Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
What function of a neuron is nonprogrammable?
The point is, since we don't yet fully understand how all neurons function, it's incorrect to say that we can program all their functions.
Zooming out a bit, if we're talking about behavior exhibited by groups of neurons designed by evolution to behave modularly -- which we are -- then it's an error to assert (or assume) that the only function of the substrate can be to support the programming if we want to reproduce the behavior artifically in real spacetime.
Anything the system does in real spacetime has a necessary physical component, and a functionally equivalent system must take that into account. And not just at the neural level, in this case.
In fact, there's nothing a computer actually does in real spacetime that can be purely programmed. If you want your computer to play music, or print numbers, or display images, or control a robotic arm, it's a hardware/software solution. Consciousness should be no different.
There are those here who claim it is different, but so far not one scrap of evidence has been introduced to back up that claim.