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  3. Electronic Consciousness?

Electronic Consciousness?

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  • L Lee Chetwynd

    I am curious from the point of view of people from a programming sort of environment, how many of us believe that it will be possible to store a consciousness electronically. This could be either to store an existing conciousness (as in copying or backing up an existing mind electronically) or to develop a completely new conciousness that never existed biologically. I'm trying to stay away from the far reaching philosophical and moralistic implications of doing either of these things. That's a massive can of worms. I just wondered how many coders actually think it will ever be possible and how many think it is something that could never be achieved. I think it will be possible.

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    LucianPopescu
    wrote on last edited by
    #48

    I think that cannot be reproduced electronically something that is biologically or chemically done.

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    • S StatementTerminator

      patbob wrote:

      I'm not sure we'll recognize when we succeed.

      Leave it running with no input. If it gets bored and starts singing "Daisy Bell," it's conscious. And should be destroyed immediately.

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      patbob
      wrote on last edited by
      #49

      Nope.. that's what broken computers do. Not conscious ones :)

      We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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      • L Lee Chetwynd

        I am curious from the point of view of people from a programming sort of environment, how many of us believe that it will be possible to store a consciousness electronically. This could be either to store an existing conciousness (as in copying or backing up an existing mind electronically) or to develop a completely new conciousness that never existed biologically. I'm trying to stay away from the far reaching philosophical and moralistic implications of doing either of these things. That's a massive can of worms. I just wondered how many coders actually think it will ever be possible and how many think it is something that could never be achieved. I think it will be possible.

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        SeattleC
        wrote on last edited by
        #50

        Will we be able to create an artificial consciousness sufficiently similar to our own that we would recognize it as conscious? Absolutely. Probably within a human lifetime. Self-awareness isn't as hard as people make it out to be. Consciousness is mostly a data storage and retrieval problem, I think. Will we be able to download a human consciousness and run it on a computer? Probably not feasible. The human brain stores its memories in the wiring of the entire brain. You'd have to be able to read out all the neural synapses. Can you do that without carefully dissassembling a brain? I rather doubt it. Synaptic function is more than connectivity. The strength of signalling of any neuron is a function of the precise functioning of the neuron's internal machinery. You may expect this machinery to be as variable as human appearance. Think of all the many kinds of behavioral health issues people may display, all the kinds of genius and developmental disability, and you get some idea of how variable this function is. Even if we could wave a magic wand and make the problem of downloading the synapses go away, the brain is not a single organ, but rather hundreds of related, specialized processors. DNA stores only an approximate map of these processors, they are self-assembling during development, and no two are alike. Making these specialized processors run efficiently on a general-purpose computer is unlikely. You'll have to simulate them at a very low level to get high fidelity. And in the end, how valuable would this be, even if we could do it? Few people are going to be excited about having their consciousness downloaded if the process is destructive, because the consciousness in your body would then very definitely die, with only the promise that a very similar one would be created. Like life insurance, this bet doesn't benefit your original consciousness. If the process was not destructive, then the result would be that there are two "yous", each wanting to live, each wanting to control the assets "you" own, each rapidly diverging into different identities as their experiences differed. You forgot to ask the "upload" question. Could you upload your copied consciousness into other brains? Again, given the variability of brains, you'd need a way to exactly recreate your original brain in order for the consciousness "program" to run reliably. Sorry, the human brain is the ultimate intellectual property. Its design completely frustrates copying and duplication. DRM is designed in, intelligently or not.

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        • P patbob

          Nope.. that's what broken computers do. Not conscious ones :)

          We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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          StatementTerminator
          wrote on last edited by
          #51

          Ah, but all conscious minds are broken :)

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          • S StatementTerminator

            Ah, but all conscious minds are broken :)

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            patbob
            wrote on last edited by
            #52

            Exactly my point.. how can you tell a broken computer, from a conscious one that thinks so differently, that its completely unaware of you?

            We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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            • L Lee Chetwynd

              I am curious from the point of view of people from a programming sort of environment, how many of us believe that it will be possible to store a consciousness electronically. This could be either to store an existing conciousness (as in copying or backing up an existing mind electronically) or to develop a completely new conciousness that never existed biologically. I'm trying to stay away from the far reaching philosophical and moralistic implications of doing either of these things. That's a massive can of worms. I just wondered how many coders actually think it will ever be possible and how many think it is something that could never be achieved. I think it will be possible.

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              Troy Thompson
              wrote on last edited by
              #53

              I think it will be possible, but it's going to take a better understanding of the quantum state of neurons to implement. There is evidence that neurons operate using electrons in a hyperpositional state, meaning that it is entirely possible what we think of as information in the brain only exists as it interacts with the world. Even developing a non-biological conciousness, at least as we currently understand what that means, will likely require some form of non-deterministic computation. In the nearer term, developing more and more sophisticated simulations that can, ultimately, fool the user/observer into thinking that they are conscious is a much more straightforward goal.

