I'm sorry, I don't remember this question. — RogueAI
Well, I raised it in every post today...
It's more like: how can you not see the absurdity. — RogueAI
At first sight, it does seem absurd that these devices could compute, but when you work through the Turing-equivalence argument, you see that it is not, after all, absurd at all. So here you have a difference between an emotional and a rational response to the issue.
No. I don't think a rock-shuffling device that can pass a Turing test is absurd. — RogueAI
There seems to be something of a misunderstanding here -- my question referred to Turing equivalence; I did not (and did not intend to) raise the Turing test. The fact, however, that you accept that a rock-shuffling device could pass a Turing test -- something that not even an electronic digital computer has done so far -- just goes to show that your issue is not, after all, with the medium in which the computation is performed, even if it feels to you that, somehow, it should be.
I think a conscious rock-shuffling device is absurd — RogueAI
We can, with complete generality, substitute 'digital computer', or any other type of Turing-equivalent machine, for 'rock-shuffling device' in this statement. Therefore, this just underscores the point that you just cannot believe that any Turing-equivalent machine of any type could be conscious, and that your objection is not actually dependent on the type of device.
Materialism's absolute lack of progress... — RogueAI
Yes, we already agreed that it is a premise, but no other approach has done any better.
It reminds me of the tortured explanations fundamentalists give — RogueAI
Have you read any Chalmers recently? And Chalmers is a model of clarity compared to, for example Hegel; It is just that his arguments are subtle and nuanced for an ordinary mortal such as myself. Arguments that qualia are factual knowledge are, IMHO, as tortuous as anything that fundamentalists come up with.
The obvious difference between mental states and brain states. — RogueAI
That is not a problem for materialism: mental states are abstract emergent phenomena caused by physical processes.
A blind person really could understand what "seeing" is if they just knew enough about the brain states involved. — RogueAI
Any materialist who thinks that is probably mistaken - knowledge of brain states does not necessarily give you the ability to instantiate them.
. Why shouldn't I assume minds and consciousness are the foundation of reality? — RogueAI
You can believe whatever you like, but why, then, do you care what us illusions think?
I don't believe there are physical devices. I'm an idealist, for the reasons given. — RogueAI
Why, then, would you have any opinion at all about what rocks can and cannot do?