Good attempt but tusks are nothing more than overgrown teeth. — TheMadFool
This is assuming that consciousness isnt physical, hence begging the question.. IF physicalism is true THEN p-zombies are impossible. — TheMadFool
Case point, does Ava in Ex Machina have consciousness? Without the ability to internally adapt and change behavior, she would be stuck in a feedback loop of choices that are easily predictable, thus not act like a human. — Christoffer
That is the right question. And the answer is: We can't know, because we don't have a bridge from the third-person perspective to the first-person perspective. Quite simply, both possibilities are conceivable. Likewise, p-zombies are also conceivable. — SolarWind
All that remains, that is the similarity principle. The more similar something is to us, the more likely we are to assume the first-person perspective. But the similarity principle is not a law of nature like others. — SolarWind
P-zombies require they can uphold the illusion of being a human over the course of time. But even the most complex P-zombie robot would not be able to sustain such an illusion for long. — Christoffer
But the question is, what if there was a chatbot that passed the Turing test? — SolarWind
Just a quick interjection... this statement suggests to me two things: (1) a non-repetitive robot is conscious, (2) a non-repetitive robot is incredibly difficult to build. Both 1 and 2 are dubious.It will mimic me in the first minute, then start repeating itself while I adapt and change my behavior pattern. — Christoffer
Just a quick interjection... this statement suggests to me two things: (1) a non-repetitive robot is conscious, (2) a non-repetitive robot is incredibly difficult to build. Both 1 and 2 are dubious. — InPitzotl
Explain yourself first. — TheMadFool
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