jrhowell
Muse
No, any machine could easily succeed at doing that and not give the remotest hint of being conscious. BTW I don't see an argument from incredulity there.
Sure, but this particular discussion was about a machine built to operate using the principles derived from the human brain. It would be an odd coincidence if human brains were constructed so as to fake consciousness without actually being conscious.
Stating that a faithful model of a brain must necessarily not be conscious when we don’t know enough yet to be certain of the outcome seems to be an instance of incredulity to me. The same goes for with stating that it must be conscious.