I am open to discussing OP further if you wish.ok enough is enough. You are not discussing, you are just repeating and not trying to understand things in context. — Carlo Roosen
I would use uncertain if the system is not conscious otherwise I use doubt. I agree that a deterministic system could reach a state of uncertainty or doubt.I don't think there's any reason to assume a detemrinistic system cannot have 'doubt' implemented into a thing in that system. — flannel jesus
What are LLMs? Large language models?I'm actually pretty sure LLMs have already learned to internally represent various degrees of certainty in particular situations. — flannel jesus
So you agree that the conclusion follows from OP?1) OP says, doubt : an experience of uncertainty in a situation. From that (and other observations) it follows there must be a free mind. — Carlo Roosen
I am familiar with the hard problem of consciousness. What is consciousness to you?2) My problem is that "experience" and "mind" are both related to consciousness. There is so much debate about this topic, not leading to any useful conclusions. This post says it all: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/15512/logical-proof-that-the-hard-problem-of-consciousness-is-impossible-to-solve . Basically it says: when consciouness is involved, logical thinking is not capable to draw conclusions. Wrong tools for the job. — Carlo Roosen
Probably I wrote around a thousand codes during my career. Don't take me wrong I know what you are talking about.3) So to test you logic, I proposed another, temporal, definition of doubt, one that does not require consciousness. A mechanical "doubt", so to speak. This alternative definition: doubt = "a situation of uncertainty".
4) That is where my little program comes in. It is very simple of course, it just shows you can make a choice even if the both options are equally preferable. — Carlo Roosen
Sure. I am talking about a conscious agent who has a doubt in a situation.5) This shows that your OP depends on consciousness. — Carlo Roosen
If you have no interest in discussing OP which crucially depends on consciousness then that is the end of discussion.6) To me that means that I lose all interest in the matter, I have a different view on consciousness that shows why thinking/words are incapable of making conclusions about it, quite similar to the article I mentioned in 2) — Carlo Roosen
So you agree that the conclusion follows from OP? — MoK
What is consciousness to you? — MoK
that is the end of discussion. — MoK
Or does some internal neural mechanism in your subconscious "toss a coin"? — jgill
I think MoK is saying here that if you know the outcomes of a decision, you can form reasons for acting in a certain way. This means the act is not free in the sense that reasons impel us to act in one way or another - the brain is deterministic, and the reasons arise from the brain.
Alternatively, when you are ignorant and have doubt, you can choose freely because reasons do not impel you to act in a certain way. However, since the brain is deterministic, this free act must arise from a mind that can freely choose. — ToothyMaw
Exactly right. :100: :up: — MoK
I used the maze example to ensure our past experiences cannot affect the decision. — MoK
How could your experience help you in a situation when the outcomes of options are not clear? — MoK
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