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#161 |
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Muse
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Home
Posts: 890
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__________________
the source |
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#162 |
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Muse
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Home
Posts: 890
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__________________
the source |
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#163 |
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BOFH
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Sheffield
Posts: 4,190
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Aphorism: Subjects most likely to be declared inappropriate for humor are the ones most in need of it. |
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#164 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 4,897
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It was your own reasoning, with "matter" and "physical" swapped for "consciousness" and "think". You seemed to think you had made some point because you had a circular definition.
I was pointing out that circular definitions are easy to come by. You said you would like to see me find a circular definition for matter. I did. That is all.
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Recall when I asked you how you created your consciousness you were unable to answer.
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If any one alters the definitions, I cannot pretend to argue with him, until I know the meaning he assigns to these terms. - David Hume 1711-1776 |
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#165 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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The only meaning "digital" has in the real world is in terms of the interpretation we place on the information received. The electrical processes on an analogue telephone line are exactly the same as when converted to ADSL. It's just a matter of decoding at each end.
And the quality of reproduction of either analogue or digital is entirely dependent on the precision of the equipment. In any case, we see and hear the information in an entirely analogue way, because our senses don't work on digital. |
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"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#166 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 4,897
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You were drawing metaphysical conclusions on the basis of "thinking"
I said thinking was no better a metaphysical starting point than matter. I thought you understood that matter was not a metaphysical starting point at all, so it was a genuine misunderstanding. But at least we can now agree that thinking is no basis for drawing metaphysical conclusions. |
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If any one alters the definitions, I cannot pretend to argue with him, until I know the meaning he assigns to these terms. - David Hume 1711-1776 |
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#167 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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__________________
"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#168 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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__________________
"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#169 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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__________________
"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#170 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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When you say that something is not the subject of physics, then you are saying that you don't understand what is going on. Auto repair and house construction are understood in physical terms, and indeed the people who design houses and cars, and the materials used to make houses and cars, have to be very familiar with the physical principles involved. There are no mysterious, mystical "emergent properties" when it comes to houses and cars. We can follow what is going on from top to bottom. A brick or a brake has its engineering properties because of its physical characteristics.
When someone says that something is not in the purview of physics, that's the same as saying that it is not a matter of science. Neurological investigation is an important first step in the understanding of consciousness, but if there is no physical theory, there is no real understanding. |
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"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#171 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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However, they emerge because of the behaviour of the components of the car at an atomic level, and the connection between the behaviour of the atoms and the macro-scale behaviour of the car is well understood. When we say that we understand how a car works - how the ability to transport you from place to place emerges - we mean that we understand how the atomic level processes produce the large-scale processes. That is what physical understanding means.
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It's because we have such a strong understanding of the physical processes involved that we can, if we wish, produce electric cars, hybrid cars, electronic engine management systems, kinetic energy recovery braking systems and so on. It is because we don't have any understanding of how the atoms of the brain produce consciousness that we are totally unable to produce anything apart from a human brain that has the consciousness property.
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In fact, if you don't understand how cars work on a physical level, you might be able to drive 'em, repair 'em and maybe even build 'em, but you won't be able to design 'em.
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__________________
"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#172 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 4,897
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__________________
If any one alters the definitions, I cannot pretend to argue with him, until I know the meaning he assigns to these terms. - David Hume 1711-1776 |
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#173 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 4,897
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__________________
If any one alters the definitions, I cannot pretend to argue with him, until I know the meaning he assigns to these terms. - David Hume 1711-1776 |
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#174 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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In fact it does. There is no physical distinction between a digital and an analogue device. The difference is purely operational. A computer is a digital device because we choose to use it as such.
The reason this is an important distinction is because there's an apparent belief that digital devices are distinct in some sense from analogue devices. They aren't. We can treat digital devices as analogue, or analogue as digital, depending on our requirements. |
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"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#175 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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__________________
I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#176 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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__________________
I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#177 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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Now taht is the appearance, it could be a Brain In Vat situation, it could be that thoughts are partly determined or mostly determined causaly and that they are an appearance of interactive free will, when in fact they are not.
My point is that 'there appear to be the experiences we labels as thought', but the usage of the word 'myself' is yet undefined. Now if you use 'meslef' to denote the 'apparently organic body which I reference as mine' then I can agree to that. But the appearnce is that we are organice beings and that the brains of those being have neural nets which generate patterns of interaction we call thought. That requires a lot more than phenomenolgy, in phenomenology we could be BIVs.
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__________________
I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#178 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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Sorry, I don't get that either.
The usage is what determines the nature of the computation. Justa s in defintions of analog and digital. There are no absolutes, the usage of the machine is digital, that is the part that matters, the parts are use digitally whatever the ultimate construction. Why would it matter? (Most importantly)
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Your point being?
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I could sue my desktop computer as a hammer, that does not mean that it becomes a hammaer.
