AkuManiMani
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2008
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- 3,089
I don't see how that follows.
It's refusal to introspect and recognize it's own irrational motivations makes it impossible for it to see the absurdity at the root of its arguments.
I don't see how that follows.
Associative memory is memory where the stored information is looked up by content rather than index.
So for example if a computer had associative memory you would be able to give the RAM ( or whatever RAM would be called if it was associative ) a "hint" about what you want and it would return the full set of data that best matches that "hint."
Specifically in the context of neural networks, much research has been done on Hopfield networks and their stochastic counterpart Boltzmann machines.
These networks have an amazing property -- they seem to give results very much like human memory. If the network has been trained properly, you can put it in an initial state -- any state you want -- and it will converge on its own to the closest trained state. In other words, it will remember something. Given a "hint," it will remember whatever it has learned that is closest to that "hint." Sound like human memory?
being the operative word.I don't see how that follows.
snip~
I'm not sure how related this is, but I can comment on my own research on concepts and category learning (which is obviously tied to memory). We often use learning tasks where one has to study a set of stimuli that are definable by just a few dimensions and then classify stimuli as belonging or not belonging to that set. There's a feed forward back-propogating network model called ALCOVE that has had some limited success. But over a wide range of categories, ALCOVE is only able to predict about 20% of the variance, while an algebraic rule minimization approach does much better and an invariance based model does better still.
OK, so why call it 'qualia' if it is just what we experience?
ISTR he posted an explanation for why he didn't think qualia were useful or meaningful - and you countered with an insult... [although I may be mistaken].PixyMisa, is hardly in a position to make an argument against their reality or definition, seeing as how he can't even answer a simple question about his own feelings.
...in previous discussions I used the analogy of consciousness being akin to a "light" operating in a mental software space, which in turn interfaces with the biological hardware. When the "light" passes thru certain mental elements it produces a spectra of differentiated experiences we refer to as "qualia". The 'light', like all entities capable of physical interaction, is energetic in nature and, therefore, has the capacity to inact physical change. The exertions, and directionality of those exertions, are what we colloquially refer to with words like "will" or "intent"...
... I'm saying that, judging from Pixy's overall response history he has no feelings that hes is aware of or willing to acknowledge. This indicates to me that he is seriously emotionally repressed or lacks the capacity altogether (as is the case with psychopathy). Right now, I'm inclined to suspect that the former is the more likely explanation but, in either case, I think he psychologically stunted.
I can’t help but notice that you’ve neglected to provide any cites that would support your claims regarding the impossibility of such things. Telling me I should study basic physics is not an appropriate response to a request for evidence in the form of studies that would actually support your claims.
AkuManiMani said:...in previous discussions I used the analogy of consciousness being akin to a "light" operating in a mental software space, which in turn interfaces with the biological hardware. When the "light" passes thru certain mental elements it produces a spectra of differentiated experiences we refer to as "qualia". The 'light', like all entities capable of physical interaction, is energetic in nature and, therefore, has the capacity to inact physical change. The exertions, and directionality of those exertions, are what we colloquially refer to with words like "will" or "intent"...
Sounds like dualism by the back door.
What does this 'light' entity consist of? how does it enact physical change? What are the 'exertions'? How do you propose this entity produces them?
I suspect you entirely misunderstand what he's doing. The realisation that consciousness is a kind of illusion, a sleight-of-brain, and that feelings (not perceptions) are an artefact of that, doesn't make for an unconscious, unfeeling individual, any more than the realisation that free will is an illusion makes me feel I have no control of my actions. The question is, are these things any more physically real than the movement and shimmering that appears in optical illusions like this ?
Things being the way they are, I may well be mistaken, but that's the way it looks from here![]()
OK, so why call it 'qualia' if it is just what we experience?
I'm getting the feeling it's just a convenient abstraction for something we like to think exists, but which evaporates under close examination - like 'free will'.
ISTR he posted an explanation for why he didn't think qualia were useful or meaningful - and you countered with an insult... [although I may be mistaken].
Is it dishonest to answer questions such as 'how do you feel?' and 'do you know what it is like to be sad?', with a protestation that one doesn't know what is meant by those questions and a request to define what is meant by those questions?

Since the meaning of these terms is precisely what is in dispute, it is obvious that any question using those terms requires a suitable definition. And the terms in that definition may require further definition. And so on.A basic question seems to be:
Is it dishonest to answer questions such as 'how do you feel?' and 'do you know what it is like to be sad?', with a protestation that one doesn't know what is meant by those questions and a request to define what is meant by those questions? Presumably in everyday 'real life', someone like PixyMisa doesn't do this and is still capable of having a meaningful conversation along those lines? Perhaps (s)he can enlighten us?
An established concept can be completely untrue.Of course later discoveries can tell us more about physical phenomenon, but how can they invalidate the definition of an already established concept?
