Later, I make a distinction for philosophical purposes between 'awareness' and 'consciousness' exactly for the purpose of clarifying the difference between human and animal. This is a stipulated distinction and not a matter of common usage. I am exactly not claiming that dogs are aware of being aware, but merely that they are aware, when they aren't in common parlance 'unconscious'. — unenlightened
Searle already answered this question. Even if the robot can seemingly 'display' consciousness, it only a syntactic display of consciousness lacking and semantic understanding as shown in the 'china room' theory — Jamesk
Are you sure that dogs are aware rather than just conscious? If by "awareness" you mean they possess qualia - i.e. they not only detect a particular shade of grey (dogs may not be the best animal for this) but are also aware they are detecting it, there is no evidence for that or reason to suspect it beyond anthropomorphism. There is no evidence that non-human animals possess qualia, which seems to render them, by your definition, unaware. — tom
The best way to conduct a Turing test is to refuse to say in advance what it will be, because as soon as one tells the programmer, he can program the appropriate response. So I have given away my secret here, but there are plenty of others... — unenlightened
There is still the question of simulation vs the "real thing." — anonymous66
And now we have to talk about evidence again. Anything whatsoever that is evident to me is, if the term means anything, conveyed through my qualia. My qualia are my evidence but they cannot be evidence of your qualia, let alone a dog's. — unenlightened
Is the Turing test a test for the subjective experience that (hopefully) we all agree determines consciousness? Or is it a measure of whether or not some AI can fool people with its behaviors? — anonymous66
Humans display the highest known level of intelligence that leads to a high level of conceptual self awareness that separates us from the rest of the animals. — Jamesk
Even if our brains do function on some level in similar ways to other species or computers, what separates us is this ability to learn seemingly without boundaries. — Jamesk
Animals do not create knowledge, but exist entirely within the constraints of their genetic programming. — tom
But it can't be simply that intelligence leads to self awareness, or computers would be self aware... — Tom
This translates as know-how transmitted socially and not genetically. — unenlightened
I can dismiss Searle because his view requires naive realism- and that is demonstrably false — anonymous66
Consciousness is a biological phenomenon, it arises from conditions of satisfaction such as a brain and things to be conscious of. So, I would describe it as such. — jkop
Brain" is a term we use to describe a very broad class of information-processing structures build up with a network of neurons, sometimes we also speak of "electronic brains" and we also have artificial "neural networks" (which are non-biological) but we don't have a precise definition of what should be considered brain and what should not. — Babbeus
Your questioning of 'brain' is unwarranted, I write 'biological', recall, and brains are literally biological. You can't get more precise than that. — jkop
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