Is the mind an algorithm — m-theory
Here is a comprehensive lecture on how to configure the neural network so that you can capitalize on the reinforcement learning technique developed by deepmind.Is a neural net strictly speaking just an algorithm? Or does it do what it can do because an anticipation-creating learning rule acts as a constraint on material dynamics?
Not sure what specifically is your grievance...here is the wiki link describing neural turing machine.Potentially there is a lot of equivocation in what is understood by "algorithm" here. The difference between neural nets and Turing Machines is a pretty deep one philosophically.
The company has created a neural network that learns how to play video games in a fashion similar to that of humans,[4] as well as a Neural Turing Machine, or a neural network that may be able to access an external memory like a conventional Turing machine, resulting in a computer that mimics the short-term memory of the human brain.
Perhaps I am missing something? — m-theory
The computational theory of mind is one philosophical view among many, and has been heavily critized. If it's your position then cool, but don't pretend it's not a philosophical issue. — jamalrob
Either we can decide what a mind is or the question of what a mind actually is will be an undecidable problem. — m-theory
But there is no such thing as an undecidable problem in physics.
It is inconceivable that a "mind" could be programmed by accident i.e. that's not going to happen until we understand what constitutes a mind.
Properties that the artificial mind will possess include consciousness, qualia, creativity, and dare I say it, free will. AlphaGo possesses none of these. It is not a mind.
Yes there is.
Perhaps you failed to understand.
Algorithms are mechanical physical things.
They are not just mere abstractions...many problems exist for which there is no mechanical solution and can be no mechanical solution or algorithm.
This statement is very uninformed.
Any undecidable problem is literally a physically undecidable problem. — m-theory
I believe the deepmind system does posses qualia, creativity and free will, and even some level of consciousness. — m-theory
So, it should be no problem for you to give a few examples of these undecidable problems in physics?
Why do you believe the computer program possesses qualia?
The halting problem has no mechanical or physical solution.
It cannot be decided by any physical means.
Here is a list of more. — m-theory
Deepmind experiences things and forms a concept of its own existence as an acting agent within an environment that responds to the actions that deepmind performs. — m-theory
This is simply false.There are no physics problems in your list. The undecidable problems of mathematics are irrelevant to physics,
Perhaps you could explain how you know it is a fantasy...for some one so uninformed you are rather quick to doll out proclamations as though they are simply true.That is simply a fantasy. But you seem to have decided the undecidable problem nevertheless.
Undecidability is an important discovery about mathematics and mechanical systems. — m-theory
I believe the deepmind system does posses qualia, creativity and free will, and even some level of consciousness. — m-theory
The reason you cannot give an example of an undecidable problem in physics is because there aren't any. The reason for that, is that only the class of computable functions (and computable numbers) is required to express any physical law, or any problem in physics. No physical process relies on the the unphysical aspects of undecidability, which either involve the liar paradox or infinity.
.It just so happens that the famous Bekenstien Bound guarantees that Reality is a finite-state machine. Every calculation which you have carried out, every calculation any computer has carried out, and any calculation that any finite-state machine ever will carry out is expressible in Presburger arithmetic.
As for your fantasy that any current computer program experiences qualia etc, well you had better be wrong. If you are not, then what exists is an artificial person who can suffer and who should be protected by rights like the rest of us.
Simply calling undecidability nonphysical does not make that problem go away though, you are still left with the problem of whether or not the mind is decidable or undecidable. — m-theory
And again I will remind you that if you believe you can answer the question "do I have a mind/consciousness" correctly with a yes or no everytime you ask then at a fundamental level the consequence is that the mind/consciousness is something that is decidable. — m-theory
But all you need to do (on the 3rd time of asking) is to demonstrate that a physical theory is undecidable. How many opportunities do you need to present a counter-example?
To repeat: It is utterly improbable that, in trying to solve the computational problem "how to win at go" will also solve the hard problem. Of course, it is possible that in trying to solve the problem "how to win at space-invaders" the problem of qualia is also solved, but what use is that? If we have solved the problem of qualia without an explanatory theory of qualia,
I assure you, from a computer science perspective, it is no equivocation to say that the deepmind general purpose ai is an algorithm. — m-theory
But then a neural network is (ideally) in dynamical feedback interaction with the world. It is embodied in the way of a brain. And this is a non-algorithmic aspect of its being. You can't write out the program that is the system's forward model of the world. The forward model emerges rather than being represented by a-priori routines.
So sure, you can ask about the algorithm of the mind. But this is equivocal if you then seem to think you are talking about some kind of programmable computer and not giving due weight to the non-algorithmic aspects of a neural net which are the actual basis of its biological realism.
The idea of an algorithm in itself completely fails to have biological realism. Sure we can mathematically simulate the dynamical bistability of molecular machine. We can model what is going on in brains and cells in terms of a sequence of rules. But algorithms can't push matter about or regulate dissipative processes.
That is the whole point of Turing machine - to disconnect the software actions from the hardware mechanics. And the whole point of biology is the opposite - to have a dynamical interaction between the symbols and the matter. At every level of the biological organisation, matter needs to get pushed about for anything to be happening.
So in philosophy of mind terms, Turing computation is quite unlike biological semiosis in a completely fundamental way.
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