You haven't explained the explanatory gap, you've only waved your hands at it.
Then Searle's argument makes a wrong presupposition that it is an adequate model of how understanding works. — Zelebg
What a great coincidence that the technology we mastered in the past forty years just happens to be the secret of consciousness. How lucky we are! What are the odds?
It doesn't offer a model of understanding, though. It uses a clear case of non-understanding (you processing symbols in a language you don't understand) to show that showing syntax isn't showing semantics.
Searle argument simply [works onrefutes] a wrong model of understanding [as syntax] which he obviously takes as being [universallytoo widely] accepted as correct, but that is a wrong assumption, which once might have been true though. But today it really should be clear he simply starts with the wrong model and then proves the wrong model is wrong, it’s a farce. — Zelebg
this op is entirely nonsensical - it doesn't convey anything about the original argument, nor any insight into what might be wrong with the original argument. — Wayfarer
An associated question: What if the computer tells you it is aware of itself and not simply aware to the extent it can answer questions? What would be your test for self-awareness? — jgill
There is no sure fire test. You can't ask me and I can't ask you any question that tests self-awareness. If you say you have it, then from my point of view it could be true, or it could be just a programmed response.
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