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You can use analog processes as well to generate analog computing algorithims, we don't. You are making a distinction based upon some absolute, the process is digital. That is physical process. It does not happen in some Kantian metaspace. |
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I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#179 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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__________________
I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#180 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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__________________
I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#181 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 17,332
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__________________
I’m not ready to make nice, I’m not ready to back down, I’m still mad as hell and I don’t have time to go round and round and round, It’s too late to make it right I probably wouldn’t if I could, ‘Cause I’m mad as hell, Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should- Dixie Chicks |
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#182 |
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deus ex machina
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,351
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__________________
The phrase deus ex machina (literally "god out of a machine") describes an unexpected, artificial, or improbable character, device, or event introduced suddenly in a work of fiction or drama to resolve a situation or untangle a plot... |
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#183 |
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Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Brighton, Sussex, England
Posts: 7,316
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The arguments I make tend to be neo-Kantian. They are addressed to people who are still engaged in pre-Kantian debates about ontology and epistemology (not that most of them realise this). You are talking about philosophical arguments that occured after the period of philosophical history which Kant triggered. In other words, people have to understand the issues raised by Kant and the people who immediately followed him before they can understand the relevance of Wittgenstein, Neurath and logical positivism.
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"I am real!" said Alice, and began to cry. "You won't make yourself a bit realler by crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there's nothing to cry about." |
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#184 |
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Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Brighton, Sussex, England
Posts: 7,316
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One doesn't end up at Nietzsche or post-modernism because one wants to. One just ends up there because there is nowhere-else left to go.
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"I am real!" said Alice, and began to cry. "You won't make yourself a bit realler by crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there's nothing to cry about." |
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#185 |
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Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Brighton, Sussex, England
Posts: 7,316
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No-one has got to the bottom of the question because nobody has worked out what question they are actually trying to ask. I'm afraid it really does come down to how you define the word "consciousness". If it is not possible to come to an agreement about exactly what is meant by that word and exactly what question we are trying to ask about the thing to which it refers then we stand zero chance of reaching a sensible answer.
Garbage in, garbage out. |
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"I am real!" said Alice, and began to cry. "You won't make yourself a bit realler by crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there's nothing to cry about." |
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#186 |
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Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Brighton, Sussex, England
Posts: 7,316
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What, precisely, do you think is not a "semantical argument"?
"Just a semantic argument" should only be used to refer to an argument where the only serious point of contention is what a specific word means. For example, if a person disagrees that sex with a consenting pre-teen should be refered to as "rape" but accepts that it should still be illegal then it really is a merely semantic argument. You, on the other hand, continually try to claim "it's just semantics", even when there is a very real argument going on underneath the semantics. You use it as a means of avoiding the real underlying argument. Arguments about consciousness end up being arguments about the definition of words NOT because there is a genuine disagreement about what the relevant words mean but because it is impossible to resolve the dispute simply by agreeing to a new and clearer set of definitions. It is not possible to come to agreement precisely because there is a genuine underlying logical problem (or set of logical problems) which certain people try to hide by providing definitions of words which are designed to avoid acknowledging a real, non-semantical problem. In this specific case, they try to avoid being forced to acknowledge a genuine difficulty in studying consciousness by attempting to define the word "consciousness" to mean something which can concievably be tacked by science rather than defining it to mean what most people mean when they raise the problem in the first place. This is a classic example of putting cart before horse. It's a bit like trying to define "evolution" to mean "God's method of creating life on Earth" and then wondering why people refuse to accept the definition. Is that a merely semantic argument? No, it is an abuse of language resulting from an attempt to hide from an unwanted problem and the attempted mis-definition has no power to solve the actual problem. What it does do is allow the person trying misdefine the word to avoid having to think too hard about the unwanted problem. Can I suggest a test? If you can re-arrange the meanings of the words so that the point of contention/disagreement disappears, then it is merely a semantic argument. If you can't, then it isn't. |
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"I am real!" said Alice, and began to cry. "You won't make yourself a bit realler by crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there's nothing to cry about." |
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#187 |
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deus ex machina
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,351
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__________________
The phrase deus ex machina (literally "god out of a machine") describes an unexpected, artificial, or improbable character, device, or event introduced suddenly in a work of fiction or drama to resolve a situation or untangle a plot... |
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#188 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Hyperion
Posts: 4,213
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#189 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Hyperion
Posts: 4,213
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#190 |
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Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Brighton, Sussex, England
Posts: 7,316
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It wasn't me who mentioned the word "consciousness". Ask the person who asked the original question. You should already know my answer to this: I think we depend on a subjective definition of this word - we have to define it privately in terms of our own experience of reality. The next question is: can we use a privately-defined word in a public discussion?
