I couldn't find what "compu-dasein" is. So I guess its a kind of term of yours, a combiination of a computer/computing and "dasein", the German term --esp. Heidegger's-- for existence. But what would be the nature of such a "synthetic" mind? What would it be composed of? Would it be something created? And if so, how?It is a conception of what it would be to have a truly synthetic human mind. It would have to be a kind compu-dasein, and not merely programming. — Constance
I know little about Heidegger's philosopy, from my years in college, in the far past, when I was getting acquainted with --I cannot use the word stydying-- a ton of philosophers and philosophical systems. So I cannot conceive the above description of yours. It's too abstract for me. Indeed, this was the general feeling I had reading your messages since the beginning.an examination of a human "world" of possibilities structured in time — Constance
Of coure, since "free will" is a philosophical concept and subject. Natural science and any other phyiscal science have nothing to do with it. (Even if they mistakenly think they have! :smile:)Your side of the disagreement takes us OUT of natural science and into philosophical territory that has an entirely different set of assumptions to deal with. — Constance
OK.a day when science will be able to conceive of programming, with the help of AI, that has the subjective openness of free thought. Considering first what freedom is, is paramount. — Constance
True.Today's fiction is tomorrow's reality. — Constance
In fact, I was in a hurry to assume that I know what you meant by "synthetically". I should have asked you. Maybe you have a point there. So, I'm asking you now: what such a "synthetic mind" would consist of or be like?...Can this be duplicated in a synthetic mind? You say no ... — Constance
OK, since you are talking about DNA, etc., maybe you would like to check, e.g.:Studying primitive DNA is a practical start. Imagine once we, that is, with the AI-we-develop's assistance, come to a full understanding of the human genome. All that is left is technology to create it. — Constance
Free will (freedom of choice and action) is not a biological manifestation. It is produced by and does not reside in cells. It is not something physical. It is a power and capacity that only humans have.if we are a biological manifestation of freedom and choice, then it is not unreasonable to think that this can be done synthetically. — Constance
Well, it is not so simple. I can assure for this! (Take it from a computer programmer who knows how to work with AI systems.)Of course, for now, it is a simple matter of programming, — Constance
Certainly. People in the field are already talking about biological computers, using DNA found in bacteria, etc. But see, even these computers in general terms will be as dumb as any machine and will still be based on programming. Frankenstein was able to build a robot that could have sentiments and will. A lot of such robots have been created since then. But in science fiction only. :smile:you know that the technology will seek greater capabilities to function, work, and interface with the world, and this will prioritize pragmatic functions. — Constance
One can say that, indeed.knowledge itself is a social pragmatic function. — Constance
In fact, one onc can conceive not only a synthetic agency but an organic or biological one too. And it can be modelled on certain behaviours. I believe the word "modelled" that you use is the key to the differentiation between a machine and a human being. In fact, we can have humans being modelled on certain behaviours, e.g. young persons (by their parents), soldiers, and in general pessons who must only obey orders and who are deprived of their own free will. You can create such a person, on the spot, if you hypnotize him/her.Why not conceive of a synthetic agency that learns through assimilating modelled behavior, like us? — Constance
Well, if you like to think so ... :smile:Therein lies freedom, an "open" program. Is this not what we are? — Constance
AI's purpose is to provide as much information as possible and solve problems. ChatGPT itself says that its purpose is "to help and be informative". But it is not actually its purpose. It is the purpose humans have created for it.Can AI have an "end"? — Constance
Only the element and story of the anthropomorphic creator is enough for a rational and honest being to reject it. Of course, this normally doesn't happen immediately even if one is a very rational and knowledgeable person. A whole religious culture is built since 2,000 ago and burdens us since our first baby steps in our never ending education and maturation as well as our domineering, oppressive, despotic, bossy way we have been educated, by our parents, school and society in general, and esp. for the older generations, have made it very difficult to lift this heavy burden off our backs. Indeed, this kind of education has very deep roots in our minds and consciousness. And it takes a lot of (philosophical) thinking to do that. For the last two generations of course, the burden is not so heavy since a lot of the old values have started fading out and education is much less oppressive.why posit an anthropomorphic creator of the universe, thereby invoking the problem of an infinite regress of creators, when you can go one step further and claim the universe has always existed? — ucarr
It would be interesting to know who forms that opposition and how exactly the law hampers economic growth and property rights ...But opposition has grown from industry and landowners who say it hampers economic growth and property rights. Some lawmakers are trying to weaken the law.