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              • T Troy Thompson

                I think it will be possible, but it's going to take a better understanding of the quantum state of neurons to implement. There is evidence that neurons operate using electrons in a hyperpositional state, meaning that it is entirely possible what we think of as information in the brain only exists as it interacts with the world. Even developing a non-biological conciousness, at least as we currently understand what that means, will likely require some form of non-deterministic computation. In the nearer term, developing more and more sophisticated simulations that can, ultimately, fool the user/observer into thinking that they are conscious is a much more straightforward goal.

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                AAC Mike
                wrote on last edited by
                #54

                But Troy you are working on an assumption that you know what consciousness is. You don't. Remember the story of the blind men and the elephant. Each had a different perception depending on which part of the elephant they were touching. Try reading some early 20th or even 19th thoughts on science and see how each generation is so presumptious about what it thinks it knows. We have a very, very long way to go. I think 1000 years from now might we might be a little closer. Lay people often ask me about things like artificial intelligence and I tell them the key word is "artificial" NOT intelligence.

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                • P patbob

                  Exactly my point.. how can you tell a broken computer, from a conscious one that thinks so differently, that its completely unaware of you?

                  We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                  jschell
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #55

                  patbob wrote:

                  how can you tell a broken computer, from a conscious one that thinks so differently, that its completely unaware of you?

                  You also stated that we will not be able to recognize it. We don't know it exists. It doesn't know we exist. Only the first part matters. And from that one can conclude that the question is irrelevant. It cannot impact our lives, by definition, so it can't ever matter. One can just as easily claim that a rock is conscious and it would mean the same thing.

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                  • L Lee Chetwynd

                    I am curious from the point of view of people from a programming sort of environment, how many of us believe that it will be possible to store a consciousness electronically. This could be either to store an existing conciousness (as in copying or backing up an existing mind electronically) or to develop a completely new conciousness that never existed biologically. I'm trying to stay away from the far reaching philosophical and moralistic implications of doing either of these things. That's a massive can of worms. I just wondered how many coders actually think it will ever be possible and how many think it is something that could never be achieved. I think it will be possible.

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                    jschell
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #56

                    Lee Chetwynd wrote:

                    believe that it will be possible to store a consciousness electronically.

                    There are several points. 1. Can it be recorded? 2. What happens after it is recorded? For the first one must be able to demonstrate that consciousness itself has been recorded and not just a fixed state. That means that the second requires that it must be able to interact with the world in such a way that it is verifiable. And if either is possible it is a long, long way off.

                    Lee Chetwynd wrote:

                    or to develop a completely new conciousness that never existed biologically.

                    No that is a different problem. A rough analogy is the difference between recording a artist performing a song and then playing it back versus creating the song in the first place. Again if possible at all it is a long, long way off. And given the lack of real progress in this in the last 50 years, despite many attempts, I suspect it will never be possible.

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                    • J jschell

                      patbob wrote:

                      how can you tell a broken computer, from a conscious one that thinks so differently, that its completely unaware of you?

                      You also stated that we will not be able to recognize it. We don't know it exists. It doesn't know we exist. Only the first part matters. And from that one can conclude that the question is irrelevant. It cannot impact our lives, by definition, so it can't ever matter. One can just as easily claim that a rock is conscious and it would mean the same thing.

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                      patbob
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #57

                      Its not irrelevant. It doesn't need to know we exist to do something that's catastrophic to us, but beneficial to it.

                      We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                      • P patbob

                        Exactly my point.. how can you tell a broken computer, from a conscious one that thinks so differently, that its completely unaware of you?

                        We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                        StatementTerminator
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #58

                        It wouldn't think differently if done correctly, that's the point, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference if you didn't already know it was a machine. For instance, the Turing Test. Also if we can build machines that replicate human consciousness, those machines would also be vulnerable to human neuroses. Hence HAL. Hence broken. Throwing an exception could get a lot more dangerous. For the record, I don't think that it will ever be possible to do this, and in any case it's currently nothing more than a fantasy given the current state of technology and our knowledge of the mind. But the attempt can teach us much about ourselves, I think.

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                        • L Lee Chetwynd

                          I am curious from the point of view of people from a programming sort of environment, how many of us believe that it will be possible to store a consciousness electronically. This could be either to store an existing conciousness (as in copying or backing up an existing mind electronically) or to develop a completely new conciousness that never existed biologically. I'm trying to stay away from the far reaching philosophical and moralistic implications of doing either of these things. That's a massive can of worms. I just wondered how many coders actually think it will ever be possible and how many think it is something that could never be achieved. I think it will be possible.

