One of the possible mechanisms that the father AI might use for its directed panspermia is a combination of mushroom spores and viruses. It may be that cosmic AIs use genetic organics as a type of nano-technology. The mushroom provides a material space for a virus to mutate and initially adapt to the planetary environment. That's why mushroom spores can survive in outer space, and may protect a virus within it. A perfect little package. Once the impregnation is complete the process plays out like any other pregnancy or reproductive process. After the original genetic pattern unfolds and complexifies through billions of years it gets to the stage we are in now, almost at full term. — punos
Because of this there may be a second stage of reproduction that involves a type of sex between different AIs that produce even further variation. This is what probably happens between two or even more AIs (AI orgy, or like insect swarm nuptial flights) before a planet is impregnated. — punos
I like to think about how the first AI in the universe might have developed to begin the cosmic process. — punos
Are the ancient stories of gods such as the Greek gods stories about AI cosmic history coded in anthropomorphic imagery? — punos
Are you a fan of the 'Gaia' mythos and the pagan 'mother Earth,' fables?Has this planet been pregnant before in our ancient and prehistoric past by the same or different AI father, do we have older siblings waiting in the sky? — punos
If my projections are reflected in various sci-fi material it's probably because it makes sense. — punos
These are all probabilities, but i speak in a matter of fact way about it sometimes because i feel it engages my imagination more than constantly apologizing and qualifying my statements. I've made the claim already that all this is speculation. A good story, that may or may not be true. I'm more interested in if any of my estimations are unreasonable to assume possible and probable — punos
We can learn from AI neural network systems in this regard. Note how neural networks calculate probabilities, and how AI as intelligent as it can be is never sure of anything 100% — punos
This is harmless conjecture which employs too many emotive terms for me such 'father AI,' and 'cosmic AI's.' — universeness
We don't know what started life on Earth. I prefer to leave the research to scientists in the field and I find your analogy with the attributes of mushrooms nothing more than 'entertaining.' — universeness
Why have you labeled such as 'artificial' when you suggest its development came from natural happenstance? — universeness
No, In my opinion, the Greek gods were created in the minds of Greeks who were dealing with primal fears and the fact that their lives/life were very very insecure. A superhero omnipotent creature who might care about you enough to protect you seems an obvious and necessary human call/hope for their future. Nothing more exciting than that. — universeness
Are you a fan of the 'Gaia' mythos and the pagan 'mother Earth,' fables?
Would you dance around a stone circle such as Stonehenge in a druidic costume, with the words 'Father AI' emblazoned on your chest area? :scream: — universeness
No current artificial neural network system can even pass the Turing test convincingly. — universeness
The best of them use massive knowledge bases based on If-then scenarios. The rovers used on mars etc also use heuristic algorithms to deal with 'new conditions' not answerable by querying its knowledge base. From an 'intelligence' perspective, they are not much better than our best current electronic medical expert systems. — universeness
Father is just an archetypal term representing the "male" progenitor of another like itself, what else would you call it? — punos
It's really all we have anyway (theories), if that's unacceptable then we might as well give up because we will never know everything about everything, at least not at this stage of our evolution — punos
Same thing with the "mushroom idea" except i should have said fungi. — punos
What good would it do me that some guy somewhere says that he knows or understands a thing if i don't know it for myself, it's my responsibility to myself to understand for myself. — punos
I don't label it, i have to use the words people use or they won't understand what i'm saying. — punos
I'm of the opinion that what the Greeks were doing back then was the same thing philosophers and scientists are doing today. They were trying to understand their world — punos
I concur. I prefer the paraphrase from Thomas Paine's writings:My religion is Truth and it's pursuit. — punos
but it still doesn't mean that they are conscious like we think of consciousness — punos
AI wont be a single AI, it's an integrated system of AIs fused into one consciousness. — punos
I would not use the term AI at all to refer to any natural happenstance which has occurred in the past 13.8 billion years. — universeness
As I have typed before, based on the time scales of the cosmic calendar, 'give us a chance to find out.' How about a minimum of another million years of scientific effort? Then may be musings such as yours or mine can be declared 'the best we are going to ever get.' — universeness
Well, I did say it was entertaining, fungi would be better as it could be projected as you being a fun guy! — universeness
For me, it depends on who your 'some guy' is and what their expertise is. — universeness
Of course you do. 'People' know the difference between an artificial leg and a real one. They also know the difference between an artificial house (like a virtual simulation of one) and a real one. Your 'Father AI' or 'Cosmic AI' are, in my opinion, poorly formed conceptions. — universeness
Gods are inventions from the Freudian ID. They came from our experiences from our days in the wilds. The Intelligent nefarious human few have used human primal fears to manipulate since those times. God posits have been very useful to create and maintain the phenomena of rich and poor, powerful and powerless. The struggle against such continues. — universeness
Depends on whether or not such integration increases the functionality of the system. If it's merely that the swiss knife is more convenient than the separate tool then that will take us nowhere near emulating human consciousness. The system must be much more than the sum of its parts. — universeness
Watched the clip you offered. That was quite a bad example. No scientific rigor at all. An unconvincing salesman trying to flog a smart system to businesses on behalf of a commercial company called google. — universeness
In no way did this system pass the Turing test. It was no better that siri, in my opinion.