Imagining, remembering, speculating, inferring, etc., are indeed thinking. Perceiving is a total different thing. It involves our senses and is a most simple process: it stops at recognizing, identifying things, which are almost instant. What we observe we can then process with the mind, which involves thinking, a process that can take ... forever.Perceiving, like imagining, remembering, speculating, inferring, etc., is a species of thinking. — charles ferraro
I don't think Descartes has ever assumed "for any human mind". It;s an additive. It's Berkeley that assumed that, as I menteioned.Descartes: For any human mind, to think is to exist (cogito ergo sum). — charles ferraro
I have showed in different occasions that this unfortunately is not true, referring th the term "thinking" as we use it today. In fact, its the opposite. During thinking you may lose the sense and experience of living. There are many times that you are thinking all sorts of things but in reality you are absent-minded, or immerged in the past by bringing up memories, or while you are imagining things, etc. Thinking can be also illusory. In all these cases you are not aware, or you are partially aware, of your existence and anything in your environment! Thinking actually is an obstacle to being totally aware, that is, observe and perceive things in your environment as well as aware of youresf. But I can't believe Descartes didn't realize all these things. That's why I believe that by "thinking" he most probably meant "being aware". That is, "I am aware, therefore I exist".In other words, when and while I am thinking, in the first person present tense mode, I must be existing. — charles ferraro
As I said, thinking and perception are two totally different things. But if by "thinking" pone means "being conscious/aware" --as in Descartes' time -- then they are close.Berkeley's esse est percipere (to be is to perceive) and Descartes' cogito sum (while thinking, I am) are saying precisely the same thing. — charles ferraro
Please look up the definitions of "perceive" and "think" or "perception" and "thinking". I mean it.They both claim, each in his own way, that the existence or being of a human mind depends upon its perceiving or thinking. — charles ferraro
Of course. He lived a century later. And most probably he took ideas from Descartes.However, Berkeley takes a major step beyond Descartes. — charles ferraro
Right. By this only you should see that thinking and perception are different things. And that Berkeley was very close to consciousness/awareness, since consciousness depends on perceiving; it is actually and in essence perception. (Not as a definition, of course).Berkeley also claims the "esse" of every object of human perception depends upon its "percipi," i.e., the existence of every object depends exclusively upon its being perceived by a human mind. — charles ferraro
Interesting. From what I know, psychology does not believe in soul or spirit or anything that is non-physical. It only believes in brain. Certainly, there may be exceptions, as in any other field. Even Carl Jung --the only name that is familiar to me in your list-- believes that the soul is a manifestation of the body. He also uses the term as somthing given, known by everyone. As besides all psychologists do.Lots of psychiatrists and psychotherapists specialise in these subjects (famously Victor Frakl, Irvin D Yalom, Carl Jung, Eugine Gendlin) These subjects are the bread and butter of therapeutic work — Tom Storm
At the time I was studying various philosophers --quite far in the past-- Berkeley appeared to me as quite an obscure philosopher and he remains so. Just to show this and also set the "climate" in which he discoursed:Did George Berkeley mean that the existence of the entire world was dependent upon human perception, or divine perception? — charles ferraro
Where in psychiatry or psychotherapy appear the subjects of "caring for soul" and "preparation for death"?This post is not at all to suggest that the usage of philosophy is a replacement for modern psychiatry and psychotherapy. — Dermot Griffin
Emerging from what exactly? What could be something on which both an objective and a subjective process can be applied?I find that it is a false dilemma to posit a thing as either objective or subjective, as there can be emergent things from the relationship between the two.
