I am far, less, the philosopher then you are. All this peasant (me!) requires 
for both animals and machines is a basic mechanical, cause + effect diagram on 
how both sets attained self-awareness? Call it a working theory. 
It's remarkable that we attained consciousness and even more remarkable that a 
server farm could do so. 
If one is a pantheist, then I suppose one sees consciousness in everything, 
being, "as right as rain." I have no objection to that view either, because 
maybe the pantheists are correct or will be found so? 
Now, by choice, would I prefer to have a Turning-surpassable computer, or 
something that unconsciously, churns out wonderful technologies for humanity? 
I'll pick the later, because we have 8 billion people to chat with on this 
world, and I choose to chat with people. I personally, would like to chat with 
my fellow humans about the new, asteroid mining craft GPT6 just produced, but 
so far, there's zero in the news about that. 
This, comes from my values, but it's non-obligatory that all humans need value 
this as a first. Each to their own. 


-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Resch <[email protected]>
To: Everything List <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, Mar 17, 2023 11:32 am
Subject: Re: 4 Tests Reveal Bing (GPT 4) ≈ 114 IQ (last test is nuts)



On Thu, Mar 16, 2023, 6:37 PM spudboy100 via Everything List 
<[email protected]> wrote:

To get to the point, I did advocate for a bit of skepticism for claiming 
consciousness for a computer system, and the retort was from JC that 
essentially, we cannot even define what makes a human conscious, and I am going 
with an au contraries', Pierre! I took me under 10 min to locate a worthy 
article submitted for JC's criticisms. 
Here tis'
What Neuroscientists Think, and Don't Think, About Consciousness - PubMed 
(nih.gov)
So, we are much closer to understand human consciousness. I am ask to to put 
the same effort into how a network developed this in so little time. Our our 
analog chips so mighty in 2022-3???



Neurologists know that neurons and neural activity is correlated with 
consciousness, but for the most part their understanding stops there, (and by 
their own admission.)
I would say neurologists are almost in the worst position to understand 
consciousness as they look at it from the lowest level, the neurons. This is 
like trying to decipher a word processor program by looking at the patterns of 
electrical impulses in the circuits of a computer's CPU.
Here are some quotes about our complete lack of understanding of consciousness 
and the disappointment regarding what help neurology has offered (emphasis 
mine):

“How it is that anything so remarkable as a state of consciousness comes about 
as a result of irritating nervous tissue, is just as unaccountable as the 
appearance of Djin when Aladdin rubbed his lamp.”-- Thomas Huxley in " “Lessons 
in Elementary Psychology,” (1866)
“An electron is neither red nor blue nor any other colour; the same holds for 
the proton, the nucleus of the hydrogen atom. But the union of the two in the 
atom of hydrogen, according to the physicist, produces electromagnetic 
radiation of a certain discrete array of wavelengths. The homogenous 
constituents of this radiation, when separated by a prism or an optical 
grating, stimulate in an observer the sensations of red, green, blue, violet by 
the intermediary of certain physiological processes, whose general character is 
sufficiently well known to assert that they are not red or green or blue, in 
fact that the nervous elements in question display no colour in virtue of their 
being stimulated; the white or gray the nerve cells exhibit whether stimulated 
or not is certainly insignificant in respect of the colour sensation which, in 
the individual whose nerves they are, accompanies their excitation.”-- Erwin 
Schrödinger in "Mind and Matter" (1958)
“Few questions have endured longer or traversed a more perplexing history than 
this, the problem of consciousness and its place in nature. Despite centuries 
of pondering and experiment, of trying to get together two supposed entities 
called mind and matter in one age, subject and object in another, or soul and 
body in still others, despite endless discoursing on the streams, states, or 
contents of consciousness, of distinguishing terms like intuitions, sense data, 
the given, raw feels, the sensa, presentations and representations, the 
sensations, images, and affections of structuralist introspections, the 
evidential data of the scientific positivist, phenomenological fields, the 
apparitions of Hobbes, the phenomena of Kant, the appearances of the idealist, 
the elements of Mach, the phanera of Peirce, or the category errors of Ryle, in 
spite of all of these, the problem of consciousness is still with us.”-- Julian 
Jaynes in "The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind" 
(1976)
“We know that brains are the de facto causal basis of consciousness, but we 
have, it seems, no understanding whatever of how this can be so. It strikes us 
as miraculous, eerie, even faintly comic. Somehow, we feel, the water of the 
physical brain is turned into the wine of consciousness, but we draw a total 
blank on the nature of this conversion. Neural transmissions just seem like the 
wrong kind of materials with which to bring consciousness into the world, but 
it appears that in some way they perform this mysterious feat. The mind-body 
problem is the problem of understanding how the miracle is wrought, thus 
removing the sense of deep mystery. We want to take the magic out of the link 
between consciousness and the brain.”-- McGinn “Can we solve the mind body 
problem?” (1989)
“IT IS REMARKABLE that most of the work in both cognitive science and the 
neurosciences makes no reference to consciousness (or 'awareness'), especially 
as many would regard consciousness a the major puzzle confronting the neural 
view of the mind and indeed at the present time it appears deeply mysterious to 
many people.”
-- Francis Crick in "Towards a neurobiological theory of consciousness" (1990)
“At the time, I uncritically accepted the view that the troublesome phenomenal, 
or “what it is like,” aspect of experiences had nothing to do with their 
representational contents, and I supposed that neurophysiology would ultimately 
tell the full story. In the course of reflecting on this pair of assumptions in 
later years, I Came to think that I had made a serious mistake. Not only are 
the phenomenal or felt aspects of our mental lives representational but also 
(relatedly) they are not even in the head at all. So, neurophysiology certainly 
will not reveal to us what it is like to smell or skunk or to taste a fig. Look 
at the neurons for as long as you like, and you will not find phenomenal 
consciousness.”-- Michael Tye in "Ten Problems of consciousness" (1995)
“Consciousness poses the most baffling problems in the science of the mind. 
There is nothing that we know more intimately than conscious experience, but 
there is nothing that is harder to explain. All sorts of mental phenomena have 
yielded to scientific investigation in recent years, but consciousness has 
stubbornly resisted. Many have tried to explain it, but the explanations always 
seem to fall short of the target. Some have been led to suppose that the 
problem is intractable, and that no good explanation can be given.”-- David 
Chalmers in "Facing Up to the Hard Problem" (1996)
“We should therefore not expect the search for a neural correlate of 
consciousness to lead to the holy grail of a universal theory. We might expect 
it to be valuable in helping us to understand consciousness in specific cases, 
such as the human case: learning more about the processes underlying awareness 
will certainly help us understand the structure and dynamics of consciousness, 
for example. But in holding up the bridge from physical processes to conscious 
experience, preexperimental coherence principles will always play a central 
role”-- David Chalmers in "The Conscious Mind" (1996)
“Two decades later, we know an astonishing amount about the brain: you can’t 
follow the news for a week without encountering at least one more tale about 
scientists discovering the brain region associated with gambling, or laziness, 
or love at first sight, or regret – and that’s only the research that makes the 
headlines. Meanwhile, the field of artificial intelligence – which focuses on 
recreating the abilities of the human brain, rather than on what it feels like 
to be one – has advanced stupendously. But like an obnoxious relative who 
invites himself to stay for a week and then won’t leave, the Hard Problem 
remains. When I stubbed my toe on the leg of the dining table this morning, as 
any student of the brain could tell you, nerve fibres called “C-fibres” shot a 
message to my spinal cord, sending neurotransmitters to the part of my brain 
called the thalamus, which activated (among other things) my limbic system. 
Fine. But how come all that was accompanied by an agonising flash of pain? And 
what is pain, anyway?” -- Oliver Burkeman in “Why can’t the world’s greatest 
minds solve the mystery of consciousness?” (2015)