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"I am real!" said Alice, and began to cry. "You won't make yourself a bit realler by crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there's nothing to cry about." |
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#191 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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__________________
"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#192 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Hyperion
Posts: 4,213
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Pretty much. Here is a summary of about 1000 pages of posts:
Westprog thinks that consciousness can't be a physical process because all physical processes are equivalent and thus everything would be conscious -- an absurdity, according to westprog. Westprog's proof of this is that he/she thinks the behavior necessary for computation -- switching -- is constantly exhibited by all existing physical entities, from the smallest particle to the entire universe. To show this, westprog is more than happy to come up with elaborate scenarios where any entity might indeed act as a switch (and he/she considers the fact that all these scenarios are entirely independent of each other to be beside the point, because after all its not like the switches involved in computing have to work together or anything). Thus, according to westprog, everything computes: there is no distinction between a pile of rocks, a pile of computer parts (or a bowl of soup -- yes, we actually argued about this) and a working computer. And when anyone points out the obvious distinctions, westprog claims that those only exist in the minds of humans, and anyway computers are built by humans so somehow they can't be used in arguments about human consciousness because to do so would be circular, or something. Furthermore westprog thinks that all the stuff that exhibits such obvious distinctions that we could use in arguments that would not be circular, or something, -- such as all other life on the planet Earth -- is irrelevant (his/her repeated dodging of questions along those lines is equivalent to an admission of as much). Finally, when a clever observer points out that a rock doesn't compute when it is sitting in the sun, westprog intelligently replies that it is only not computing according to a human observer (then we are back to the whole "human centric" thing) and in fact we can come up with some definition of "computing" that such a rock sitting in the sun will satisfy. Again, the fact that definitions are completely changed to suit the specific case in question is irrelevant to westprog, because things like consistency should not get in the way of a good argument. EDIT: Oh, and westprog also claims that a glass of pure water contains a virtual machine + software, equivalent to the central dogma of molecular biology (DNA + transcription, etc). He/she has yet to explain that one, since the thread died before yy2bggggs could get anything resembling an argument from him/her. |
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#193 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: St. Louis
Posts: 9,526
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I don't think it's a function purely of number.
For example, you might ask how many bricks make a house (and the emergent properties of a house)? It's not a matter of number (though it does take more than "some") as much as it is how they're organized to do certain functions. (ETA: It also depends on how you define "consciousness". As I've been saying that's a term that refers to many different properties/functions.) But again, back to the point of this thread, do you suppose QM or neuroscience will answer this question? |
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"That is a very graphic analogy which aids understanding wonderfully while being, strictly speaking, wrong in every possible way." —Ponder Stibbons |
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#194 |
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deus ex machina
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,351
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__________________
The phrase deus ex machina (literally "god out of a machine") describes an unexpected, artificial, or improbable character, device, or event introduced suddenly in a work of fiction or drama to resolve a situation or untangle a plot... |
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#195 |
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deus ex machina
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,351
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__________________
The phrase deus ex machina (literally "god out of a machine") describes an unexpected, artificial, or improbable character, device, or event introduced suddenly in a work of fiction or drama to resolve a situation or untangle a plot... |
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#196 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: St. Louis
Posts: 9,526
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That's not true.
When I say consciousness is not the subject of physics I mean exactly what I said: consciousness is not the subject of physics. Go to any reputable university and there is not one single physics department class on consciousness (or any of the collection of properties/functions that comprise consciousness like memory, proprioception, etc.) |
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"That is a very graphic analogy which aids understanding wonderfully while being, strictly speaking, wrong in every possible way." —Ponder Stibbons |
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#197 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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Could you be any more confused about what I'm saying? You've managed to miss an astonishing number of points in a single sentence. Good lord.
It's not as if I haven't explained this point at great length. I have always insisted that any scientific investigation of consciousness has to start with a physical theory. "All physical processes are equivalent"? Where do you get this? It's the proponents of Strong AI that insist that consciousness is independent of any given physical process, and that it can be produced by electricity, mechanics or punched cards. I've made the point that one cannot assume that an entirely different physical process cannot be simply assumed to produce the same result. The context is the Strong AI claim that computing is something that produces consciousness, or can produce it, independently of the physical medium, but at the same time the insistence that computing only happens either in the brain or in human-made computers, but never in any way in natural phenomena.
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This kind of hamfisted switching around, using an argument about one thing as evidence for another, is all too typical of the discussions on this subject.
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I had no particular wish to revisit this, but the alternative seems to be to have Rocketdodger give his misunderstood version. |
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"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#198 |
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Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Brighton, Sussex, England
Posts: 7,316
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__________________
"I am real!" said Alice, and began to cry. "You won't make yourself a bit realler by crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there's nothing to cry about." |
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#199 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,421
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Which is what I already said. I'm also insisting that this necessarily implies that consciousness is not scientifically understood.
True, there are no physics classes on auto engineering, but there are classes on all the processes that scientifically describe auto engineering.
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"The use of anthropomorphic terms when dealing with computer systems is a sign of professional immaturity" -Edsger Dijkstra
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#200 |
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Mormon Atheist
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Southern California
Posts: 31,091
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Then you are being dishonest. You asked a question about how many brain cells are needed for consciousness to emerge. I asked how many atoms are needed for flight to emerge.
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www.StopSylvia.com. Nothing wrong with God removing people from this world and bringing them to the next. --hamelekim |
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