Steve said, "I STRONGLY suspect that what we perceive as consciousness
isn't anything at all like what is really happening. Specifically, a
massively parallel process comes to a decision, but all we perceive is
the single tiny thread that succeeded in intersecting with one
possible solution, while the remaining 99.9999% of the process, along
with other potential solutions, remains completely invisible to us."

That is ambiguous. I am not talking about decision making. (I do not
think decision making is mostly conscious but) I am talking about the
mystery of living human (and presumably animal) experience. It cannot
be explained by current technology. However, there have been some
people who have denied it. I cannot tell if they are being completely
honest or perhaps they are trying to be a little too sensationalistic.
The best interpretation I have had as an explanation for their
feelings is that we have such powerful imaginations that our
experience of life (including that mysterious essence of our
experience) is just a manifestation of that imagination. I find that
opinion to be absurd, if honest. Most people all acknowledge that
there is some mysterious quality of experience that cannot be
attributed to processes of mind that we can use in computer
programming.  For instance, synesthesia is an example of an
unconscious synthesis of different kinds of experience. So, while
synesthesia is not a common example of the unconscious combination of
data of the senses, the actual part of sensing, the experience of the
senses, is different than that a computer might do. While I believe we
are not near a theoretical limit of AGI, it still must be a simulation
of human or animal intelligence. It may go beyond or skills (as AI
already does in some ways) but it is still just going to be a
simulation of mind.
Jim Bromer

On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 5:40 PM Steve Richfield via AGI
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Jim,
>
> There are several potential interpretations of this, with Rob's being but one 
> (or just a few).
>
> Continuing...
> On 6:07PM, Tue, Sep 18, 2018 Jim Bromer via AGI <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > I already regret asking these questions, but do you truly (really -
> > honestly) believe that:
> > Conscious Experience or soul or Qualia or the experience of being (or
> > whatever you want to call it) does not actually exist (or occur)?
>
> I have posted on the past that I STRONGLY suspect that what we perceive as 
> consciousness isn't anything at all like what is really happening. 
> Specifically, a massively parallel process comes to a decision, but all we 
> perceive is the single tiny thread that succeeded in intersecting with one 
> possible solution, while the remaining 99.9999% of the process, along with 
> other potential solutions, remains completely invisible to us.
>
> > and/or
> > This experience (whatever you want to call it) can therefore occur in
> > a computer program?
>
> So, armed with this grossly oversimplified perception, people attempt to 
> write programs to do the same things with 0.0001% of what is needed to do the 
> job. Lotsa luck.
>
> Are we on the same page here?
>
> Steve Richfield
> > Jim Bromer
>
> Artificial General Intelligence List / AGI / see discussions + participants + 
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