
So being able to wonder and be surprised and amazed is cool, despite your philosophical stance, as you say.
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simulism wrote:Somebody pointed me to this discussion; I'm the one who created the simulism wiki and it's interesting to see what kind of discussions it sprouts.
simulism wrote:on my first attempt I got banned for posting a wikipedia link; first forum I see that bans on posting a link while still offering the 'url' button in the reply screen
simulism wrote:In any case, idiocy or not, it is a fun topic to ponder.
simulism wrote:Somebody pointed me to this discussion; I'm the one who created the simulism wiki and it's interesting to see what kind of discussions it sprouts.
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If you were to disconnect the nerves that go into your brain, reroute them and simulate all the electrical impulses (the ultimate virtual reality experience), would you be able to tell the difference? Think back, when was there an event in your life that you did not experience using only your 6 senses?
In any case, idiocy or not, it is a fun topic to ponder.
BarbaricAvatar wrote:Russell of Los Angeles wrote:Hello everybody. I'm back, but not to play Cantr. I have come to bring you this:
Simulism
http://www.simulism.org/Simulism
"Gaming is one reason for simulation. Studying behaviour is another. Like a boy studying a colony of ants in a jar, we run simulations to assist us in every-day decision making. We simulate the weather, the stock market, animal life etc. It is not unthinkable that as science progresses, we would even run simulations of human evolution. With enough processing power, we could run realistic simulations of any historical event, or life in general. In this scenario, the chances are similar that we are part of one such simulation."
Maybe the year is really 2080. Maybe Cantr IX has already been developed and implemented.
Maybe we are the charries.
Sounds like someone's seen 'The Matrix' too many times and is shallow enough to begin to believe that parts of it could be real.
simulism wrote:Which one of Bostrom's arguments do you disagree with?
I differentiate between first degree and second degree simulations. First degree is the 'total simulation' (there is no real person 'outside'); Second degree is 'Brain in a Vat'.
One big issue that science has not yet solved is whether 'consciousness' is simulatable. Is the 'me' concept a biological/chemical process or is there more? Ir it's biological/chemical, a first degree simulation would be possible. If not, the maximum that could be possible is a brain in a vat.
Matt Cartmill wrote:A digital computer is essentially a grid of slots, each of which can be either full or empty. We think of these as ones and zeroes. Some of these slots are linked causally by rules of operation, which provide that when a certain pattern shows up in some area, the contents of other slots are changed in various ways, which may depend on the contents of yet other slots. In modern computers, the ones and zeroes are represented by electrical charges in semiconductors, but they could be represented by anything: holes punched in cards, or beads on wires, or eggs in egg cartons. The medium doesn't matter: what's important is the algorithm. All the operations that you do on a computer could be done in exactly the same way by giving a team of people written instructions for moving eggs around in a football field full of egg cartons, though of course it would take longer. (By the way, a football field full of egg cartons has about 1 megabyte of RAM.)
This fact poses problems for computational theories of the mind. If moving electrical charges around in a certain pattern can produce subjective awareness and bring a mind into existence, so can moving around a collection of eggs in the same pattern; and if I knew how many eggs to use and what rules of operation to use in moving them, I could make my egg collection think it was Elizabeth Dole or the Wizard of Oz. I could get the same effects by making chalk marks on a blackboard, or waving semaphore flags, or singing songs, or tap dancing. All these processes can be computationally equivalent, with algorithms that correspond in every detail; but none of them seems like a plausible way of producing a subjective awareness. And since a digital computer is just another way of instantiating an algorithm, it seems impossible for such a device to become conscious. If we ever succeed in creating an artificial intelligence, it's going to have to be something more than just an algorithm machine.
Nick Bostrom wrote:A common assumption in the philosophy of mind is that of substrate-independence. The idea is that mental states can supervene on any of a broad class of physical substrates. Provided a system implements the right sort of computational structures and processes, it can be associated with conscious experiences. It is not an essential property of consciousness that it is implemented on carbon-based biological neural networks inside a cranium: silicon-based processors inside a computer could in principle do the trick as well.
Arguments for this thesis have been given in the literature, and although it is not entirely uncontroversial, we shall here take it as a given.
Jos Elkink wrote:simulism wrote:In any case, idiocy or not, it is a fun topic to ponder.
Yeah, I agree. Instead of going into a deep debate about whether or not humans could be simulated, which is a probably unanswerable philosophical question, you can at least assume you can and assume it is happening and then see where that leads us. What happens to moral values, for example, if this is the truth? What would you base your ethics on?
Matt Cartmill wrote:If moving electrical charges around in a certain pattern can produce subjective awareness and bring a mind into existence, so can moving around a collection of eggs in the same pattern (...) All these processes can be computationally equivalent, with algorithms that correspond in every detail; but none of them seems like a plausible way of producing a subjective awareness.
Jos Elkink wrote:Matt Cartmill wrote:If moving electrical charges around in a certain pattern can produce subjective awareness and bring a mind into existence, so can moving around a collection of eggs in the same pattern (...) All these processes can be computationally equivalent, with algorithms that correspond in every detail; but none of them seems like a plausible way of producing a subjective awareness.
I don't like this quote at all... That is, it is totally devoid of a logical argument. Just because this Matt can't imagine consciousness through a collection of eggs doesn't mean that it is impossible. Most things we do with computers were unimaginable just a few decades ago. Especially in the area of complex systems / non-linear / evolutionary / etc. algorithms, we can create very unexpected and impressive things using, indeed, just algorithms and bit settings. So why not consciousness? I'm not saying you can, I just mean that he gives no argument at all why not, so I don't really understand why you quote him like that
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EDIT: Oh, simulism already said it...
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