tsig
a carbon based life-form
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2005
- Messages
- 39,049
I don't know of any machines which are undetectable or which exist outside the material world.
That's the difference.
You believe in a soul?
I don't know of any machines which are undetectable or which exist outside the material world.
That's the difference.
Information processing is a very loose and ill-defined term. There are many definitions of information, and all of them are problematic. But they all have one common feature -- information is an abstraction, a measurement.
There is no independent "information" in the real world, just as there are no independent kilometers in the real world.
Information is always a measurement or abstraction of something else which is not information.
A poem is another example of the kind of thing which exists only in a system involving an object and an interpreting mind.
In other words, a poem about a lion is not a lion.
What's the difference between a conscious phenogram and a simulation in which the interpreting 'other' is itself?
Quick note to the computerists….
Start with a bounce-back system that responds directly to the external world through an array of sensors. Program a simulation of that part of the external world which can be accessed through those sensors. Route the output from the simulation through the same pathway as the sensors into the bounceback system. Route the output from the sensor array into the simulation's input parameters.
It sounds to me as if a lot of people here are saying something along the lines of...
consciousness being an iterative process of the form (dd+li)**n(cp1+cp2), where dd is degree of differentiating and li is level of integrating, and cp1 and cp2 are canonical pairs defining end-points during each moment of consciousness.
How does that produce color, sound, odor, feelings of emotion, etc?
OK. What exactly do you mean by "program a simulation"? How is that to be done?
I mean the simulation would be much the same as, say, something like a climate model, but of the real world space in which our physical bounce-back device operates. so it's parameters would be the same as the possible range of inputs that could be received from the sensor array to which the device normally responds to.
I'm thinking it would be accomplished via a genetic algorithm that tests how closely the simulation's outputs predict reality (data actually received from the physical sensor array a short time later), and adjusts the simulation accordingly.
It sounds to me like you're describing a more complex bounce-back system, in which the simulation wouldn't be producing a phenomenon with the essential hallmarks of consciousness, i.e. a unique and integrated phenomenology with a single implied point of view.
But maybe I'm wrong.
Worth exploring.
How do you propose to achieve integration and a unitary point of view, first of all? We'll leave the thorny issue of phenomenology for later.
Well, I don't know what the simulation would be producing internally, but it seems to me that this set up would allow the system to function in much the same way that consciousness allows us to function. That it would confer the same sort of advantages that we have over non-conscious organisms.
I don't see how it would even be possible to discern what sort of phenomenology might be present, beyond that the simulation would be generating a representation of the real world against which the system can navigate. Of course, it should also be able to navigate against stored memories of previous states as well.
I'm not sure I understand exactly what you mean by a "single implied point of view" though.
Piggy said:The second feature is an implied single point of view
Well, there are 2 key hallmarks of consciousness, irrespective of the mechanism which is another consideration.
You might want to check out Tononi and Balduzzi's work on integrated information theory (IIT). There's a good vid online in which Tononi gives a general description... I think it's part of a panel with Ned Block.
Anyway, the first is the ingegration of experience.
I'm not at home right now so I can't give you a quote from The Cognitive Neurosciences, but Tononi uses the example of a digital camera. For the digital camera, there is no ingegration, the diodes do their work separately.
And in non-conscious brain processes we see something similar in the neural chain.
However, conscious processes are different, and that difference is likely anchored in the simultanaitey of the synchronized oscillations across the brain which are the mechanical hallmarks of conscious experience.
In other words, consciousness isn't in the neural chain. It's something different.
And the result is an integrated experience. You can't simply decide to experience the color of the sky separate from its brightness, for instance, or the shape of a cup separate from its color. It's a unified experience.
The second feature is an implied single point of view, which is actually the solution to Descartes problem of irreducibility. You probably are aware of this, but the problem is, if there's some sort of image of the world in your head, like a movie on a screen, who's watching it? Some little man in your head? If so, who's watching the movie in HIS head?
But the model of consciousness I described doesn't have this problem, because the "movie" is you. The illusion is that the movie is the outside world, but it's not.
What feels like you is simply the implied point of view produced by the phenogram. But there's really nothing there. This is the brilliant illusion of consciousness.
It's kind of like a reverse vanishing point. The single point of view doesn't result from any little man in your head, or anything in your head which is "observing" anything at all. There is no observer, or even any observation. You ARE the movie, so to speak.
Think about your visual vanishing point. It's not real, it's an illusion. There is no point at which the railroad tracks meet, it only seems that way.
The same thing's happening in reverse. There is no point where the observer stands. That point (and the observer) are merely implied by the structure of the phenogram.
Does that make sense?
Thank you. Whenever I read one of your explanations on this topic, I oscilate between moments of clarity when I think you've given me some brillian insight, and periods of confusion when I can't remember exactly what that last insight was and I'm trying to get it back.
For the part about consciousness being outside the neural chain, I'm envisioning something analogous to looking at a video monitor right up close, and seeing only 3 colors of stationary pixels flashing on and off (the neural chain), then stepping back and seeing a visual subject dancing across the screen (the simulataneous oscilations). I'll look up the Tononi reference and see if I glean a better understanding. I'm wondering if these oscilations can be understood mathematically in a similar way to, say the integrated movements of a flock of birds or a school of fish. Actually, looking at it that way makes me wonder if maybe such phenomena arise from some common evolutionary principal. Are you familiar with Gerald Edelman's work on Neural Darwinism?
As to the implied point of view, isn't it possible that's just an artifact of having sensory processing and language processing done by different systems that are in intimate communication with each other?
Consider… a digital camera -- say, one whose sensor chip is a collection of a million binary photodiodes, each sporting a sensor and a detector. Clearly, taken as a whole, the camera's detectors could distinguish among 21,000,000 alternative states, an immense number…. Indeed, the camera would easily respond differently to every frame from every movie that was ever produced. Yet few would argue that the camera is conscious. What is the key difference between you and the camera?
…[T]he difference has to do with integrated information. From the point of view of an external observer, the camera may be considered as a single system with a repertoire of 21,000,000 states. In reality, however, the chip is not an integrated entity: since its 1 million photodiodes have no way to interact, each photodiode performs its own local discrimination between a low and a high current, completely independent of what every other photodiode might be doing. In reality, the chip is just a collection of 1 million independent photodiodes, each with a repertoire of 2 discriminable states. In other words, there is no intrinsic point of view associated with the camera chip as a whole. The point is easy to see: if the sensor chip were cut into 1 million pieces each holding its individual photodiode, the performance of the camera would not change at all.
By contrast… phenomenologically, every [conscious] experience is an integrated whole, one that means what it means by virtue of being one and that is experienced from a single point of view.
But does it only feel like a single POV, though ?
It's because one of his bodily functions is the production of a hologram-like-thing, which we're calling a phenogram, which only appears to extend beyond his body.