So the question, then, is how do we arrive at the point where a super intelligence becomes embodied, survives and maintains itself independently of our assistance? — Joshs
Let's agree to disagree on consciousness, we've covered the territory. Please? — GLEN willows
I can’t think of anything else that so many people insist is unexplainable. — GLEN willows
1. A first person experience of the world. It needs to be an entity that can wander around and see by itself what elephants and rainbows look like. — Olivier5
I don't know what that means
:up: — Agent Smith
I don't think consciousness is an ‘it’, some special facility that some living things happen to have produced. Instead , the basis of consciousness is present in even single-celled organisms, and I strongly believe that this is a continuum that can be even be traced from
the non-living to the living. — Joshs
It's all speculation and I'm getting the VERY REAL sense that most of the members here are firm in their belief that it's literally impossible that science might provide a solution to the "Hard Problem" of consciousness. — GLEN willows
↪180 Proof seemed to think that neural nets might do it, and as far as I know neural nets are still computational (and observer-dependent). — Daemon
↪Daemon
I would like to know who thinks computation can cause consciousness. Is that a pan-psych argument? That a thermometer has a small level of consciousness. That’s definitely not my argument. — GLEN willows
Can you answer my questions?
Most humans are not creative. Most don't have awareness of their feelings. — Jackson
No one here KNOWS what consciousness is, so none of us can predict whether it will be something that can be explained with neuroscience, or created and put into a robot or computer. — GLEN willows
As for AI most of the arguments are based on what computers can do now, not what they can do in the future, ex. quantum computers. — GLEN willows
:up: ... or advanced neural nets (post von Neumann systems). — 180 Proof
You will have to elaborate as to why you consider functions to be observer dependent, but not the existence of other minds. — sime
Most don't have awareness of their feelings. — Jackson
He proposed that if you replace each neuron with a tiny computer computing the right exit signals based on the input, — Hillary
I understand what the Chinese Room is doing...correct me if I'm wrong. It's dispelling the notion that the computer is doing anything that requires complex thought. — GLEN willows
Choose whether you want your ones to be the top row or the bottom row. You can either start at the top and increase the place value as you go down, or start at the bottom with your tens, hundreds, thousands and so on above you.
Regardless, it still doesn't mean that an AI device can't eventually develop such advanced capacities, and even consciousness. — GLEN willows
Read Searle - not a fan. The Chinese Room hasn't fared well over time. — GLEN willows
So if consciousness and the material brain are not literally the same thing, how do we avoid dualism? — GLEN willows
I'm being careful NOT to claim it WILL be explained by science, just that it could. — GLEN willows
Someone with a photographic memory has to have full detailed recall of every 'snapshot' their eyes have taken in since the day they were born. — universeness
Eidetic/photographic memory in humans is not scientifically proven. Every tested case has failed. — universeness
From what I can see it is a configuration as whole, rather than a boundary (appearance of separation) itself, that enables consciousness. — Possibility
I do think there is awareness, but not consciousness. The bacterium as a whole is not aware of the attractant’s location. But a chemical process within this group is aware of changes in the chemical gradient of the attractant (allowed through by the chemical process in the cell wall). — Possibility
You missed in that, too. I am a professional programmer and work with computers since 1982! — Alkis Piskas
Do you mean that when we switch a light on/off and its result, when we turn a device on/off and its result, etc. occur in our minds only? — Alkis Piskas
Input Voltages for Logic Gates
Logic gate circuits are designed to input and output only two types of signals: “high” (1) and “low” (0), as represented by a variable voltage: full power supply voltage for a “high” state and zero voltage for a “low” state. In a perfect world, all logic circuit signals would exist at these extreme voltage limits, and never deviate from them (i.e., less than full voltage for a “high,” or more than zero voltage for a “low”).
However, in reality, logic signal voltage levels rarely attain these perfect limits due to stray voltage drops in the transistor circuitry, and so we must understand the signal level limitations of gate circuits as they try to interpret signal voltages lying somewhere between full supply voltage and zero.
Voltage Tolerance of TTL Gate Inputs
TTL gates operate on a nominal power supply voltage of 5 volts, +/- 0.25 volts. Ideally, a TTL “high” signal would be 5.00 volts exactly, and a TTL “low” signal 0.00 volts exactly.
However, real TTL gate circuits cannot output such perfect voltage levels, and are designed to accept “high” and “low” signals deviating substantially from these ideal values.
“Acceptable” input signal voltages range from 0 volts to 0.8 volts for a “low” logic state, and 2 volts to 5 volts for a “high” logic state.
“Acceptable” output signal voltages (voltage levels guaranteed by the gate manufacturer over a specified range of load conditions) range from 0 volts to 0.5 volts for a “low” logic state, and 2.7 volts to 5 volts for a “high” logic state
I don't know what does "mind" mean to you, but the functioning of robots, like computers, is based on electronic circuits. And these circuits work on the basis of rudimentary and logic (AND, OR, XOR, etc.), which are reduced into 0/1 states. This occurs at a "low level". — Alkis Piskas
At a higher level, human beings use programming, which can involve quite sophisticated and intelligent algorithms, and this programming --software-- is then "translated" into low level commands for the computer/robot firmware and hardware.
The organism is not really separate from its environment, — Possibility
Integration seems to me the prerequisite here for consciousness. — Possibility
‘Non-conscious sensory mechanisms’ are just members with particularly useful awareness characteristics, like the cell wall. — Possibility
I don't actually know what the latest biological definition of life is — bert1
My view could perhaps be: before x can be conscious, there has to be a conscious p, q and r. — bert1