AkuManiMani
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2008
- Messages
- 3,089
I would like to know exactly how you distinguish "living" from "non-living", given that even scientists in the field of biology cannot agree on such a distinction. Machines and people are both things, and they operate in different ways for sure, but there is no fundamental difference that would make consciousness possible in one but not the other without evidence.
Well I've been proposing ways to do just that and I've mostly had an uphill struggle just defending the basic premises of my arguments -- let alone what my Definition is. Claim that it would be a good idea to devise a unified theory of life [with would include a precise definition of it] and I get accused of invoking 'magic' or that I somehow don't know what I mean when I say something.
Now, with all that whining outta that way...*ahem*...I would like to state for the record that I don't see why it would not be possible in principle to generate an instance of consciousness in an inanimate object or system I haven't seen any convincing evidence or reason to assume that such examples currently exist.
I smell a hint of dualism, here.
Erm...okay?
Then tell me, what, exactly, would YOU consider "life" that were synthetic ? Where would you draw the line and how could you distinguish it from non-life ?
I guess the most obvious and unambiguous method would be to create a cellular organism from scratch, which I believe is what some current researchers are trying hard to do.