Or maybe my time on PF debating with clever people payed off — Michael
Is it anything akin to writing on philosophy forums? — intrapersona
Is it anything akin to writing on philosophy forums? — intrapersona
The principle seems the same; read the topic, search related material, find evidence, analyse and finally expound a 2500 word . . .
. . . illiterate piece of jargon that doesn't say anything about anything at all really.
Do that twice per semester
for 4 years and finally you'll get a certificate at the end that doesn't entitle you to diddly squat. Sweet! I'm in!
In my experience, many professional philosophers, that most farcical of oxymorons, are gargantuan egotists. Be prepared to not have your emails read, to engage in passive aggressive conversations, and to put up with a host of downright bizarre eccentricities. — Thorongil
So it wasn't a big problem that continental stuff always seemed like a bunch of intentionally obfuscated gobbledygook to me. — Terrapin Station
I just hope we can emulate emotions in an AI machine... — Question
You can always side major in cognitive science. I've long thought about that; but, that field is increasingly requiring some computational knowledge also if you don't want to flat out go for psychology. — Question
That problem can be solved ad hoc by a simulation of the entire workings of the human brain. This will be as close to real AI as one can get.I thought that depended on solving the riddle of consciousness first. — intrapersona
Yes, there's a bunch of stats and data analysis involved; but, you aren't confined to work in a lab analyzing results on behavioral tests on humans if you don't want to. It's just (and no offence to the psych majors) a more valuable degree than one in psychology alone.I was thinking of majoring in cog sci but am declining because it is too statistics based and mostly writing up lab reports on stats. — intrapersona
That problem can be solved ad hoc by a simulation of the entire workings of the human brain. This will be as close to real AI as one can get. — Question
In the brain, where else?Where does this emergent property exist though? — intrapersona
Qualia are what one can describe as phenomenological experience. It is unique for every individual. Even identical twins will experience the color 'red' differently; but, never be able to know the difference between how another person experiences it apart from agreeing on the social convention that the word 'red' entails what they mean. This is different than the fact that 'red' is the color with the wavelength of 650 nm.Qualia is needed for proof of emotional reception... — intrapersona
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