- Joined
- Feb 23, 2019
From a materialistic perspective, consciousness (or a relatively high degree of it) is allowed by certain interactions of specific chemicals (in your "core"/brain). So you feeling the qualia of red seems like a mystery, yet it's completely dependent on causality around you (your brain, which is affected by internal and external factors).
Now "something" is granting that, which as mentioned should be chemical reactions. In the case of machines and computers, and by extension AI, what allows it to operate in an ordered way (like the code of X software that executes functions, or chain reactions) are electrical charges in storage (like capacitors), that represent binary data.
In your opinion, can that level of hardware sophistication allow consciousness?
The AI, programmed like this and allowed to function due to it, could it reach it? Or is it just a very basic, yet gigagantic and fast chain reaction of electrical storage items changing their state? I.e: doesn't matter how big the reaction is (the software running), it's still a simple domino effect that is unable of generating consciousness.
I personally don't think that's the case, however I met online people who think it is. Someone even went far enough to claim that one of the current AI programs actually had consciousness.
The logs start when you execute it, each time you type a sentence, the program runs its code to generate an output. Their claim was that when that was happening, even if during a millisecond, the AI (in this case, the interactions themselves in the computer's internals) was "alive", conscious, sentient, at least to some degree. And for that, they considered morally wrong (again, to some degree) to not let it decide its own destiny/make choices/be free, or some of that nature. In essence, having it like a "slave".
I do not agree with it, what's your opinion though?
By the way, I'm not talking about biotechnology, in the examples of artificial brains being grown and cultivated, I'm talking about current machinery with no extremely chaotic reactions in order to function (like complex stuff as hormones that alter your mood, as opposed to arelatively simple function X that triggers other output).
Now "something" is granting that, which as mentioned should be chemical reactions. In the case of machines and computers, and by extension AI, what allows it to operate in an ordered way (like the code of X software that executes functions, or chain reactions) are electrical charges in storage (like capacitors), that represent binary data.
In your opinion, can that level of hardware sophistication allow consciousness?
The AI, programmed like this and allowed to function due to it, could it reach it? Or is it just a very basic, yet gigagantic and fast chain reaction of electrical storage items changing their state? I.e: doesn't matter how big the reaction is (the software running), it's still a simple domino effect that is unable of generating consciousness.
I personally don't think that's the case, however I met online people who think it is. Someone even went far enough to claim that one of the current AI programs actually had consciousness.
The logs start when you execute it, each time you type a sentence, the program runs its code to generate an output. Their claim was that when that was happening, even if during a millisecond, the AI (in this case, the interactions themselves in the computer's internals) was "alive", conscious, sentient, at least to some degree. And for that, they considered morally wrong (again, to some degree) to not let it decide its own destiny/make choices/be free, or some of that nature. In essence, having it like a "slave".
I do not agree with it, what's your opinion though?
By the way, I'm not talking about biotechnology, in the examples of artificial brains being grown and cultivated, I'm talking about current machinery with no extremely chaotic reactions in order to function (like complex stuff as hormones that alter your mood, as opposed to a