| > machines are not submerged in an environment that effects them, giving them no merit to be intelligent about anything You're alluding to the problem of having to 'raise' a super-intelligence with a vested interest in the continuity of its physical existence. I think I agree with where you're going with that. Our understanding of 'self' or 'self preservation' likely comes from a long history of suffering, pain, and failure brought on by trials at understanding the self from evolution's attempts at imbuing the information for longevity into cognition. Mother nature has had years of exponential growth with an inconceivable number of branches attempting to understand the 'self', that lead to failure, all necessary because the idea of 'self preservation' or 'grounding one's sense of ego into a concept of physical sensory data' is very obscure to precisely define, let along to define such that it can be TESTED between generations. Based on how much of a headstart evolution has on that refining process, and how bad humans are at implementing that or even exposing sensory information about that that plug directly into concepts that necessarily affect an artificial's sense of self, I'm willing to bet that we are completely ill-equipped to grow any real intelligence that's truly grounded in the real world, until it can make all the same failed attempts at living longer or evolving + testing those attempts, with that exact same directional goal of 'self-preservation' which humans have. Self-preservation is really the only thing you can evolve to, to guide a physical evolution. I'm not aware of any other physical goals that could lead to the same human-like intelligence or human-like neural models. Most creatures seem to hit the exact same point. An agent-based survival of the fittest with generational physical trials that punish poor understandings of the self's physical manifestation, trying to optimize for its longevity. Anything that doesn't hit that kind of model is strictly not aware of the manifestation of its ego, as we know it (e.g. plants, bacteria, etc), and I don't think the physical sense of self can evolve into grounded concepts without allowing for generational failure on the understanding of self, due to incorrect concepts of 'physical self' between competing generations. TL;DR - The concept of physical self is an evolved trait only if there is a goal tied to it, it cannot arrive without the concept of 'self existence' being threatened or when not allowed to fail. |