You're projecting mentalism onto it. — InPitzotl
Well, there's an apparent singularity of purpose; this body doesn't seem to arm wrestle itself or reach in between the two options. And there's a continuity of perspective; when this mind recalls a past event it is from a recalled first person perspective. So there's at least a meaningful way to assign singularity to the person in this body. — InPitzotl
I would, for those symbols, if "correctly" means semantically. — InPitzotl
But we social constructs use language to mean the things we use language to mean. And a CR isn't going to use chips and dip to mean what we social constructs use chips and dip to mean without being able to relate the symbols "chips and dip" to chips and dip. — InPitzotl
Indeed it is, but that's a different question. You're asking a few of them!That's pretty mentalistic — path
"Trained into us" is making an assumption; as is "learn to talk this way". There is a social practice of naming people and treating them as distinct individuals for sure, but there are these features as well that I just described... to simply presume this comes out of a social construct requires an argument. We also know singularity of identity breaks down in certain cases, such as patients who underwent corpus callosotomy, and such individuals have distinct manifestations from the normative cases. It's interesting to me that a person whom we may have named "Charlie" may develop a case of Alien Hand Syndrome.I also have the intuition that I am a single consciousness. But I'm suggesting that this is trained into us. We just learn to talk this way. — path
The ability to plan behaviors directed towards and manage to successfully attain a goal of getting chips and dip.What does meaning add to reacting to 'get the chips' by getting the chips? — path
I know, and such is apparently the trend here, but I feel like too often discussions about AI become hand wavy.Also, yeah,I was using the Turing test metaphorically, extending its meaning. — path
The ability to plan behaviors directed towards and manage to successfully attain a goal of getting chips and dip. — InPitzotl
to simply presume this comes out of a social construct requires an argument. — InPitzotl
I know, and such is apparently the trend here, but I feel like too often discussions about AI become hand wavy. — InPitzotl
Indeed it is, but that's a different question. You're asking a few of them! — InPitzotl
http://paulaustinmurphypam.blogspot.com/2015/10/comments-on-wittgensteins-beetle-in-box.htmlHowever, there's more to a pain than our knowledge of it. It has both an ontological and an experiential status. We can also accept the fact that any ontological and experiential status the pain does have will itself be coloured by public language. (For one, those parts of public language which have given us the tools and concepts to think about a pain’s ontological and experiential status!) Though, yet again, there's still something about pain that's above and beyond its epistemic position and its ontological and experiential status. There's a state - a pain - that's the subject of all these public expressions. These public expressions are about something other than themselves. They're about pain. — link
Then I would say it probably understands things, but not necessarily that it's conscious. I don't have a great model for what it takes for something to be conscious yet, so wouldn't know when to apply what metric for that. — InPitzotl
But why do we believe that our fellow meat-puppets are conscious? — path
I do think this is a difficult and complex issue. But I also think that it assumes the subject/object distinction as fundamental. At the same time, one can make a case that subject/object talk is only possible against a background of social conventions. In other words the 'subject' must be plural in some sense. Or we might say that the subject and its object is a ripple in the noises and marks we make. — path
Computers are calculators, albeit immensely powerful calculators. They can deal with anything that can be quantified. But being has a qualitative element, a felt dimension, which is intrinsic to it, which can't be objectified, as it can't be defined.
