing machine.
As with thesis M, neither the Church-Turing thesis properly so-called nor any result proved by Turing or Church entails thesis S. This is so even when the thesis is taken narrowly, as concerning processes that conform to the physics of the real world. (Thesis S taken in the wide sense is known to be false; see the references given earlier re the wide version of thesis M.)
I don't know, if I defined happiness as the feeling produced by a specific group of neurochemicals, I doubt very much I'd get the same amount of opposition that those saying consciousness is the result of self referential information processing get.
I know what I wrote was a bit hyperbolic, but as you yourself admit, it was a very lame refutation of the point. Even if Church were alive he wouldn't be the final arbiter of what his theory proves.
The link Westprog gave seems to show that there is some general agreement that the brain is Turing equivalent, unless some specific and fairly unlikely conditions apply.
As I said earlier, I'm not really qualified to judge that, and am prepared to be proved wrong.
As far as I can understand what you are saying, it's that you feel like there is a little man in your head, who's driving the bus, and that's consciousness.
I have no idea if I'm aware of stuff when I'm asleep and not dreaming, because I don't remember it.
I don't know if I dream. I wake up and sometimes have memories of dreams, but I can't say for sure that the dreams occurred, or that if they did occur they used the same part of my brain as conscious awareness. What I think my brain is doing is not really a good guide to what it actually is doing.
Since you can't explain Marvin or the deep brain probe results, I don't see why I have to. I haven't even proposed a theory.
More like "that golliboggelotz right there" while not being in same room with you to see what you are pointing at.
There are a lot of problems with that article, primarily stemming from the fact that it's a philosophical piece rather than a scientific one.Thanks for that, it's more what I was looking for, and it certainly shows that PixyMisa's opinion is not universal. However even the author of the piece seems to admit that the brain is Turing equivalent provided it doesn't use any non computable functions in it's operation. From my perspective this means that PixyMisa may be overstating the level of proof of his position, but it is far from a 'destruction' of his point.
Actually, the brain is not Turing equivalent - it's unreliable. It is, however, definitely simulatable. Everything is.The link Westprog gave seems to show that there is some general agreement that the brain is Turing equivalent, unless some specific and fairly unlikely conditions apply.
I don't know whether my body works like that. I don't always remember my dreams, so I don't know whether I had those "Sofia events" during dreams I don't remember. Maybe they occur only during dreams I can remember?You're telling me that this isn't how your body works.
Actually, the brain is not Turing equivalent - it's unreliable. It is, however, definitely simulatable. Everything is.
No; that looks like the dualism fail again.Is there such a thing as a true simulation vs a false simulation.
Likewise, no.A relevant simulation vs an irrelevant simulation?
Not sure what any of this means.Is the true/relevant simulation designed? Is the true/relevant simulation something pre-existing and stumbled upon through, what, serendipity? Is the true/relevant simulation something else entirely?