On 5/5/2019 11:26 PM, Jason Resch wrote:


On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 12:59 AM 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



    On 5/5/2019 10:30 PM, Jason Resch wrote:


    On Sun, May 5, 2019 at 10:51 PM 'Brent Meeker' via Everything
    List <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



        On 5/5/2019 7:30 PM, Jason Resch wrote:


        On Sunday, May 5, 2019, 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List
        <[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



            On 5/5/2019 5:57 PM, Jason Resch wrote:


            On Sunday, May 5, 2019, 'Brent Meeker' via Everything
            List <[email protected]
            <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



                On 5/5/2019 3:49 PM, Jason Resch wrote:
                How do we know other humans are conscious (we
                don't, we can only suspect it).

                Why do we suspect other humans are conscious (due
                to their outwardly visible behaviors).

                Due to the Church-Turing thesis, we know an
                appropriately programmed computer can replicate
                any finitely describable behavior.  Therefore a
                person with an appropriately programmed computer,
                placed in someone's skill, and wired into the
                nervous system of a human could perfectly mimic
                the behaviors, speech patterns, thoughts, skills,
                of any person you have ever met.

                Do you dispute any of the above?

                It assumes you could violate Holevo's theorem to
                obtain the necessary program.



            You could find the program by chance or by iteration
            (for the purposes of the thought experiment).

            In those cases you could never know that you had been
            successful.



        The question wasn't whether or not we would succeed, but
        given that we know it is possible to succeed, given there
        ezists a program that could convince you it was your friend,
        why doubt it is consciousness?

        I don't think I would doubt it was conscious even if it just
        acted as intelligent as some stranger.  But note that it
        would have to be interactive.  So I think Wegner's point is
        that makes its computations not finitely describable.


    Who is Wegner in this context, and what was his point?

    I don't see how any computation could be not finitely
    describable, given that any programs can be expressed as a finite
    integer.

    This guy, Peter Wegner, that pt referred to indirectly.
    http://www.cse.uconn.edu/~dgoldin/papers/strong-cct.pdf His point
    is that human consciousness is an interactive program that
    receives arbitrary and unknown inputs from the environment and is
    modified by those inputs.  He calls this model a PTM, Persistent
    Turing Machine, because it keeps a memory and doesn't overwrite
    it.  Of course you can say that whatever the environmental input
    is, it can be included in the TM code, but then it is potentially
    inifinite.


Even if true, this doesn't preclude the thought experiment I defined, where the program takes in inputs from the environment via the senses and feeds those inputs to the program.

But those inputs modify the program (what you do depends on your memory).  I was just reacting to you statement that a person can be defined as a finitely describable TM.  And there is also the point that whatever TM you use to model a person, physics says it will be entangled with the environment and effectively random at a low level.  Even Bruno agrees that the physics of the world is not TM emulable.

Brent

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