This essay says it much better than I ever could https://aeon.co/essays/your-brain-does-not-process-information-and-it-is-not-a-computer — Wayfarer
Other beings are more than just like us - each of them is 'I', from inside their perspective. — Wayfarer
And solispsism is really a bizarre notion to seriously entertain, isn't it? — Wayfarer
After all, humans are called 'beings'. I think this is taken for granted at our peril. There's a deep reason for it. — Wayfarer
So the fact that the subject is not something objectively discernable, doesn't mean that it can simply be disregarded or glossed over, although that is pretty much what eliminative materialism, positivism and behaviourism wish to do. — Wayfarer
If it can't be fitted with the procrustean bed of naturalism, well, then, it can be disregarded. But the point about the 'transcendence of the subject' is actually another facet of the hard problem of consciousness. — Wayfarer
The first question is whether quality and quantity are actually that different or not? — TheMadFool
Splitting 'what is' into subject and object looks linguistic and cultural. We can dissolve 'I' into an ocean of speech act conventions. — path
There’s facts, and there’s interpretation. — Wayfarer
The A.I. produces “elaboration graphs" on a screen. For the MacBeth question, the program produced about 20 boxes containing information such as “Lady Macbeth is Macbeth’s wife” and “Macbeth murders Duncan.” Below that were lines connecting to other boxes, connecting explicit and inferred elements of the story. — Frank Pray
I think Searle was a bot. — path
Why is he so sure that he is swimming in something semantic? An appeal to intuition? 'I promise you, I can see redness!' — path
And what do those symbols refer to? Not the symbols themselves, but actual chips and dip. So somehow you need to get the symbols to relate to actual chips and dip. — InPitzotl
This essay says it much better than I ever could https://aeon.co/essays/your-brain-does-not-process-information-and-it-is-not-a-computer — Wayfarer
I challenged researchers there to account for intelligent human behaviour without reference to any aspect of the IP metaphor. They couldn’t do it, and when I politely raised the issue in subsequent email communications, they still had nothing to offer months later. They saw the problem. They didn’t dismiss the challenge as trivial. But they couldn’t offer an alternative. — Robert Epstein: The Empty Brain
The distinction which can be found, between the ideas of subject and object, and to which many attest, is I believe, and such as you assert, also, a product of convention, yet nonetheless essential for structuring of the ability to know, to conceive; a heuristic of sorts, whose significance can scarcely be overstated, that enables the mind to recognize itself as agent, as capable of guiding the whole of its own actions, absent any extraneous influence, and thereby attaining freedom of choice, and thought. — Vessuvius
Is there a thorough historical analysis of the problem of consciousness? One that, for example, links the disappearance of general animism with sedentism and agriculture and continues the plot up to now? — Heiko
I can think of better things to be dissolved into. — Wayfarer
If I say of myself that it is only from my own case that I know what the word "pain" means - must I not say the same of other people too? And how can I generalize the one case so irresponsibly?
Now someone tells me that he knows what pain is only from his own case! --Suppose everyone had a box with something in it: we call it a "beetle". No one can look into anyone else's box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. --Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box. One might even imagine such a thing constantly changing. --But suppose the word "beetle" had a use in these people's language? --If so it would not be used as the name of a thing. The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something: for the box might even be empty. --No, one can 'divide through' by the thing in the box; it cancels out, whatever it is.
That is to say: if we construe the grammar of the expression of sensation on the model of 'object and designation' the object drops out of consideration as irrelevant. — Wittgenstein
the point I’m making is simply that humans are designated ‘beings’ for a reason, and part of the implication of that is to distinguish beings from things, objects, or devices. — Wayfarer
As regards the concept of the subject, I respectfully submit that subjectivity, or better, subject-hood, is not a concept per se but a fundamental existential reality which is logically prior to conceptual thought. To say that is not to malign conceptualisation in the least, but to draw attention to logical priorities. A major point about scientific method is that it starts by ‘bracketing out the subject’. But forgetting that it has done this is the beginning of scientism. — Wayfarer
(And still is, presumably.) A machine with a sense of / illusion of consciousness? Agreed. He himself would of course reject "illusion of", and even "sense of" except in the narrower sense of "accurate sense of". Not "machine": he embraces that. — bongo fury
Yes, he might be wrong trusting that kind of intuition... but... be right about swimming in something semantic: namely, the social game of pointing symbols at things. — bongo fury
https://aeon.co/essays/your-brain-does-not-process-information-and-it-is-not-a-computerBut the IP metaphor is, after all, just another metaphor – a story we tell to make sense of something we don’t actually understand. — link
But there were reasons for slavery, infanticide, etc. Such reasons aren't necessarily reasonable by our standards here and now. — path
I'll just say that my philosophical influences and approach are anti-scientism, where scientism is understood as bad philosophy pasted on to mere prediction and control. — path
they perform calculations - vast numbers at astonishing speeds. But they are no more sentient than calculators. — Wayfarer
There's a fairly recent essay on exactly this at Aeon, The Blind Spot, which I happen to think is a tremendously important essay. — Wayfarer
But, are there any standards? Or are the standards now 'what I deem acceptable'? That argument is a kind of sleight-of-hand, which can be used to rationalise, or rather relativise, any ethical claim whatever. — Wayfarer
I've often been presented with the beetle-in-the-box argument, but I've never seen the point of it. I think the reality of empathy is such that we naturally see ourselves in others, and others in ourselves, unless there's something that interferes with that, like sociopathology (which it often does.) — Wayfarer
We regard respect for the subjective as being a kind of anthropomorphic sentimentality, — Wayfarer
which are the accidental byproduct of an essentially fortuitious process - just the kinds of processes that science now assumes. But our judgement regarding this process is itself a product of the modern scientific outlook, so spot the circularity. — Wayfarer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.