I would be surprised if you didn't already know about Chalmer's Hard Problem of Consciousness and the various arguments involved: — Amity
'Tries to' and 'in one aspect ' being the operative words here. Human consciousness is more than neurons firing. — Amity
The thing is - there would be no awareness and no sense of being bold. No sense of accomplishment.
That is the difference in type of consciousness and yes, we would not necessarily wish to burden a computer with what it means to be a human. — Amity
How are we aware ?
Well, that is the question of consciousness addressed by various disciplines. — Amity
Well, we can hope that we are doing the best we can but we don't know that we are.
To hope is to be human. — Amity
The machines we create to help us in this will probably need to feel hope. The machines we make to do other things might not.
Do you know of the Turing test? Essentially, you are put in a room with two monitors. You type in a question, and that question goes to recipients in two separate rooms. In one room is a person, and their answer appears on one monitor, and in the other room is a self-learning AI, and their answer appears on the other monitor. If you can tell the difference between the two, the computer loses. If you can't, the machine is indistinguishable from a human. Of course, you would need to ask many questions, but if the person asking them can't tell the difference at the end of the day, then how do you justify the machine not being both aware but also human? — TogetherTurtle
Even if it were possible why would we need to instil hope, or emotion, into a computer. If some computers are given varying degrees of humanity, the situation would quickly evolve into a state of competition, each tribe having their own territory or interest. Robot wars. — Amity
A form of The Turing test happens every day. Think computer-generated spam, chat bots and the need for us to prove we are human as part of online security. — Amity
I think the larger question in all of this is: What does it mean to act human ? — Amity
More and more we are using computer assessment tools to make decisions, the results of which can seriously affect someone's life. Quantitative check boxes while helpful can only go so far. The person administering should also have life experience, qualities of empathy, compassion and common sense. — Amity
I don't have to justify anything about a computer and how human it might be no matter how well it manages to deceive a questioner. We can be deceived by chatbots. That still doesn't make them human. — Amity
OK, enough input/ output for me, I think. I'll leave you with...
In the beginning the Universe was created.
This had made many people very angry and has been widely regarded as a bad move.”
― Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe — Amity
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