What assumptions are these?
There are probably many -- and I doubt I could uncover them all in one sitting -- but some of the most apparent are ontological. I'll try to cover the two most pressing ones I can think of off the top of my head:
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Assumption 1: Logical structure [e.g. syntax, symbols, etc] is synonymous with subjective meaning [e.g. understanding, semantics, etc]
Its very clear that there's been a
lot of progress in studying the systemic architecture of intelligence and developing intelligent systems. At most, this is a good way to simulate and model some of the possible functions of conscious entities. In the same way that taxonomy is just a
description of instances of life rather than a
theory of life, so this approach is just a
description of the object of study and not a true theory of it. Subjective experience -- consciousness -- is the thing IAOI that we're trying to understand. Describing instances of cognitive function, while invaluable to the pursuit, shouldn't be mistaken for the summation of the pursuit.
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Assumption 2: Acknowledging the distinction between cognition and awareness is tantamount to invoking Cartesian dualism or, at worse, invoking magic of some kind.
I think that this is among the most crippling of the assumptions and the one that, in all likelihood, inspired the OP. I won't go into all the details here but I will once again link to some posts [
here and
here] where I do elaborate more on where I'm coming from on this issue. I'll simply state here that materialism/idealism and Cartesian dualism aren't the only options when considering ways of looking at this problem.
To know that would have to mean you know the solution, so what is it?
I don't know THE solution to the
EMA but I do see the nature of the current impasse on the issue and some very likely routes around it.
AkuManiMani said:
Theres a much value in the approach you've taken to far and much can be accomplished in refining and building upon it -- but its not the whole story of consciousness.
Again how do you
know this? And if you know it what is the answer?
For the reasons I've stated above, it believe that many researchers working on the problem are merely chasing shadows of consciousness while avoiding serious consideration of consciousness IAOI. I strongly suspect that the question of consciousness is fundamentally related -- if not identical -- to the question of just what is life. I don't mean this merely in the superficial sense that consciousness is a distinct
part of some biological entities but that in solving the EMA, we will not only have a theory of the human mind, but the first steps to developing a unified theory of life itself.
Again, I won't go into all the details of why I suspect this is so in this one post but I will state that I believe that what we call consciousness is most likely a field or field like phenomenon generated by the brain and that all biological processes and entities are based on similar fields.