I think any satisfying answer must involve all the levels of processing that 
sit between the top level user-interface of consciousness (which we see and 
which presents the mystery), and the lowest level of the neural circuitry, 
which we also see. But between these two layers is a vast bridge of various 
levels of processing, processing of neurons and dendrites, processing of 
neocortical columns, algorithms in the cerebellum, processing of sub-brain 
regions in the visual cortex for recognizing colors, shapes, patterns, motion, 
faces, etc., the whole regions such as the complete visual cortex, whole brain 
hemispheres, the complete brain of both hemispheres and connection via the 
corpus callosum. We might make the analogy between the brain and a cell phone, 
where again we have the UI presented to us on the screen, and the circuitry at 
the bottom. In the middle layers are the machine code, the system calls, 
operating system kernel, functions, routines, modules, sub processes, 
processes, applications, etc. which finally work their way up to presenting a 
screen with buttons, text and images. All the meat required for understanding 
exists in the middle layers. Analyzing the top-most and/or the bottom-most 
layers, while ignoring the middle is sure to lead to bafflement.
As neurology works its way up to building a complete map of neural regions and 
functioning, we will know how the brain does what it does, but will that 
explain consciousness? Here philosophers disagree. Some like Dennett say that 
is as far as we can go and that will answer all the questions we have about 
consciousness. Others like Chalmers say that will still leave the "hard 
problem" unresolved.
I see merit in both aspects of their argument. I agree with Dennett that 
consciousness is nothing other than awareness. But I also agree with Chalmers 
that even with such an objective and complete brain map, there will remain some 
things that are unexplainable/shareable (in my opinion due in part to similar 
reasons as Gödelian incompleteness). First-person experiences are not 
explainable in third-person terms and can only be understood/experienced/known 
by being the system that has that particular experience.
Jason




-----Original Message-----
From: John Clark <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, Mar 16, 2023 5:55 pm
Subject: Re: 4 Tests Reveal Bing (GPT 4) ≈ 114 IQ (last test is nuts)

On Thu, Mar 16, 2023 at 4:50 PM <[email protected]> wrote:


> America executes prisoners for capital murder. So, legally, if a murderer 
> died 50 years ago for a capital crime, does that mean, once, revived, 

To my knowledge no executed prisoner has ever been cryogenically preserved, 
however Joseph Paul Jernigan was executed by lethal injection in 1981 and he 
became part of the "Visible Human Project". His body was sliced into 1871 1 
millimeter thick slices. and each slice was then photographed with a very high 
resolution camera. I've wondered if there was enough information preserved in 
those photographs to upload him, probably not but maybe. You can watch a one 
minute video of a journey through Mr. Jernigan's body here. 
The visible human project - Male (HD)

A few years later they took even higher resolution photographs of a woman who 
died of a heart attack and they used even thinner slices, only 0.33 millimeters 
thick 
Visual Human Project Female 


> they are no longer liable because of Double Jeopardy and that their victims 
> will also be revived? A Civil Case then??

As I've said, I'm not a lawyer.  John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  
Extropolis
ws8
u6c




-----Original Message-----
From: John Clark <[email protected]>
To: 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, Mar 16, 2023 1:30 pm
Subject: 4 Tests Reveal Bing (GPT 4) ≈ 114 IQ (last test is nuts)

Forget the Ukraine war, forget climate change, forget Donald Trump, I now think 
GPT-4 is by far the most world shaking event and the most underreported one.  
Many of us have been talking about the singularity for decades, but now it 
looks like we're on its doorstep. You've got to look at this video!

4 Tests Reveal Bing (GPT 4) ≈ 114 IQ (last test is nuts)


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