Al said:
What would you like consciousness to be?
You mean, how exactly it should be defined? In a concise way, preferably, but unfortunately I cannot think of a concise definition. If those "strong AI" guys win at the end, they could define it in technical terms ("we call a computer 'conscious' if it is able to perform 4'th order mega-quasi-wizard-Turing operations" or some such). I'd like that, at least if I learned enough about AI to understand such a definition.
Or do you mean what I'd like its nature to be? I prefer the strong AI notion, i.e. it comes from complexity alone, doesn't matter if the stuff it's made of is biological or electronic, behaves according to classical physics or some Penrosian meta-quantum- physics. This is because I worship Occam's Razor.
Todd said:
Penrose's argument is that the human brain can do things that are provably un-doable for a classic computer/Turing machine.
In "The Emperor's New Mind" he gives this example: A Turing Machine wouldn't be able to prove Godel's Theorem. As Richard says, very few scientists and philosophers take this argument serious. My own assessment was that it sounded like yet another silly "This statement is wrong"-paradox. Then again, very few scientists and philosophers understand Godel's Theorem. It's possible that Penrose is just too far ahead of his time.
jimmy said:
i wonder why you feel that "mindstuff" (whatever it is, if it is) must be physical in order to interact with the physical... i assume the opposite would be true, that the physical (for example, the brain) can only interact with other physical entities... true?
According to Denett, this is not just what I feel, it's something virtually all contemporary philosophers and scientists agree on. Even Descartes himself recognized that it was a big problem, it was just that he couldn't imagine any alternative. But the following question is crucial:
csaba said:
It would be interesting to establish what exactly "physical" means.
Today, physics is pretty much the theory of "everything", which renders "x is something physical" nearly tautological. One could imagine the objective World consisting of three classes of objects:
- physical objects which (this is the defining property for physical objects) interact with other physical objects
- nonphysical objects, such as spirits, which (defining property for nonphysical objects) don't interact with physical objects
- the human mind which is the only object that can interact with both. I suppose you could put "God" in this category as well, if you want.
In Descartes' time, nearly everybody saw "living objects" as possessing non-physical properties: the spiritual was interacting with the physical in animals, the human soma, maybe even in plants. So Descartes was outrageously materialistic for his time. Today, physics has become "everything" so we see Descartes as a dualist. But he was very much monist for his time.
Today, that discussion is obsolete, but maybe it has reapeared as the controversy of interpretation of quantum mechanics. Suppose that the quantum wave function (before it collapses) and determined quantum states (after the wave collapses) are deemed "physical", while the models of those physical things as imagined by a human mind are deemned non-physical. This is not to suggest that there is anything "magical" about the human brain: it's just that the information stored in the human brain (or a computer, or a paper book) is called non-physical if we focus on the information alone and don't care what particular storage medium is has been written to.
Now if one subscribes to Penrose's ideas, and/or to the notion that information is what is "really" out there and matter, space and energy are just abstractions, then the distsinction between physical and non-physical becomes blured, at least to me. But that might just be because I happen not to be able to think clearly about this.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket