From Wikipedia:
A philosophical zombie or p-zombie argument is a thought experiment in philosophy of mind that imagines a hypothetical being that is physically identical to and indistinguishable from a normal person but does not have conscious experience, qualia, or sentience. For example, if a philosophical zombie were poked with a sharp object it would not inwardly feel any pain, yet it would outwardly behave exactly as if it did feel pain, including verbally expressing pain.
An unself-conscious and unaware organism that acts as if it's self-conscious and aware in a way that cannot be detected either physically or by observing its behavior is conscious and aware. — T Clark
Careful with the syllogism. Not that the computer, if it passes the test, is a person. It is that the computer is intelligent.If a machine can fool a person into believing that it itself is a person, it must be considered as AI. In other words, AI is a person. — TheMadFool
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's the principle of the identity of indiscernibles which, unlike its converse, the principle of the indiscernibility of identicals, is, last I checked, controversial. — TheMadFool
Careful with the syllogism. Not that the computer, if it passes the test, is a person. It is that the computer is intelligent. — Caldwell
What you call "the identity of indiscernables," a phrase I hadn't heard before, is a central one to how I see the world. If you can't tell the difference, there is no difference. Both the Turing test and the P-zombie apocalypse are good tests of the principle. — T Clark
Dude, don't re-interpret the Turing test. Stick to what the Turing test says.You can't tell the difference and, ergo, by the Turing principle, the AI is a conscious (makes it a person) OR, intriguingly, if that's a hard pill to swallow... — TheMadFool
Dude, don't re-interpret the Turing test. Stick to what the Turing test says. — Caldwell
I avoided including p-zombies in the OP because I wanted to focus on the Turing principle. — TheMadFool
I'm mostly interested in the broad principle you described, what you call the "identity of indescernibles," — T Clark
So, what's your take? Do you think the Turing principle (identity of indiscernibles) is justified/unjustified? — TheMadFool
Turin didn't think a human could be fooled. — Gary M Washburn
What if there aren't any machines? What if that is just a concept we project onto experience?Something a machine can never bring to it — Gary M Washburn
Turing principle — TheMadFool
When I look up "Turing principle" it discusses the computability of functions. I don't think that's what you're talking about. What do you mean specifically? — T Clark
I edited the OP to correct the confusion. — TheMadFool
Pretty limited, but apparently some people couldn't tell that it was computer generated. — T Clark
The human examiner could not be fooled. The critics of Turing Test had already addressed its limitation -- the "test" is very limited to the basics to which both the human and computer subjects could say yes or no. So the test itself is not representative of what we, humans, would call adequate measure of human intelligence or consciousness. It is intentionally rigged so that not only the human subject, but also the computer could respond.This is interesting. I’m not sure either that a human would necessarily be fooled—it seems logically possible for an AI to be indiscernible from a human, but in reality a person could discern the two if they understood the limitations in the AI’s programming and exploited them to discover it. — AJJ
So the test itself is not representative of what we, humans, would call adequate measure of human intelligence or consciousness. — Caldwell
The premise underlying the Turing Test is:
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's the principle of the identity of indiscernibles which, unlike its converse, the principle of the indiscernibility of identicals, is, last I checked, controversial. — TheMadFool
Never having read anything by Leibniz, I am assuming that the "principle of the identity of indiscernibles" would dictate that two items which are utterly indiscernible must be held to be identical, ergo the same type of thing? — Michael Zwingli
Raven, or is it Mystique — Gary M Washburn
Yes...See below — TheMadFool
I am currently chewing over...thinking about these two "principles". I have another question. Is "the indiscernibility of identicals" a proposition of Liebniz, as is "the identity of indiscernibles"? — Michael Zwingli
This might help: — TheMadFool
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