I think that 'truth' is a prime example of this ... — Bob Ross
The article says "It is desirable that the discussion has as many participants as possible", not everyone. That would be impossible, anyway. Then is an indicative element. It shows a direction, a desirability. Opposite to it is "as less as possible". Which of course is undesirable.A goal of a discussion if to have everyone involved and participating in the discussion. This is a common but questionable assumption in the philosophy of education, a vestige of a factory model. A way of measuring productivity. — Fooloso4
It is applicable to any discussion forum according its structure,size, rules, etc.How well does this translate to a philosophy forum? — Fooloso4
No one can require from anyone to change their ideas, beliefs, assumptions or any personal trait in order to participate construtively to a productive discussion. False assumptions, defective reasoning or lack of knowledge are in the game. One needs only to follow and apply the elements --or as many of them and as well as possible-- that make a discussion smooth, productive and constructive.You can change your assumptions and attitude, which might change what you say and how you say it. — Fooloso4
They might be. I'm not willing to analyze this. As I just said to Fooloso4, these are suggestions, ideas, criteria regarding a good discussion. Each person may have their own. The question is if they work and are effective, at least for the majority of people. And I believe the ones I presented --which are not mine-- are applicable and quite effective and I believe acceptable by most people.The problem is that points 1, 2 and 3 are in conflict with points 4, 5, and 6. — Isaac
That's true. I have indicated a couple of times to my interlocutor that we have deviated from the topic, but they believed that what we were talking was "on track" as you say. But this doesn't mean that there mustn't be a kind of rule that reminds to stay on track, does it? :smile:So keeping a discussion on track according to one set of views on those first matters tends to work against that latter. — Isaac
I don't know where are you applying the element of logic to here, but it made me realize something that I wish to add to this topic: These "rules" --if you want-- are in fact so evident for most intelligent people, that they can be actually considered as just "reminders". :smile:Looking at data and drawing a rational conclusion from it is simply not that difficult — Isaac
This may be true, but it is about guidelines as you yourself say. The post though was an article and not guidlenes, for which BTW only the TPF administrators can post. It is an article about "elements that are considered important in a discussion and distinguish a good discussion from a poor one". as I said.First, it should be noted that the guidelines were written for teachers leading classroom discussion. I think the following claim is questionable for both classroom discussion and forum discussion: — Fooloso4
Because one participant is better than none. And two participants are better than one! :smile:[Re "It is desirable that the discussion has as many participants as possible."] Why is this desirable? — Fooloso4
OK, OK. Again, these are not guidelines or rules of conduct that one must abide to. One can get from that whatever inspires or gets remidended of him/her. In other words, it's not a subject to be discussed about. If that were the case, I would have posted it in the regular Discussions section.There are several questionable assumptions underlying this, including: — Fooloso4
Right. But I belive the key element here is "conscience" rather than "self-knowledge".In my opinion it is better to have enough self-knowledge to know when to stop talking and listen. — Fooloso4
Sure, there may be. But you can;t do anything about it, can you? And even if you could, it wouldn't have changed anything, would it?When you’re teaching always assume there is a silent student in the class who knows more than you do. — Fooloso4
Well, I must not complain. Yesterday I received an acknowledgement from T Clark. (But only after you have rocked the boat! :smile:)Yet one would expect at least a simple acknowledgent ...
