I don't know why you believe that biological systems are so special compared to non-biological ones. Both are, quite simply, composed of the same basic stuff.
The same basic stuff, yes. But the
process of creation is utterly different.
An apple tree and an apple pie contain the same basic stuff, but are hugely different. We can make apple pies. The only way we can make apple trees is by using the existing system of self assembly. Which is more complex - a tree, or a conscious mind?
Neural organisation is the result of 3 billion years of evolution which has tweaked the interdependancy of the cells, of the DNA
in the cells, the environment in which they develop (a womb), the chemistry of the mother's body, the presence of non nuclear DNA (as in mitochondria) and so on and on, in a massively re-entrant cascade of self referential processes, which (these days) takes around 40 weeks in humans. The result is a thing primed to learn, programmed to acquire language, and aware of it's own existence, which then interacts with an environment that stuffs it with information for the next two decades. This is not a model of anything. It's a real baby. Is this our experience of computers?
Its a simple fact that
only living systems display consciousness. It is that fact alone which leads me to think it probable that consciousness actually is a result of being alive. I postulate no mystical forces, merely that an object must have undergone a process akin to embryonic development before it can become conscious, because that is where whatever it is that consciousness
is actually happens. If
that process can be copied, then the resulting thing might indeed be conscious, but that process is not how computers are built.
This is why I think Pixy Misa is wrong to place his faith in computers capable of
modelling brains producing the behaviour of brains. I see no reason to think that is true. It's an
assumption, as much as my assumption that the result depends on the process. Modelling is not enough. The synthetic mind must actually
be a mind, not a model. I think the mind gets started as part of the development process, so reproducing the end architecture simply is not enough. It's cargo cult engineering.
So I think we must
grow a brain, the parts of which are aware from the inception . That may be possible synthetically, but it's not what we are doing now. Some form of nanoengineering might be a better route to take, where the logic elements self- assemble into a final structure, but still I think there are many processes we are unaware of, any of which could be responsible for consciousness. (But none of them necessarily requires quantum
anything. They might, but we have no reason to suppose so.)
So in summary. I think the computer route can probably build machines which behave so intelligently that we would have difficulty telling their intelligence from human intelligence. I think these would be the famous p-zombies. Their substrate might be aware, but the whole thing would not be self aware- conscious.
I think to create true consciousness we must learn to copy not merely the material end product of embryonic development, but the entire process, or we risk missing many possibly critical steps.
I do not think we are likely to be capable of that for decades.
No reason not to start though.
But let's face it. We do not know what consciousness is, though we know some of what must be involved. We are all arguing here from a position of some ignorance. In reality all we can do is build stuff and see what happens.