On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 7:06 PM, meekerdb <meeke...@verizon.net> wrote:

>  On 5/19/2014 2:38 AM, LizR wrote:
>
>  His main interest is the mind-body problem; and my interest in that
>> problem is more from an engineering viewpoint.  What does it take to make a
>> conscious machine and what are the advantages or disadvantages of doing
>> so.  Bruno says a machine that can learn and do induction is conscious,
>> which might be testable - but I think it would fail.  I think that might be
>> necessary for consciousness, but for a machine to appear conscious it must
>> be intelligent and it must be able to act so as to convince us that it's
>> intelligent.
>>
>>  That is fair enough, but it (of course) assumes primary materialism -
>
>
> No it doesn't.  Why do you think that?  I think "assuming primary
> materialism" is a largely imaginary fault Bruno accuses his critics of.
> Sure physicists study physics and it's a reasonable working hypothesis; but
> nobody tries to even define "primary matter" they just look to see if
> another layer will be a better layer of physics or not.
>

But I think Bruno's criticism is that physics->psychology is assumed, and
that the reversal hypothesis is rejected a priori. So it's not just a
matter of "another layer".

Best,
Telmo.


>
>
>  otherwise a conscious machine, as commonly understood, might have other
> attributes that can't be deduced from its structure, and hence the
> engineering approach will fail. (Hence to be fully confident in this
> approach you should perhaps show what is wrong with Bruno's starting
> assumptions, or his deductions.)
>
>
> I'm assuming it doesn't and that I can make conscious machine from any
> assemblage that can interact with the world in a certain way.
>
> And I have shown what I think is wrong with Bruno's deductions.  In his
> MGA he relies on the MG being isolated, not part of a world - or when
> challenged on the point he says it can be expanded to be as large as the
> whole universe, i.e. to be a world.  But I think it makes a difference.  I
> think the MG can only be conscious relative to a world in which it can
> learn and act.  Bruno (being a logician and mathematician) thinks that
> consciousness doesn't need any external referents.  It's not a conclusive
> refutation, but a point of evidence is that humans in sensory deprivation
> tanks tend to have their thoughts enter a loop - which I would say shows
> that they need external reference.  I tend to agree with JKC that
> intelligence is harder (and more important) than consciousness.
>
> Brent
>
>
>
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