On 3/8/2015 3:34 PM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:


On Monday, March 9, 2015, meekerdb <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    On 3/8/2015 1:26 AM, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:

        On 8 March 2015 at 09:33, meekerdb <[email protected]> wrote:

            I like Graziano's theory of consciousness.

            http://aeon.co/magazine/philosophy/how-consciousness-works/

            I have generally been inclined to agree with JKC that natural 
selection
            can't act on consciousness, only on intelligence; so consciousness 
is either
            a necessary byproduct of intelligence or it's a spandrel. But under
            Graziano's theory it's a way of augmenting or improving 
intelligence within
            constraints of limited computational resources.  So it would be 
subject to
            natural selection.  It also shows how to make intelligence machines 
without
            consciousness (albeit less efficient ones).

        Graziano equates consciousness with a model of the brain's state of
        attention, but why couldn't this be done by an unconscious machine?


    Because doing it makes the machine conscious.


It might, but as presented it's begging he question.

It proposes an architecture for computation that would realize consciousness. It's something that, in principle at least, could be constructed and one could interact with it and determine whether it seemed as conscious as you or I. What would you consider a non-question begging theory?

Brent

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