Is it to be implemented on a digital computer? You mentioned logic gates. — Daemon
The brain is not modular like a man-made machine (see above) and neither is the body. The brain relies on a supply of blood, and the liver plays a major role in providing that. — Daemon
IIT, based on the scholarpedia page.
In formulating the axioms, Tononi uses these criteria:
1. About experience itself; — frank
Scott Aaronson debunkificated this — fishfry
think the whole thing is scientifically naive. I was thinking about parts of the body that don't participate in consciousness, I thought of hair. But try stroking your hair.
Consciousness is embodied. — Daemon
Consciousness is embodied. — Daemon
Neither can be directly seen and identified as objects but physicists can justify supposing that they necessarily exist. — magritte
Scott Aaronson debunkificated this a while back.
Consciousness may not require a liver, let's say a lobster is conscious and doesn't have a liver, but the lobster or human does need to have the equipment to remain alive and...conscious. If the human hadn't had a liver to start with, it wouldn't have become conscious. — Daemon
The actual mechanisms are so much more messy, plastic, multifaceted than binary logic gates. — Daemon
Bacteria can swim towards a desirable stimulus (let's say some sugar) or away from a toxic chemical. It seems they would need to recognise a kind of pattern in the increasing or decreasing concentration of the chemical. — Daemon
We can take over the functions of the heart, lungs, and kidneys with machinery. Hospitals do it everyday. The patient can be wide awake while being supported in this way. So whether the body is modular or not, whether a human needs a liver, I think that's a side issue. — frank
But it's not like some sort of mystical fuzz. Is it? — frank
I don't see why it would need to recognize a pattern. — frank
When the hospital takes over vital functions they are taking over something that's already in operation, that already has to be in operation for the person to be in a position to be conscious at all. We can't make the whole thing from scratch, using machinery. — Daemon
And the brain can't be isolated from the rest of the body, it's enmeshed with the rest of the body. — Daemon
But for you consciousness is different from that kind of function? We can't identify a body part that produces it? — frank
An "abstract" division, as you say, is enough for our purposes. — frank
I think defining consciousness using only the flow of information is lacking. For starters I'd include that conscious entity needs to recognize patterns in this information. — original2
It's not entirely isolated though. The blood brain barrier is a filter isn't it, not a seal. — Daemon
I appreciate that Tononi began with abstract mathematical Information as fundamental, and derived human-like Consciousness as an emergent phenomenon. That bypasses the distractions of worrying about the feelings of subatomic particles. :smile:IIT, originated by Giulio Tonini, is an attempt to specify the system requirements for consciousness. — frank
Can I just say how much I'm enjoying the discussion Frank, I really appreciate you posting the summaries and will wait patiently until more arrives. — Daemon
I appreciate that Tononi began with abstract mathematical Information as fundamental, and derived human-like Consciousness as an emergent phenomenon. That bypasses the distractions of worrying about the feelings of subatomic particles. — Gnomon
A conscious entity would need to interpret the information flow.
P.S. Is there an automatic way to quote other posts in the style most people do that here? It eludes my perception. — original2
My gut tells me that if an entity is able to match information to patterns, it is a mark of consciousness, though not necessarily a big one. By pattern i mean some generalized, meta-information that describes information succintly. — original2
Composition allows for elementary (first-order) elements to form distinct higher-order mechanisms, and for multiple mechanisms to form a structure. — frank
Does the theory ever address the question of what constitutes a "distinct" mechanism (without a human being making the call)? Without that, the theory doesn't get off the ground, or we have panpsychism, which doesn't explain anything. — Daemon
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