If not, then what makes the processor(s) in Data, Eva or any potential computer different from pencil and paper? — Marchesk
The OP question is, of course, a variant of the Chinese Room problem. — SophistiCat
All universal computers are equivalent. What you need to argue is that a billion Chinese human computers, cranking out an algorithm, constitutes a computationally universal system which is realisable. — tom
Why not just program qualia on your laptop? — tom
Irrelevant cultural side note: Why do we assign these mind numbing tasks to a billion Chinese? Do we suppose they have nothing better to do with their time. Why not a billion Africans? A billion Europeans and North Americans? Isn't it enough that they have to make all this junk we buy, without having to do all this calculation on top of everything else? — Bitter Crank
hat makes experiences of color etc. obtain is that those are properties of matter/structure/process complexes. You need the right sort of matter, in the right structures, undergoing the right processes, or you don't have the properties in question. — Terrapin Station
Pencil and paper can't get you a cup of "Earl Grey Tea, Hot!" or play Chopin, or win against you in a Chess match, et cetera. Pencil and paper can't even read itself. — Nils Loc
Humans were computers before electronic computers existed. Is there a reason why enough humans given enough time can't compute any algorithm? How is that different from a turing machine with infinite tape? — Marchesk
Does anyone have any idea what sort of algorithm that would be? The point is to ask what it is about algorithms which could lead to experience. — Marchesk
You can take this as a criticism either against the computational theory of mind, or a criticism against universal computation (the substrate doesn't matter). — Marchesk
Because racism. Only a Chinese substrate will realize a true Turing machine. God is Chinese, and Searles messed up by having the room output Chinese, otherwise he had a solid argument. Silly Searle. — Marchesk
Denial of known physics is always an option, particularly when there are no consequences that matter. — tom
I'm not aware that physics requires universal computation to be the case, only that some have asserted that all physical processes can be computed. Sounds like an ontological claim to me, but maybe there is a mathematical proof for this? — Marchesk
Even if so, the big challenge would be to show that everything about the living brain is reducible to physics. — Marchesk
You think the brain has some non-physical aspect to it? — tom
An experience is a biological phenomena: the identification of something, not an expression of it (eg with pen and paper). — jkop
What is it about computation, or translations from some sets of symbols to other sets of symbols, that could produce a state of conscious awareness? — jkop
It is except the focus is own conscious experience and not understanding. Arguably, a fair amount of progress has been made in computer understanding with machine translation, image recognition, search algorithms, etc. But no progress whatsoever, far as anyone can tell, has been made on experience. — Marchesk
Of course, what constitutes "true" understanding, as well as "true" conscious experience, is anyone's guess. I don't think there is a metaphysical truth of the matter here, because we are ultimately just stipulating how we are going to use words such as "understanding" and "conscious experience". — SophistiCat
That is, unless one intends to posit some positive metaphysics specific to consciousness - you know, the soul or some such. — SophistiCat
I'm under the impression that modern philosophers don't appeal to the soul when defending versions of consciousness which aren't explainable in physical terms. Rather, they come to the conclusion that physicalism is false. — Marchesk
Do physicalists think consciousness is "explainable" in physical terms? Life isn't even explained in physical terms, but rather in terms of abstractions that supervene on the physical. — tom
Let's say an algorithm was discovered that would give machines the ability to have experiences of color, sound, or whateve
They think consciousness is explainable in term of abstractions that supervene on the physical, such as neuroscience. So if neuroscience can fully explain color experience (at some point in the future), then it's physical. — Marchesk
More broadly, it's about whether an objective account can be given for subjectivity. Tying this back to the OP, if there is such an objective account, then it might be computable, and if so, then there should be some algorithm for computing an experience of seeing blue. And if that's the case, then why wouldn't a pencil and paper computation of the algorithm result in that experience? — Marchesk
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