— Alkis Piskas — javi2541997
As I realized yesterday, when I was looking for that article, one has to open the "Artrcles Submitted" section to see it! And I don't think this is what people use to do ...I don't remember seeing your post on the main page — javi2541997
Thanks a lot, Javi!What a good thread, Alkis! I do not understand why you didn't have any reply at all. — javi2541997
You are right.I think it is not only good for keeping this site with quality threads but also for the moderators in general, because - sometimes - they lack of having arguments on discern which thread deserves to be on the main page, in The Lounge or even removed. — javi2541997
I believe that too. People like more to discuss with "friends", independently of how interesting and useful a topic and its description by the PO is.[Re Participation] Well, this point never gets taken seriously. I think each thread would have more or less participation depending on the author, not the content itself. — javi2541997
A devout Chistian is not necessatily a fanatic, a zealously religious or someone who cannot think rationally, but instead he (for brevity) believes blindly in his religion and God and reacts badly in the presense of views different than his own, as if his llfe depends on his beliefs.if you’re a devout Christian, ignore this thread — it doesn’t apply to you. It will only hurt your feelings. Go elsewhere and be well. — Mikie
Do you mean, it is used to dissuade them from believing in God? Do you think that such a shallow --as I have expalined-- construct would succeed in that? I believe that it would succeed in the opposite: it would rather strengthen their belief in God! :smile:Keep in mind that argument is targeted to people with very specific beliefs about God. — GRWelsh
I can see the first point. I can't follow the rest ... Sorry.What I was getting at is that your age is part of the now as it relates to a point in the past. That aspect of the now is emphasized on your birthday, but it's there all the time in some way, unless you drop down below the surface. — frank
Ah, this explains everything! That's why I can't follow it! :grin:This is mostly Kierkegaard type stuff, I guess. — frank
"The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was to convince the world he didn't exist." — GRWelsh
Ah, good. I should have waited before commenting on the quotation ... But now it's too late. And I also enjoyed it! :smile:The reason I bring this up is that Christians will often cite this as, paradoxically, evidence that the Devil does exist and (as a consequence) that Christianity is true. — GRWelsh
The whole construct is built on thin ice and falls easily apart ...About Theodore Drange's argument — GRWelsh
OK, I won't follow this part because I can't talk about so many assumptions. Assuming that God actually exists is already a huge assumption, but it is at least challenging. Adding Devil into the game, however, makes the game too heavy or incredible light, like a bubble that can burst at the slightest blow ...So why would God allow the Devil to pull this trick? — GRWelsh
For me, my birthday meant only something when I was a kid and received presents! :smile: I have stopped celebrating it since a lot of years ago. It's just a social convention.Once a year, there's a day when one aspect of the now is magnified, specifically about how it relates to another date: your birthday. — frank
Are you in poetry?Your birthday is a distant star, but you use that star to judge your appropriateness. You may notice some confidence and poise in some areas, and identify that as part of the blessing of this pole star — frank
That's a good place for inspiration. In the past I used it to find solutions in my computer programming projects! :smile:--thoughts from the bathtub — frank
:grin: "Well, you can, if you have no better solution to win a war.""Here you go, sir. Please don't drop it on anybody." — Vera Mont
They usually do, I believe. But, as I said, they can only act as consultants. They are not the decision makers.Scientists sometimes do see ahead to the probable dangers — Vera Mont
Well, I don't want to disappoint you, but as an AI programmer and quite knowledgeable in AI systems, I can say that this is totally impossible. Neither with chips nor with brain cells (in the furure).[Re AI] If it evolves a mind of its own. Then, it may decide to help us survive - or put us out of the artificial misery business once and for all. 50/50 — Vera Mont
Yes, I thought about thete waste. But the Chernobyl link you brought up talks about successful handling of the waste ... Otherwise, I have read that the area surrounding Chernobyl remains radioactive.The waste. ... Can't ever seem to erase the consequences - or the waste. — Vera Mont
Same with drugs. But here is where we use to ask, "Can't or doesn't want?" I believe that if a government cuts enough heads it can handle it. But I mean really cut. Not e.g. forcing the tobacco companies put a warning label on cigaret packs ... So, why tobacco use is still allowed?[Re guns] If that traffic can't be stopped, how do you figure computing technology that runs on a world-wide web and conducts vast amounts of international information and commerce is going to be confined by legislation in the UK or Austria? — Vera Mont
