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by elliotto
352 days ago
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My personal views are an animist / panpsychist / pancomputationalist combination drawing most of my inspiration from the works of Joscha Bach and Stephen Wolfram (https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2021/03/what-is-consciou...). I think that the underlying substrate of the universe is consciousness, and human and animal and computer minds result in structures that are able to present and tell narratives about themselves, isolating themselves from the other (avidya in Buddhism). I certainly don't claim to be correct, but I present a model that others can interrogate and look for holes in. Under my model, these systems you have described are conscious, but not in a way that they can communicate or experience time or memory the way human beings do. My general list of questions for those presenting a model of consciousness are:
1) Are you conscious? (hopefully you say yes or our friend Descartes would like a word with you!)
2) Am I conscious? How do you know?
3) Is a dog conscious?
4) Is a worm conscious?
5) Is a bacterium conscious?
6) Is a human embryo / baby consious? And if so, was there a point that it was not conscious, and what does it mean for that switch to occur? What is your view of consciousness? |
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The intuitive one looks like 100% chance > P(#2 is conscious) > P(#6) > P(#3) > P(#4) > P(#5) > 0% chance, but the problem is solipsism is a real motherfucker and it's entirely possible qualia is meted out based on some wacko distance metric that couldn't possibly feel intuitive. There are many more such metrics out there than there are intuitive ones, so a prior of indifference doesn't help us much. Any ordering is theoretically possible to be ontologically privileged, we simply have no way of knowing.