| The problem for me with that line of reasoning is that it's one based on philosophy & not mathematically proven or with any clear evidence. For example, [1], [2], [3] all show there are classes of computation outside of Turing machines. So if we agree there are computations outside of Turing machines, then the question is where does the human brain fall and, relatedly, can non-Turing machines run Turing machines? I suspect the answer to the latter question must be yes given the simplicity of a Turing machine (i.e. a pen & pencil is sufficient). Thus, the fact that a human can execute a Turing machine doesn't conclude anything meaningful to me. If you could show that a Turing machine can execute a human brain, then the human brain would 100% be a Turing machine since a core property of a Turing machine is that it can transfer to any other Turing machine. Even if we build "general AI" on a Turing machine, all we've shown is that there is a class of intelligence that is at its core a complicated Turing machine. It might suggest that a human brain is also a Turing machine (& I'd shift the weight of my prior from let's say 30% we're not Turing machines to 70% we are), but I think the only way to definitively prove that would be to do so by mathematically proving the model of the human brain, and then maybe also using it to actually clone a human brain onto a Turing machine to prove the model correct. I think until that happens the argument remains philosophical & whichever side you take to be uninteresting. The only purpose of the debate is to show the question itself is important. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercomputation
[2] http://faculty.poly.edu/~jbain/physinfocomp/Readings/94Hogar...
[3] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S030439750... |
In fact, we don't know of a single physical process that is not Turing Computable, at least if we add randomness. Even with quantum wave-function collapse, we already know that QCs are still Turing equivalent.
This all suggests to me that the prior for the human mind being Turing equivalent can only be taken to be very close to 1.