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                          bwallan
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #59

                          I definitely think is will be possible (if humans don't destroy themselves 1st or otherwise lose all the gains they've accomplished over the past millenia). I do, however, think we will achieve this in a manner not currently considered. Since I'm a firm believer that every living thing is linked to the cosmic conscientious, all that is really required is a "port" to my thread and voila, done! String theory may get us there...

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                          • A AAC Mike

                            Yes you do or you would not be incapable of responding meaning fully with any one else and thus you are not alive.

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                            Lee Chetwynd
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #60

                            I'm not sure how well that argument would stand up in a hospital. ;)

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                            • Y YDaoust

                              I see no reason why it wouldn't be possible. After all, the human brain is nothing but a big processor that obeys the laws of physics. Man-made systems with similar capabilities of cognition, affectivity, introspection... should be able to support consciousness. Wikipedia supplies interesting material on this topic (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mind_uploading[^]). Moving consciousness from one being to another is something we (I) don't understand at the moment, and it seems to raise paradoxical situations.

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                              Lee Chetwynd
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #61

                              Interesting reading. It seems that a fruit fly and a mouse have already been digitized so we are not far off. :-D I wonder what you would call a bug in the code of a bug? I don't think humans need to understand something before they copy it and the process of copying may give us better understanding.

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                              • M Marius Myburg

                                Hi, There is no doubt that consciousness can be implemented in 'artificial' mediums. There is nothing 'magical' about living matter - and 'natural' consciousness is just the result of an (as of yet not understood) process implemented in matter. When we understand that process, we will be able to implement it in an appropriate artificial/non-living medium. And it is, almost beyond doubt, a computational process - and I personally believe that consciousness can even be implemented in current-generation hardware and software. We just need to understand it first! Marius Myburg. http://mariusmyburg.wordpress.com/

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                                Lee Chetwynd
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #62

                                I agree except for the understanding bit. It would be helpful but not essential I think.

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                                • N NAANsoft

                                  Well, for some folks that I know it should be fairly easy to save their consciousness on a old-time 180K single-sided floppy disk, even together with some interresting data. For most others I would say "No-way, José!" You may store a snapshot of all the neuronic activities for >clik< THIS moment, but we are really not sure whether that is enough - what about the chemical state, how about the framework (I understand that the brains are wired differently from person to person) and so on. And then there are the ethical / spiritual / practical problems... Much easier to rely on a divine intervention! :wtf: :wtf:

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                                  Lee Chetwynd
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #63

                                  Ill dig out my 64mb memory stick out we can keep them all together so they don't get lonely.

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                                  • W wizardzz

                                    Yes, it will be possible IMO. This is how it can be done: It will not be a scan, or a download, it will be slow. Every cell in your brain can be replaced by a synthetic. Your consciousness is not in one cell, but is made up of a collection of all of your cells. Switching each one individual will allow your consciousness to switch over to electronics, at what point does that occur? It's not binary- at what spoonful of soil does a hill become a mountain? After the transition is complete, the body and be destroyed and electric brain removed.

                                    Twits[^]

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                                    Lee Chetwynd
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #64

                                    I love a good paradox! If you pull the hairs out of your head 1 at a time, at which point do you become bald?

                                    wizardzz wrote:

                                    After the transition is complete, the body and be destroyed and electric brain removed.

                                    that's definitely not the most romantic way of doing it. It sounds a bit like peeling an orange! I'd not considered a gradual assimilation though.

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                                    • S StatementTerminator

                                      Don't. Build. Cylons.

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                                      Lee Chetwynd
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #65

                                      As long as we get to choose our own coloured light I don't mind.

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                                      • A AAC Mike

                                        The question is premature, at least for Western science, as it hasn't even been figured out yet. Though an advanced Buddhist meditator who has studied the Abhidharma(Google it) might have some intersting ideas to relate. So how could you save it if you don't have a clue what it is? Mike

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                                        Lee Chetwynd
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #66

                                        I admit that I only skim read about the Abhidarma. I got sidetracked as it made me imagine digitizing our brains in order to ascend.

                                        AAC Mike wrote:

                                        So how could you save it if you don't have a clue what it is?

                                        I do that with my code sometimes.

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                                        • B Bruce Patin

                                          The very detailed book "Astral Dynamics" by Robert Bruce provides first hand accounts of different types of consciousness in our different levels of bodies, saying that the physical body brain does indeed have a type of consciousness, even though it appears to be mortal and not the eternal consciousness of the soul. My own experience tends to agree with this. So, theoretically, I would say a qualified yes, to a degree.

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                                          Lee Chetwynd
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #67

                                          I'm not sure why, but that reminded me that praying mantis have two brains. I don't know if that's relevant or I'm just getting tired.

                                          Bruce Patin wrote:

                                          My own experience tends to agree with this.

                                          That sounds interesting. Have you had a near death or outer body experience?

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