Of course it's a personal view and complaint. Whose else could it be? :smile:This is just a your personal (rather self-centred imo) view Alkis, for me, it has no value beyond your personal complaint. You wont be surprised that I also don't agree with it's proposals. — universeness
I have talked about that already (maybe not in this thread). I very rarely do that and only lust a statement and after I have already set forth my position clearly. And not so much as a support, but rather to show that I'm not the only one who believes something but even persons much more knowledgeable than me on s subject. And I always use very known persons, something which serves as a stable and solid reference shared with the other person. Also to give a little "color" or breath of air to the discussion, as a kind of "ornament". So, it is very evident that I don't actually need to do that at all.Was your use of Heraclitus and Einstein above, you bringing in external help, contradicting your own position? — universeness
I agree.The term 'physical,' described as: 1. ... 2. ... 3. ... — universeness
This is a theretical approach based on an arbitrary use of undefined concepts. Certainly nothing physical in it.Physicists define time as the progression of events from the past to the present into the future. — universeness
Existence, reality, experiences, etc. All this is concepts, mental constracts. Not physical. We are not speaking here about psychological time ot how I perceive time in my mind, etc. This belongs to another area.Your physical body in the reference frame of its own existence, in your own personal reality, materially, tangibly and palpably, experiences progressing from the past, to the present to the future. — universeness
Don't quite get this.This can be empirically demonstrated by observing you over any notional time unit you wish, from sand clocks, sundials, water clocks to atomic clocks. — universeness
Maybe so. OK, but about the physicality of time?I understand the proposals that time is an emergent property, rather than 'physically' real, but I think such notions are similar to all 'Plato style' 'idealistic' notions, such as the ideal clock or an ideal measurement etc. — universeness
Oh god. Is it I who needs to change my position regarding time, after all the argumentations and counter argumentations, examples, detailed desciptions and all that, explaining the non-physicality and even non actual existence??? Whereas you haven't really said --much less proved-- anything about the physicality of time during the whole time and not even in the challenge I proposed to you?It does not matter if you do not change your position regarding time, based on anything I have offered in our exchange here. The truth of what time is, exists, regardless of whether or not you, I or anyone else, currently, has correct knowledge of it. — universeness
This is all I'm talking about: taking measures ...
What is this legacy about?Even if shut down tomorrow, its legacy will be around for a hundred thousand years. — Vera Mont
It's a good thing you've brought up this, because I had the curiosity where do different countries stand ragarding guns control ...In theory, the US could legislate gun control... but it's not going so well. — Vera Mont
Indeed. Governments respond differently under the same circumstances of dangers. This is a socio-political matter that maybe would be interesting to explore, but not in this medium, of course. But whatever are the reasons for such difference it is true that any government has the ability and the authority to pass legislation about dangers threatening not only the human beings but also the animals and the nature.And how legislatures handled the simple, straightforward, known hazard of Covid was .... uneven at best — Vera Mont
Right. That's what I talk about a lot of factors involved in handling potential dangers, including interests.Development and application of computer technology is far more complicated and vested in more diverse interests. — Vera Mont
I don't know what can of "demonstation" are you expecting. There are many. But let this aside for the monment ...I have not seen it demonstrated that ever-increasing computing and automation capability is "mostly benefits". — Vera Mont
Example(s)?On the negative side, however, the obvious present harm is already devastating and the potential threat is existential. — Vera Mont
I don't have in mind any technology that has discontinued as beeing dangerous (although there may be). But I know that a lot of technologies have been discontinued because they wer obsolete. And this is usually the case and will continue to happen.In any case, the point is moot, since nobody has the actual power to stop or shut down the ongoing development of these technologies. — Vera Mont
Whoever has the authority to do it. And through resolutions of the appropriate channels (Parialament) as any legislation is established. Technocrats may also be involved. I can't have the details!You create instead a legislation about the use of that technology.
