But it's true that the notion of conceivability in Chalmers' argument is a bit troublesome. It positively invites the charge of begging the question, because it is so easy to confuse "We can conceive x", with "I believe there could be an x", where the latter obviously rests on one's philosophical commitments. — jamalrob
Creativity and sentience may be the same thing or mutually necessary. One difference between a p-zombie and a human is that the p-zombie would not be able to create knowledge - i.e it would be stuck in its programming, just as animals are. — tom
What I'm suggesting is that p-zombies cannot possess a GENERAL intelligence, because they cannot create knowledge of themselves — tom
'The same' means 'the same type'. — Wayfarer
Not at all. Notice the last passage: — Wayfarer
Thus one would discover that they [machines, p-zombies] did not act on the basis of knowledge, but merely as a result of the disposition of their organs. For whereas reason is a universal instrument that can be used in all kinds of situations, these organs need a specific disposition for every particular action. — Descartes
Non-rational creatures can't form concepts, they're essential to the operations of reason. — Wayfarer
Physically identical flying pigs are uncontroversially inconceivable. It is a contradiction, since by flying we just mean, and have always meant, something physical. This is not the case with consciousness and the mind. — jamalrob
Leave aside for a moment the question of whether it counts as genuine (as opposed to simulated) "knowledge" and "reason" — Cabbage Farmer
It seems likely we're getting there; I see no reason to expect it's out of the question; and it seems an empirical question. — Cabbage Farmer
I leave open the possibility that there are various sorts of rational creature. For instance, a rational sentient animal, a rational sentient robot, or a rational nonsentient robot. — Cabbage Farmer
Very obviously humans are physical and very obviously we are conscious, what is not made obvious by the argument is why it would be necessary to define consciousness in such a way that consciousness must be excluded from the physical — m-theory
How can you leave that aside? If knowledge is not genuine, then it's not knowledge. — Wayfarer
But I think in this context, it's 'intelligence' that has to be put in scare quotes, not 'knowledge' or 'reason'; it's not really knowledge until there's a knower involved. Otherwise it is still just binary code. — Wayfarer
I quite agree that Descartes was spectacularly wrong about many things, but I still think his depiction of the universal nature of reason is on the mark. I think it's a big mistake, and one made every day, to feel as though reason is 'something that can be explained'; reason is always the source of explanation, not the object of it. — Wayfarer
As Thomas Nagel says, somewhere, reason often seems to be imposed on us, it is something we have to yield to, oftentimes through painful learning. — Wayfarer
Whereas, I think us moderns take it for granted that reason 'has evolved' and that, therefore, we have an in-principle grasp of what it is - namely an adaption, something which helps us to survive. But that is precisely what has been criticized as the 'instrumentalisation of reason'* which is endemic in materialist accounts of the nature of the mind. — Wayfarer
Another effect of that, is that we think because we understand it, that it is something that can be replicated by us in other systems. Hence the debate! — Wayfarer
As far as I can see h. sapiens is the only rational sentient animal. I don't think robots are rational, but are subject to reason; higher intelligences, if there are any, are superior to it. And all of that is in keeping with classical Western philosophy and metaphysics. — Wayfarer
But we have no clue as to its origin and its mysterious ability to make the world intelligible, just as we have no way of rationally working out what the absolute origin of the world, or its capacity to be made intelligible by reason, is. This is where reason ends and faith based on intuition begins. — John
Does the robot butler know the way to the store? Has the robot butler learned to recognize each of the guests' voices yet? And so on. It's meaningful talk, we know how to check for the answer, and there would be good reason to extend usage this way under such circumstances. — Cabbage Farmer
Why should we suppose that rationality cannot "explain" rationality; that language cannot be used to speak about language; that thinking cannot be about thinking; and so on? This is a familiar pattern for us; you and I tend to diverge at such points. — Cabbage Farmer
A dog forms rational expectations on the basis of past experience: Hearing a familiar sound that has been frequently followed by a desirable result, a dog adopts an attitude of expectation, even while the states of affairs reported by that sound remain otherwise hidden from view. The dog moves through attitudes resembling hope, wonder, doubt, and positive anticipation with respect to the prospect that sometimes, though not always, follows the sound. It seems absurd to deny the dog knows what it expects while it's expecting, knows what outcome it has in mind. — Cabbage Farmer
Do you have an argument for that? In any case, even if it were accepted, it does not constitute a final explanation, but remains just another unverifiable conceptual model to be taken on faith. Any model require further explanation unless it is concluded 'This is just the way things are'. It's easy enough to see that there can be no final explanation, which means that reason and the world are intractable mysteries. — John
Everything that can be observed as conscious is conscious. Every P-zombie can be observed as conscious. Therefore, every P-zombie is conscious. — quine
Given that a p-zombie is defined as something that appears to be conscious (although, what does it mean to appear to be conscious?) but isn't conscious, your conclusion is a contradiction. — Michael
His argument is a simple modus ponens. If A, then B. A. Therefore B. You're saying that is a contradiction? — Terrapin Station
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.