Well, if the summary is correct, he also thinks that a coin has consciousness, which is far worse than not endorsing MIRI research program and far more concerning about a person who works on AI.
It’s a genuine philosophical position, and one with a long tradition in the reductionist philosophy of mind. If you don’t believe that a coin (or to use the more typical example, a thermostat) can have epsilon consciousness, then where do you draw the line? What does a conscious system have to have that, if you were to take it away the system would suddenly become inert and without a subjective experience of existence?
Positing that all things—all! - are conscious to varying degrees dependent on their informational complexity and structural pattern is an attempt to dissolve the mysterious question of what grants us awareness in the first place.
No, not really. I don’t feel I have confuted Goertzel because I cannot believe his position. See below.
It’s a genuine philosophical position, and one with a long tradition in the reductionist philosophy of mind.
Yeah, but that doesn’t make it any less silly.
If you don’t believe that a coin (or to use the more typical example, a thermostat) can have epsilon consciousness, then where do you draw the line? What does a conscious system have to have that, if you were to take it away the system would suddenly become inert and without a subjective experience of existence?
Well, I cannot describe exactly what a system must be configured to say that it is conscious, but I can certainly draw a line on having a cognitive system (that is, a system for perceiving, elaborating and storing information). Mind you, that is a necessary, not sufficient, condition. If you take away the brain out of a human, it becomes a thing, like a rock or a thermostat.
Positing that all things—all! - are conscious to varying degrees dependent on their informational complexity and structural pattern is an attempt to dissolve the mysterious question of what grants us awareness in the first place.
If you conflate consciousness with informational complexity, then you can do away with the term and just call it complexity. It doesn’t make consciousness any less mysterious, it just sweeps the problem of what differentiate a human from a coin under the rug.
Well, I cannot describe exactly what a system must be configured to say that it is conscious, but I can certainly draw a line on having a cognitive system (that is, a system for perceiving, elaborating and storing information).
A thermostat has these properties. So does a coin or rock too, if you look at it from the perspective of having vibrational modes, electric potentials & eddy currents, stored potential and spatial configuration with respect to, say, a gravitational field. It’s a bit more of a stretch than a thermostat (as we tend to mentally abstract away the coin or rock as something with no internal structure), but I hope you can see the argument.
Saying “necessary but not sufficient” is an escape technique. “A system for perceiving, elaborating and storing information” could be stretched to cover every interaction of two or more particles. So these properties are unrelated to the issue and there is some other, specific point at which you wish to draw the line and say “all things which have this property are conscious, those which do not are not.” What is that point?
If you don’t know what that cutoff is then consider, at least hypothetically, the possibility that there is no dividing line. Then there is a continuum of conscious experience from the ϵ-consciousness of two interacting particles to the jumbled mess of interactions that is our brain (spanning orders of magnitude in difference that maybe only astronomers are used to dealing with).
If you conflate consciousness with informational complexity, then you can do away with the term and just call it complexity. It doesn’t make consciousness any less mysterious, it just sweeps the problem of what differentiate a human from a coin under the rug.
I’m not, and you’ve misunderstood my point. I think Goertzel and I are on the same page that consciousness is an algorithm in motion. Even thermostats, coins, and rocks run algorithms (yes even rocks, where the steady-state quantum interactions of its composite particles do form an algorithm governing response to, say, vibrational events). So, even a rock or coin has epsilon consciousness.
This is my position which I think Goertzel shares. It’s at least in line with what he said in the documentary about coins having minute, but non-zero consciousness.
That conception certainly makes the AGI problem really easy. I’ll solve it right now. Get a machine vision/olfaction etc system that recognizes structural complexity classes, does computational complexity efficiciency optimisation stuff, depends on the structural complexity class stuff for activity detection, once it has activity detection model game complexity and you’re done—it can know process the entire computable universe including people.
Further assumptions:
..”problem solving" is largely, perhaps entirely, a matter of appropriate selection. Take, for instance, any popular book of problems and puzzles. Almost every one can be reduced to the form: out of a certain set, indicate one element. … It is, in fact, difficult to think of a problem, either playful or serious, that does not ultimately require an appropriate selection as necessary and sufficient for its solution.
It is also clear that many of the tests used for measuring “intelligence” are scored essentially according to the candidate’s power of appropriate selection. … Thus it is not impossible that what is commonly referred to as “intellectual power” may be equivalent to “power of appropriate selection”. Indeed, if a talking Black Box were to show high power of appropriate selection in such matters — so that, when given difficult problems it persistently gave correct answers — we could hardly deny that it was showing the ‘behavioral' equivalent of “high intelligence”.""
Well, if the summary is correct, he also thinks that a coin has consciousness, which is far worse than not endorsing MIRI research program and far more concerning about a person who works on AI.
Argument from incredulity? Really?
It’s a genuine philosophical position, and one with a long tradition in the reductionist philosophy of mind. If you don’t believe that a coin (or to use the more typical example, a thermostat) can have epsilon consciousness, then where do you draw the line? What does a conscious system have to have that, if you were to take it away the system would suddenly become inert and without a subjective experience of existence?
Positing that all things—all! - are conscious to varying degrees dependent on their informational complexity and structural pattern is an attempt to dissolve the mysterious question of what grants us awareness in the first place.
No, not really. I don’t feel I have confuted Goertzel because I cannot believe his position. See below.
Yeah, but that doesn’t make it any less silly.
Well, I cannot describe exactly what a system must be configured to say that it is conscious, but I can certainly draw a line on having a cognitive system (that is, a system for perceiving, elaborating and storing information). Mind you, that is a necessary, not sufficient, condition.
If you take away the brain out of a human, it becomes a thing, like a rock or a thermostat.
If you conflate consciousness with informational complexity, then you can do away with the term and just call it complexity. It doesn’t make consciousness any less mysterious, it just sweeps the problem of what differentiate a human from a coin under the rug.
A thermostat has these properties. So does a coin or rock too, if you look at it from the perspective of having vibrational modes, electric potentials & eddy currents, stored potential and spatial configuration with respect to, say, a gravitational field. It’s a bit more of a stretch than a thermostat (as we tend to mentally abstract away the coin or rock as something with no internal structure), but I hope you can see the argument.
Saying “necessary but not sufficient” is an escape technique. “A system for perceiving, elaborating and storing information” could be stretched to cover every interaction of two or more particles. So these properties are unrelated to the issue and there is some other, specific point at which you wish to draw the line and say “all things which have this property are conscious, those which do not are not.” What is that point?
If you don’t know what that cutoff is then consider, at least hypothetically, the possibility that there is no dividing line. Then there is a continuum of conscious experience from the ϵ-consciousness of two interacting particles to the jumbled mess of interactions that is our brain (spanning orders of magnitude in difference that maybe only astronomers are used to dealing with).
I’m not, and you’ve misunderstood my point. I think Goertzel and I are on the same page that consciousness is an algorithm in motion. Even thermostats, coins, and rocks run algorithms (yes even rocks, where the steady-state quantum interactions of its composite particles do form an algorithm governing response to, say, vibrational events). So, even a rock or coin has epsilon consciousness.
This is my position which I think Goertzel shares. It’s at least in line with what he said in the documentary about coins having minute, but non-zero consciousness.
That conception certainly makes the AGI problem really easy. I’ll solve it right now. Get a machine vision/olfaction etc system that recognizes structural complexity classes, does computational complexity efficiciency optimisation stuff, depends on the structural complexity class stuff for activity detection, once it has activity detection model game complexity and you’re done—it can know process the entire computable universe including people.
Further assumptions: