Ichneumonwasp
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- Feb 2, 2006
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Can anyone answer this for me? RD, maybe you can lend your superior intellect to the question.
There is a difference between simulation and reality for physical objects, but it is not at all clear that there is a clear distinction between simulation and reality for actions (aside from the obvious truism that a simulation is not the thing itself). That is the fundamental point when discussing consciousness. Consciousness is not an object; it is an action.
The better analogy that we have used repeatedly in these discussions is with running. Simulated running is running -- not in the real world but in the simulated world. The closer the simulation is to actual running the more informative the process by which we acheive the simulation is for understanding how running works in the real world. Same for consciousness, at least theoretically. The idea is that a simulation can potentially provide a model for how consciousness works in the brain; not the any simulation would be consciousness in the brain. Obviously it cannot be -- it is a simulation after all. But if the simulation provides enough information, if it is close enough to how the brain works, then we probably should even speak of it "being conscious" within its simulated world.
ETA:
Or more succinctly, as Pixy said, it's a category error, or a framing error. The simulated orange is an orange within the simulation. A real orange is an orange in the real world.
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