— Alkis Piskas
Which "you" does this? How? Even assuming any existing government had the necessary accord, and power, what would that proposed bill actually say? — Vera Mont
OK, let's make it simple and real. How has legislation been passing regarding Covid-19? Weren't all the cases based on expert opinion and suggested solutions by experts? Who else could provide information about the dangers involved? And this was a very difficult case because humanity had no similar experience, i.e. basic information were missing, and also Covid-19 has changed its "face" a lot of times during the yesrs 2020-22.A lot of experts are warning people, but they certainly can't issue public statements against e.g. smart weapons while collecting a salary from an arms manufacturer. ... — Vera Mont
Yes. That's a way to look at it. Howeve, please allow me to say that 1) I present solid and extensive arguments --and new each time-- based on examples and real experience and 2) I also present similarly valid and grounded arguments agsinst your statements, etc. On the other hand, I can't see the same thing from your part. You seem not even try. It looks like you just or mainly stick to your views, without defending them approriately. Also, bringing in external "help" from other people and esp. providing me with links to interviews etc., well this not at all my cup of tea nor I find it effective. Sometimes it may be useful but most of the times it's not at all. It's just a wate of time. And I don't mean only you: unfortunately a lot of people do it.)Taking all the points made by both of us, and the links we have used, I see the main difference in our viewpoints, is, that I consider the observability and measurement and traversability of space, proof that space exists, and it follows that distance exists and time must exist, as change requires duration. — universeness
See, this doesn't help at all the discussion. It's just another view. And based on QM, not in real life. Not something anyone can experience, connect it to real life and so on. Such things are only useful for taining one's intellect. Like Math problems. They are fun, but they are not useful for our lives.So what does Rovelli think is really going on? He posits that reality is just a complex network of events onto which we project sequences of past, present and future. The whole Universe obeys the laws of quantum mechanics and thermodynamics, out of which time emerges. — universeness
Interesting. But it has nothing to do with what I have said so far neither helps me undestand better the nature of time ...Perhaps I did not present the terms involved very well. It's based on the proposal that the geometry of the universe may be curved, but on such a large scale, that our measuring methodologies report that it's geometry is flat. — universeness
No, I believe there are indeed things to be concerned about. But what I'm saying is that they are attributed to the wrong place. Machines cannot be responsible for anything. They have no will. They can't be the cause of anything. They have no morality. They can't tell good from bad. As such they themselves cannot be a threat. (Threat: "A declaration of an intention or determination to inflict punishment, injury, etc., in retaliation for, or conditionally upon, some action or course" (Dictionary.com))This seems not really to the point. It seemed like you were painting concerns as merely irrational and perhaps stupid. — Bylaw
I undestand that. I would cetainly not want to participate myself in projects that present a danger for humanity. But if I were an expert in the field these projects are developed around, I would not simply drop out of the game but unstead start warning people, knowing well the dangers and having a credibility as an expert on the subject. Because, who else should talk and warn people? Those who are active working on such projects?there are a number within the AI industry itself who have dropped out because of their growing concerns. — Bylaw
But you don't discontinue a technology that produces mostly benefits because it can also produce dangers! You create instead a legislation about the use of that technology. This is what I said at the end of my previes message. I repeat it here because I believe it is very important in dealing with hidden or potential dangers from the use of AI and which you are bringing it up yourself below.So, what are we supposed to do in the face of such possibility? Stop the development of AI? Discontinue its use?
— Alkis Piskas
Yes, I think that's be a good idea. Won't happen most likely and part of the reason is the way concerns are framed by others. — Bylaw
I don't know if you are refering to me. As I said above, I do believe there are concerns and that a lot of responsible and knowledgeable on the subject people are correctly pointing them out. But unfortunately the vast majority of the claims are just nonsense and ignorance. I'm a professional programmer and also work with and use AI in my programming. I answer a lot of questions in Quora on the subject of AI and this is how I know thet most concerns are foundless if not nonsense. The hype about AI these days is so stroing and extensive that it looks like a wave that inundates all areas in our society. And of course, ignorance about AI prevails.Both dialogues are useful and neither benefits from painting people with concerns as silly or stupid. — Bylaw
You are right saying this. And I guess there are much more factors involved than immaturity: ignorance, will, conscience, interests ...I don't see companies and governments as mature enough to handle and do oversight over these new techs. And in the US, government oversight is very controlled by industry. — Bylaw
The only post of mine you responded to me before this one was https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/823537I can't really see your post, the one I orginally responded to as constructive, however. — Bylaw
Interesting. :up:I've always thought of infinitesimals as part of the metaphysics of mathematics. They don't really exist in normal arithmetic, but have a mathematical description that allows them to be used in calculus, say. Leibniz came up with the idea, then a bit later the limit definitions took over. — jgill