What's emerges as extraordinary is that people like you, presumably educated and smart, find this extraordinary.
Could it be that we are unknowingly creating god on earth?
Yes, our purpose to create God on Earth.
...I point out that given the volume of this planet almost entirely consists of conditions inimicable to life and, likewise, the volume of the observable universe is exponentially even more lifeless, it's patently unsound to conclude anything other than that the cosmos either is (A) "fine-tuned" for lifelessness or (B) not "fine-tuned" at all, but only appears "fine-tuned" due our self-serving/flattering cognitive biases (such as how we misrecognize that our scientific models...
Being tied for first is not as good as being first on your own.
I think that working out a structure for AI in principle is meaningless.
The advanced use of language is - as far as we humans know - essential for intelligence, so any 'principle' that does not answer how it is to be achieved in practice is suspect.
Let me give an example to make my point.
Natural selection holds that complex life-forms do not necessarily evolve from less complex forms by adding complexity to achieve a more sophisticated form of a particular mechanism-such as flagella for some bacteria.
You have to explicitly tell the computer what to do at each step.
How would you go about writing the actual instructions for feeling pain?
Would anyone suppose that this device understood the sentences it translated?
Is that what you have in mind?
Again, how would you every know that a program incorporated qualia?
With title I wanted to suggest this particular arrangement of hardware components is important to achieve all that.Ah. I was misled by the title.
Yet how could you know that the system had such an experience?
However you want to define consciousness, im asking how would you know. The reason why Im asking is because it would be very difficult to do, considering how very little we actually know about consciousness. How do you know you will have replicated it in this computer when you would have no way of accounting for missing aspects/basis (because you do not even know what they are)?
How would you achieve that though? If your program is run on a common computer, it will boil down to a deterministic set of instructions.
Its audio output will entirely be determined by its initial code and visual input history. The person who codes and interacts with it can have 100% control over its output. Could you call that free will?
For the purposes of the intended discussion do you care about how A and B work?
I think that the qualia sense of experience is crucial. Without it there can be no consciousness nor free will.
You need some externally derived driver for pain and pleasure. Without their stimuli the concept of 'will' is impossible to actualise.
So-called free will has to choose between criteria for a decision. Ultimately, the way it decides is by weighing the pain/pleasure the different choices will entail.
How does your AI learn language?
When we look at the outside world, we organize it so that all future states are fully consistent with all past states. This is necessary for us to make predictions, which we need in order to be able to act. When we do act, though, we consider that action to be guided by the future goal, not the past state of our mind. This is also necessary to be able to act.
Before moving on (i still haven't been able to decipher your position, at least we know you aren't an event-casual-libertarianist now) to an objection, what do you mean by the state of mind -Why did you even bring up the mechanism then? being a "determiner"? Are you saying that it is a substance of it's own independent of causation?
Actually, that isn’t classical compatibilism at all is it?
I’m not aware of anyone proposing this, but wouldn’t this be an argument for free will rather than against it?
But what are you abstracting from? Scientists abstract from observations or from more fine-grained models. What is the basis for your proposal?
How is this an example of downward causation?