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by tsimionescu
478 days ago
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While I don't like Penrose's argument and I think it stands on very shaky ground, I very much disagree it's a form of dualism. His argument is simply that human thinking is not reducible to a Turing machine, that it is a form of hyper-computation. If this were to be true, it would follow that computers as we build them today would fundamentally not be able to match human problem-solving. But it would not follow, in any way, that it would be impossible to build "hyper computers" that do. It just means you wouldn't have any chance of getting there with current technology. Now, I don't think Penrose's arguments for why he thinks this is the case are very strong. But they're definitely not mystical dualistic arguments, they're completely materialistic mathematical arguments. I think he leans towards an idea that quantum mechanics has a way of making more-than-Turing computation happen (note that this is not about what we call quantum computers, which are fully Turing-equivalent systems, just more efficient for certain problems), and that this is how our brains actually function. |
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That was my understanding on Penrose's position as well which is just a "Consciousness of the Gaps" argument. As we learn more about quantum operations the space for Consciousness as a special property of humans disapears.