Well, now it sounds like you found a useful definition of life; at what point on this spectrum, then, would you consider something conscious? Since it’s processes you are looking for, there is probably a process that, without which, you could clearly classify as un-conscious.
If I know how many grains of sand there are, their relative positions, and have a statistical profile of their individual sizes and shapes, I no longer need to know whether it counts as a “heap” or not. If I know an object’s thermal mass, conductivity, and how many degrees it is above absolute zero, I don’t need to know whether it’s “warm” or “cold.”
The term “consciousness” is a pointer to something important, but lacks precision. My understanding was that we were trying to come up with a more precise, quantifiable pointer to the same underlying important thing.
What is it that makes consciousness, or the thing that it points to (if such a thing is not ephemeral), important? You already said that knowing the exact quantities negates the need for categorization.
What is it that makes consciousness, or the thing that it points to (if such a thing is not ephemeral), important?
I am not in a position to speculate as to why consciousness, or the underlying referent thereto, is so widely considered important; I simply observe that it is. Similarly, I wouldn’t feel qualified to say why a human life has value, but for policy purposes, somebody out there needs to figure out how many million dollars of value a statistical human life is equivalent to. Might as well poke at the math of that, maybe make it a little more rigorous and generalized.
If I know how many grains of sand there are, their relative positions, and have a statistical profile of their individual sizes and shapes, I no longer need to know whether it counts as a “heap” or not.
Unless you’re trying to decide whether its article on Wikipedia belongs in Category:Heaps ;-)
For what purpose are you labeling something conscious? Strange7 has already stated that water droplets and pendulums have nonzero “consciousness”, and I would agree. But so what? What does it matter if it turns out that rocks are conscious too?
If we taboo “conscious” then we just got some arbitrary and thus almost certainly useless real number assigned to systems. edit: speaking of which, why would it be a real number? It could be any kind of mathematical object.
Even if it’s useless for philosophy of consciousness, some generalized scale of “how self-maintaining is this thing” might be a handy tool for engineers. That’s the difference between a safe, mostly passive expert system and a world-devouring paperclip maximizer, isn’t it? Google Maps doesn’t try to reach out and eliminate potential threats on it’s own initiative.
But we’re only interested in some aspects of self maintenance, we’re not interested in how well individual molecules stay in their places (except when we’re measuring hardness of materials). Some fully general measure wouldn’t know what parameters are interesting and what are not.
Much the same goes for “integrated information theory”—without some external conscious observer informally deciding what’s information and what’s not (or what counts as “integration”) to make the premise seem plausible (and carefully picking plausible examples), you just have a temperature-like metric which is of no interest whatsoever if not for the outrageous claim that it measures consciousness. A metric that is ridiculously huge for e.g. turbulent gasses, or if we get down to microscale and consider atoms bouncing around chaotically, for gasses in general.
Again, I think you’re misunderstanding. The metric I’m proposing doesn’t measure how well those self-maintenance systems work, only how many of them there are.
Yes, of course we’re only really interested in some aspects of self-maintenance. Let’s start by counting how many aspects there are, and start categorizing once that first step has produced some hard numbers.
Ahh, OK. The thing is, though… say, a crystal puts atoms back together if you move them slightly (and a liquid doesn’t). And so on, all sorts of very simple apparent self maintenance done without a trace of intelligent behaviour.
What’s your point? I’ve already acknowledged that this metric doesn’t return equally low values for all inanimate objects, and it seems a bit more common (in new-agey circles at least) to ascribe intelligence to crystals or rivers than to puffs of hot gas, so in that regard it’s better calibrated to human intuition than Integrated Information Theory.
Well, now it sounds like you found a useful definition of life; at what point on this spectrum, then, would you consider something conscious? Since it’s processes you are looking for, there is probably a process that, without which, you could clearly classify as un-conscious.
If I know how many grains of sand there are, their relative positions, and have a statistical profile of their individual sizes and shapes, I no longer need to know whether it counts as a “heap” or not. If I know an object’s thermal mass, conductivity, and how many degrees it is above absolute zero, I don’t need to know whether it’s “warm” or “cold.”
The term “consciousness” is a pointer to something important, but lacks precision. My understanding was that we were trying to come up with a more precise, quantifiable pointer to the same underlying important thing.
What is it that makes consciousness, or the thing that it points to (if such a thing is not ephemeral), important? You already said that knowing the exact quantities negates the need for categorization.
I am not in a position to speculate as to why consciousness, or the underlying referent thereto, is so widely considered important; I simply observe that it is. Similarly, I wouldn’t feel qualified to say why a human life has value, but for policy purposes, somebody out there needs to figure out how many million dollars of value a statistical human life is equivalent to. Might as well poke at the math of that, maybe make it a little more rigorous and generalized.
Unless you’re trying to decide whether its article on Wikipedia belongs in Category:Heaps ;-)
For what purpose are you labeling something conscious? Strange7 has already stated that water droplets and pendulums have nonzero “consciousness”, and I would agree. But so what? What does it matter if it turns out that rocks are conscious too?
Taboo the word ‘conscious’ please.
If we taboo “conscious” then we just got some arbitrary and thus almost certainly useless real number assigned to systems. edit: speaking of which, why would it be a real number? It could be any kind of mathematical object.
Even if it’s useless for philosophy of consciousness, some generalized scale of “how self-maintaining is this thing” might be a handy tool for engineers. That’s the difference between a safe, mostly passive expert system and a world-devouring paperclip maximizer, isn’t it? Google Maps doesn’t try to reach out and eliminate potential threats on it’s own initiative.
But we’re only interested in some aspects of self maintenance, we’re not interested in how well individual molecules stay in their places (except when we’re measuring hardness of materials). Some fully general measure wouldn’t know what parameters are interesting and what are not.
Much the same goes for “integrated information theory”—without some external conscious observer informally deciding what’s information and what’s not (or what counts as “integration”) to make the premise seem plausible (and carefully picking plausible examples), you just have a temperature-like metric which is of no interest whatsoever if not for the outrageous claim that it measures consciousness. A metric that is ridiculously huge for e.g. turbulent gasses, or if we get down to microscale and consider atoms bouncing around chaotically, for gasses in general.
Again, I think you’re misunderstanding. The metric I’m proposing doesn’t measure how well those self-maintenance systems work, only how many of them there are.
Yes, of course we’re only really interested in some aspects of self-maintenance. Let’s start by counting how many aspects there are, and start categorizing once that first step has produced some hard numbers.
Ahh, OK. The thing is, though… say, a crystal puts atoms back together if you move them slightly (and a liquid doesn’t). And so on, all sorts of very simple apparent self maintenance done without a trace of intelligent behaviour.
What’s your point? I’ve already acknowledged that this metric doesn’t return equally low values for all inanimate objects, and it seems a bit more common (in new-agey circles at least) to ascribe intelligence to crystals or rivers than to puffs of hot gas, so in that regard it’s better calibrated to human intuition than Integrated Information Theory.