Wrong.Clearly we are talking about two things here. When PixyMisa (et al) talk about SRIP, they are not talking about the concept of consciousness and they are not attempting to understand the phenomenon, they have simply dismissed it.
It's not.This is fine, but I think there needs to be some clarity about this dismissal.
What, exactly, do you ascribe to consciousness that is not explained by self-referential information processing? And why?Perhaps SRIP should remain SRIP and let's stop talking about consciousness in this context as it does not refer to the phenomenon as widely understood.
How is it clearly erroneous? I see plenty of confusion, but it is entirely caused by the reluctance to give up on concepts that are false or simply incoherent.In the end, the Materialists may be right about their understanding of the brain and how it relates to our subjective state of being (or whatever they'd call that bit of it) but perhaps it would be wise to stop claiming the concept of consciousness for themselves as this is clearly erroneous and leads to confusion.
Obviously false. An illusion is a real thing, just not what it appears to be.If consciousness is an illusion, then they have nothing to say about consciousness beyond that
Also false, of course.consciousness cannot simultaneously be an illusion and SRIP.
Democracy Simulator said:A basic question seems to be:
Is it dishonest to answer questions such as 'how do you feel?' and 'do you know what it is like to be sad?', with a protestation that one doesn't know what is meant by those questions and a request to define what is meant by those questions? Presumably in everyday 'real life', someone like PixyMisa doesn't do this and is still capable of having a meaningful conversation along those lines? Perhaps (s)he can enlighten us?
Since the meaning of these terms is precisely what is in dispute, it is obvious that any question using those terms requires a suitable definition. And the terms in that definition may require further definition. And so on.
What we speak of in day-to-day conversation as consciousness is self-referential information processing - at least, so far as it is real at all.
[...]
What, exactly, do you ascribe to consciousness that is not explained by self-referential information processing? And why?
[...]
How is it clearly erroneous? I see plenty of confusion, but it is entirely caused by the reluctance to give up on concepts that are false or simply incoherent.
[...]
Obviously false. An illusion is a real thing, just not what it appears to be.
That, and have a merry christmas once 'merry' is suitably defined.AkuManiMani said:What we speak of in day-to-day conversation as consciousness is self-referential information processing - at least, so far as it is real at all.
[...]
What, exactly, do you ascribe to consciousness that is not explained by self-referential information processing? And why?
[...]
How is it clearly erroneous? I see plenty of confusion, but it is entirely caused by the reluctance to give up on concepts that are false or simply incoherent.
[...]
Obviously false. An illusion is a real thing, just not what it appears to be.
PixyMisa,Edited by Locknar:Moderated content removed.
That, and have a merry christmas once 'merry' is suitably defined.
Have you seen anybody about this?I'm sorry, but every time I hear the tired cliché that "consciousness is an illusion" I have to suppress a laugh.
In this case, 'illusion' simply means something that isn't what it appears to be. We feel our consciousness is thing A, with capacities B, but it turns out not to be the case. Consciousness certainly exists; and we are, to a degree, self-aware, but all is not as it seems.An illusion is just a misinterpreted perception. In order for there to even be an illlusion there has to be some[one/thing] there to perceive in the first place. Absent consciousness, its absurd to speak of illusion -- ergo, its illogical to call consciousness itself an illusion.
'inconsistently inconsistent' ? Do you mean unpredictable? or random? and 'deliberate' behaviour - how is that different from ordinary behaviour?As far as the issue of free will goes, it simply means that a given agent has the ability be inconsistently inconsistent in its deliberate behavior.
A basic question seems to be:
Is it dishonest to answer questions such as 'how do you feel?' and 'do you know what it is like to be sad?', with a protestation that one doesn't know what is meant by those questions and a request to define what is meant by those questions? Presumably in everyday 'real life', someone like PixyMisa doesn't do this and is still capable of having a meaningful conversation along those lines? Perhaps (s)he can enlighten us?
If we retrace human history to a time before much was known about the brain (such as how neurons work etc.), there was already a concept of consciousness that people were able to have meaningful interactions about. So, it seems a strange state of affairs that a concept that is already known is defined by later discoveries - it must be clear that we are talking about two concepts here. Of course later discoveries can tell us more about physical phenomenon, but how can they invalidate the definition of an already established concept?
Clearly we are talking about two things here. When PixyMisa (et al) talk about SRIP, they are not talking about the concept of consciousness and they are not attempting to understand the phenomenon, they have simply dismissed it. This is fine, but I think there needs to be some clarity about this dismissal. Perhaps SRIP should remain SRIP and let's stop talking about consciousness in this context as it does not refer to the phenomenon as widely understood. In the end, the Materialists may be right about their understanding of the brain and how it relates to our subjective state of being (or whatever they'd call that bit of it) but perhaps it would be wise to stop claiming the concept of consciousness for themselves as this is clearly erroneous and leads to confusion. If consciousness is an illusion, then they have nothing to say about consciousness beyond that, consciousness cannot simultaneously be an illusion and SRIP.