| > There is no inherent reason we couldn't just add that effect to our metal and silicon computers. Yes, I agree with that much. Hopefully I understand you, but I do believe we could create a "consciousness chip", so to speak, that performs the proper physical process to create real conscious experience, not just simulated. But it's unlikely to happen with existing computer hardware. (by "create", I'm not saying that consciousness emerges from nothing. Rather, there's this idea of "activating" consciousness, "turning the lights on".) > Those atoms and molecules may just be bits of information themselves in some higher order computer. But there is nothing inherently "magical" about consciousness other than its uniqueness. I don't buy the idea that the universe is a computer nor that we're living in a simulation. I do believe there is an objective reality. > Heck there are fairly convincing arguments for pan-consciousness where it is a fundamental part of any set of information and is simply as complex as that information system. If you have a highly complex, self referential information system like our brains, then the complexity of consciousness is equivalent to our experience. The chinese box would have its LLM-like consciousness, which we would not recognize as our own, but could still a qualitative experience born from objective information states. It's an idea that comes out of sci-fi. It's been used as a plot device in some episodes of Star Trek. But it's just that, science fiction. > Think more about your last paragraph, it undermines your argument from the previous two. If everything is the result of a physical process, then how is that an argument for consciousness being somehow fundamentally different or exceptional in our ability to recreate or simulate it? That's not what I said. What I'm saying is computers are not magically conscious. Could we recreate consciousness with the right hardware? Sure, I don't see why not, like what I said with a "consciousness chip" . But is consciousness magically going to emerge purely from a simulation without any special hardware? No, of course not. |
I'm not talking about hand-wavy sci-fi or spiritual "the universe is a sentient being" stuff. I'm talking about one of the few solutions to what the nature of qualia is and why we aren't philosophical zombies. Why would the universe have some mechanism of consciousness available to it prior to those structures even existing? What is more convincing about a physical process being the literal mechanism for consciousness and not an informational process that has an abstracted physical basis? Could the literal mechanism not just be the information system considering you can create the same behaviors in a simulation as in reality?
Consciousness being some thing that just appears in the universe all of a sudden because evolution happened on this "neat trick" in physics seems more "magical" than it being an emergent property of increasing more complex systems, but a property that has always been there. We see the same emergent behavior appear in all sorts of systems built using different parts and/or simulated as long as they are in the same context of rules. Why wouldn't that also hold true for the emergent behavior of consciousness?
The argument for it being this unique thing that only can happen via a strict physical process strikes me as dualist. Why is it a unique thing?