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From my own idealist viewpoint – all that ultimately exists is minds and the contents of minds (which includes all the experiences of minds), and patterns in mind-contents; and intentionality is a particular type of mind-content. Material/physical objects, processes, events and laws, are themselves just mind-content and patterns in mind-content. A materialist would say that the mind is emergent from or reducible to the brain. I would do a 180 on that arrow of emergence/reduction, and say that the brain, and indeed all physical matter and physical reality, is emergent from or reducible to minds. If I hold a rock in my hand, that is emergent from or reducible to mind (my mind and its content, and the minds and mind-contents of everyone else who ever somehow experiences that rock); and all of my body, including my brain, is emergent from or reducible to mind. However, this emergence/reduction takes on a somewhat different character for different physical objects; and when it comes to the brain, it takes a rather special form – my brain is emergent from or reducible to my mind in a special way, such that a certain correspondence exists between external observations of my brain (both my own and those of other minds) and my own internal mental experiences, which doesn't exist for other physical objects. The brain, like every other physical object, is just a pattern in mind-contents, and this special correspondence is also just a pattern in mind-contents, even if a rather special pattern. So, coming to AIs – can AIs have minds? My personal answer: having a certain character of relationship with other human beings gives me the conviction that I must be interacting with a mind like myself, instead of with a philosophical zombie – that solipsism must be false, at least with respect to that particular person. Hence, if anyone had that kind of a relationship with an AI, that AI must have a mind, and hence have genuine intentionality. The fact that the AI "is" a computer program is irrelevant; just as my brain is not my mind, rather my brain is a product of my mind, in the same way, the computer program would not be the mind of the AI, rather the computer program is a product of the AI's mind. I don't think current generation AIs actually have real intentionality, as opposed to pseudo-intentionality – they sometimes act like they have intentionality, they lack the inner reality of it. But that's not because they are programs or algorithms, that is because they lack the character of relationship with any other mind that would require that mind to say that solipsism is false with respect to them. If current AIs lack that kind of relationship, that may be less about the nature of the technology (the LLM architecture/etc), and more about how they are trained (e.g. intentionally trained to act in inhuman ways, either out of "safety" concerns, or else because acting that way just wasn't an objective of their training). (The lack of long-term memory in current generation LLMs is a rather severe limitation on their capacity to act in a manner which would make humans ascribe minds to them–but you can use function calling to augment the LLM with a read-write long-term memory, and suddenly that limitation no longer applies, at least not in principle.) > I don't think algorithms can have intentionality because algorithms are arithmetic operations implemented on digital computers and arithmetic operations, no matter how they are stacked, do not have intentions. It's a category error to attribute intentions to algorithms because if an algorithm has intentions then so must numbers and arithmetic operations of numbers I disagree. To me, physical objects/events/processes are one type of pattern in mind-contents, and abstract entities such as numbers or algorithms are also patterns in mind-contents, just a different type of pattern. To me, the number 7 and the planet Venus are different species but still the same genus, whereas most would view them as completely different genera. (I'm using the word species and genus here in the traditional philosophical sense, not the modern biological sense, although the latter is historically descended from the former.) And that's the thing – to me, intentionality cannot be reducible to or emergent from either brains or algorithms. Rather, brains and algorithms are reducible to or emergent from minds and their mind-contents (intentionality included), and the difference between a mindless program (which can at best have pseudo-intentionality) and an AI with a mind (which would have genuine intentionality) is that in the latter case there exists a mind having a special kind of relationship with a particular program, whereas in the former case no mind has that kind of relationship with that program (although many minds have other kinds of relationships with it) I think everything I'm saying here makes sense (well at least it does to me) but I think for most people what I am saying is like someone speaking a foreign language – and a rather peculiar one which seems to use the same words as your native tongue, yet gives them very different and unfamiliar meanings. And what I'm saying is so extremely controversial, that whether or not I personally know it to be true, I can't possibly claim that we collectively know it to be true |
None of the people who claimed that LLMs were a hop and skip away from achieving human level intelligence ever made any formal statements in a logically verifiable syntax. They simply handwaved and made vague gestures about emergence which were essentially magical beliefs about computers and software.
What you have outlined about minds and patterns seems like what Leibniz and Spinoza wrote about but I don't really know much about their writing so I don't really think what you're saying is controversial. Many people would agree that there must be irreducible properties of reality that human minds are not capable of understanding in full generality.