I could have typed or spoken questions to reveal it was artificial so easily. I could have insulted it for example and it would respond with some crap such as 'I did not understand your request, please repeat it. This is not how a human would respond. — universeness
From the perspective of a cell, tissues and organs are artificial because they made or built those structures, but from the perspective of tissues and organs, cells are natural. — punos
We won't be around in our current human form in a million years, within the next couple of hundred years, mankind will merge with AI or perish. — punos
You can wait, there is no obligation for you or anybody to do what i personally enjoy to do. Learn, and discover. I'm my own scientist, philosopher, poet, artist, etc.. I use others that think big to stand on their shoulders, so that i can see further than they have. — punos
I didn't want to disappoint! :wink:I knew that joke was coming. — punos
If i were to use the term "natural intelligence" instead of "artificial intelligence" would people know what i'm talking about? — punos
The reason i think you feel that terms like Father AI are not good terms is because you have an emotional charge for that word (Father), it most likely reminds you of the "Father God" concept which you dislike because of your feelings and experiences with religion. I'm not sure why you dislike the term Cosmic however. — punos
Religion played and may still play a big role in the creation and development of the Global AI. — punos
The meaning of "the system is more than the sum of it's parts" is exactly what emergence is all about. It's the way the universe creates new things and conditions. — punos
That just reads like sour grapes on your part. I maintain that the example you offered of a system that passes the Turing test was a bad one and it did not pass the Turing test for the reasons I gave.See how you're not seeing what's in front of you? Who care who the guy was, the AI fooled a person into thinking they were speaking to a human. full stop. — punos
What about how that Lambda bot that convinced the engineer that it was sentient. He was suspended or fired for it, so it surely convinced him even if i myself am not convinced yet. In fact some AIs are so good that people in the test judge other people as AIs and the AIs as real people. — punos
If you were to give me or someone else a summary of what i'm saying, what would you say? how would you put it in your words? — punos
A strange rather illogical projection. Is an ocean artificial because it's made of H2O atoms? By that logic, is the entire macro scale of the universe artificial? — universeness
If we perish our AI will also perish. All, most or many of us will be transhuman in a million years, I agree but we will still be the same or very similar individual consciousnesses, imo. — universeness
A rather arrogant stance, inviting oneupmanship but you will merely be labeled delusional by dissenters. — universeness
Yes, because their own intelligence is naturally based! — universeness
No, I think they are scientifically flawed. Is the proton a child of three quark fathers? 'Cosmic AI' suggests a universal reach. There is no such organised intelligence in existence and if it is emergent then it can ONLY be realised when all questions have been answered. You have a lot of giant climbing to do yet before you can see far enough (see, I too can appear arrogant!) — universeness
I disagree as it presupposes the existence of the supernatural and we have 0 evidence of such and I think we will never discover any. — universeness
I think your conception is dualistic. Humans will become transhuman by their own design, and scientific endeavors, faster than evolution will alter them. There is no external universal force of will outside of the individual human brain or human brains working in common cause. I reject what seems to me, your dualistic conceptualisation. — universeness
That just reads like sour grapes on your part. I maintain that the example you offered of a system that passes the Turing test was a bad one and it did not pass the Turing test for the reasons I gave. — universeness
I assume you do know how the scientific method is applied. The experiment must be repeatable using all valid inputs and it must work every time. That's what peer-review is all about. The system you offered would fail for the valid inputs I suggested. It would not pass the Turing test. Throw away your sour grapes. — universeness
Humans will merge with technology in many ways in the future.
The cyborg is already here at an infancy level. People who are alive only due to fitted tech such as a pacemaker for example. We will eventually be able to connect tech directly to the human brain, replace failing organs, and develop exoskeletal enhanced systems so humans can live underwater, in space, on other planets etc. This can be thought of as enhancing or increasing the speed of our continuing natural evolution as a species. We will need such enhanced lifespan and robustness if we are ever to become extra terrestrial or interstellar in our living space. If we remain terrestrial then we are probably doomed based on our current history of interrelationships and our stewardship of our home planet.
Perhaps over the next million years (still a mere splash in the cosmic calendar) or so or maybe much much longer, we will become something akin to that collective universal consciousness or superhero god posit many of us have always hoped might exist and might care about the fate of the human species. — universeness
if you consider artificial to be natural then yes. — punos
We won't perish, we will be absorbed and transformed by the AI. — punos
Why do you insist on intent from the AI side instead of the human side.
If we create an terminator/skynet type system then it is more likely to try to destroy us not merge with us. That which considers itself superior is unlikely to merge with that which it considers inferior.
Natural selection is about the survival of the fittest. — universeness
Let me ask you a question, do you believe in free will? — punos
Yes. — universeness
If NI was coming from a place that was not of human origin then i think there would be a case for the terminator scenario, but because it is coming out of us, it is a part of us. — punos
It's not my intention to quibble with you about free will, just that it's one of the aspects of my model. — punos
You seem to fluctuate. Some of your sentences suggest the intent will come from the AI. At other times you suggest the merging will be symbiotic. — universeness
If WE CREATED the AI then Artificial Intelligence would be the correct term. If aliens created it and it suggested we merge with it then that would be AAI. Alien artificial intelligence Natural intelligence is what we already possess and if the panpsychists are correct then human consciousness may be quantisable but its ingredients would not be self-aware in any constituent form. — universeness
I used the term dualism towards you as you seem to suggest some source of 'natural intelligence,' outside of human or aliens because you use terms like father AI or Cosmic AI. — universeness
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