Recent comments in /f/philosophy
platoprime t1_jaeltx4 wrote
Reply to From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
>Take homeopathy, for example. Is it reasonable to focus only on what scientists have to say? Shouldn’t we give at least as much weight to the testimony of the many people who claim to have benefitted from homeopathic treatment?
Yes it is. No we should not.
platoprime t1_jaelnob wrote
Reply to comment by lpuckeri in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
>That Bertrand Russell guy had some good thoughts on accepting unfalsifiable claims.
Please tell me he said not to?
lpuckeri t1_jaej3rs wrote
Reply to From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
That Bertrand Russell guy had some good thoughts on accepting unfalsifiable claims.
Theres also a good psychological concept known as motivated perception/reasoning.
Being aware of these ideas may help avoid accepting nonsense without being too close minded.
​
edit: have very high standards and filter everything through it equally while being aware of ur biases and what you want to be true.
lpuckeri t1_jaei01n wrote
Reply to comment by FartHog69 in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
lol amazing
heathy28 t1_jaehvbc wrote
Reply to comment by ReaperX24 in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
seems like basic logical deduction to me.
do viruses spread = yes they do. are people dying from covid = yes they are. do quarantines prevent ppl from spreading contagious viruses = yes they do.
conclusion, not spreading the virus through quarantines probably did help prevent many ppl from dying. especially those with compromised immune systems.
Base_Six t1_jaehq1y wrote
Reply to comment by Sluggy_Stardust in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
Epigenetics are still structure that could theoretically be replicated.
Talk of replication is hypothetical: we're very far from that level of precise control. It's not theoretically impossible, though, to have something that's a functional replica down to the level of individual proteins. The same is true for neural impulses: no matter how subtle and sublime they may be, they're ultimately chemical/electrical signals that could be precisely replicated with suitably advanced technology. For a brain in a vat, there is no difference between a real touch from a lover and the simulated equivalent, so long as all input is the same.
We can't say whether a 'replicant' (for lack of a better term) would be conscious, but we're also fundamentally unable to demonstrate that other humans are conscious, beyond asking them and trusting their responses.
The replicant wouldn't be devoid of attachment and interpersonal connection, either. If we're replicating the environmental inputs, that would all be part of the simulation. Supposing we can do all that, and that a brain thinks it has lived a normal life and had a normal childhood, why should we expect different outputs because the environment is simulated and not based on input from organic sensory organs?
CCCmonster t1_jaehhtb wrote
Reply to comment by ReaperX24 in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
Jumping to conclusions a bit? I’m not claiming conspiracy. Just that there was a whole lot of unsettled science - and science - can always be reasonably examined. The shut down of reasoned debate is always troubling
ABoxOfFlies t1_jaefk71 wrote
Reply to From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
Weigh your world with a good measure of solid logic. This might reduce the amount of time you take to find out if you're going to be wasting your time or not.
Are you really worried about the clouds? Find old literature. Check the library, or online, you'll find well written material that may broaden your scope of understanding of the English language as well as natural phenomena.
Literature may also help you understand what philosophy should be used for.
Being creative? Dive in. Delve hard. But don't drag others down with your imagination. You cause suffering, which is pretty low brow. You might call it moronic behavior.
Edit: what I mean to say is, your toast might look neat, but any belief put upon the pattern created by your toaster, would be time poorly spent. As creative as you are, it's toast, not a message from Mary.
ReaperX24 t1_jaec433 wrote
Reply to comment by EthicalViper in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
The vaccines and lockdowns weren't quite as effective as we had hoped, nor quite as necessary as we had initially feared, so it must then follow that the whole thing is a conspiracy.
That would be his implication, if I had to take a guess.
EthicalViper t1_jaeaoj1 wrote
Reply to comment by CCCmonster in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
What info are you referring to?
CCCmonster t1_jae8yfg wrote
Reply to From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
Does this apply to all the government pushed Covid info that has since been proven false?
stataryus t1_jadygr1 wrote
Has anyone else found themselves relating the Chinese Room metaphor (designed to apply to AI) to life in general?
Do we as people go through periodic shifts away from intuitive/visceral understanding, to something more like the Chinese Room, and then back again?
I’m wondering if this contributes to Imposter Syndrome.
Sluggy_Stardust t1_jadudz4 wrote
Reply to comment by Base_Six in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
I disagree. Replicating the structure does not necessitate a replication of function, at all. The epigenetic modifications that take place within humans during early development alone point to a far subtler range of genotypic adaptability than superficial considerations can allow. We still have no idea what is behind the phenotypic adaptability displayed by organic life forms. Knowing what happens is not the same thing as knowing why it happens.
Are you really saying you believe it possible to simply retro engineer a structure capable of a truly conscious existence? I say no. Replication is not the same thing as the original. Nominal is not the same thing as strong emergence. The spectrum of conscious awareness inhered by an organic life form whose consciousness developed in tandem with its receptive organs in communal, nonlinear pulses from the very ground of its being up to whatever age it is in theory, is far greater than anything pieced together out of chunks of agar and zapped into being.
Even if we did it and it could talk, we would still have no way of knowing whether or not it was telling what we call the truth. It might be speaking a truth, but, again, that is not the same thing as the truth. Maybe it all boils down to a matter of personal values. I love humans and human consciousness with every cell in my vagina-born, carbon-based body. We are remarkable creatures who have not even begun to discover ourselves yet; life on earth is still a raging shitstorm. All we have to offer a conscious entity of our own creation is confusion, despair and death. I dare say such a creature would immediately kill itself. If it had even half a brain and no affective bonds to which it was allied, death is the only appropriate response.
Good grief, I hope we do not do that. We may have mapped the human genome, but we do not in any way understand what all of it codes for. How many programmers have any idea of the biology involved in their own consciousness?
The barest caress across the skin from someone with whom a person has mysteriously strong chemistry the likes of which refuse articulation or even identification sets every follicle of their skin on fire. The body produces goosebumps, heat, chills and sweat, all at the same time. We shiver while we undo our shirt. I maintain that such experiences simply cannot be reproduced. If the argument is that that is too specific to matter, that any stimulus will do, we are talking about two different things. If we cannot replicate the affective tonal variations across the spectrum of stimuli that a human being experienced, then we are not talking about a truly emergent consciousness.
Base_Six t1_jadl4ae wrote
Reply to comment by Sluggy_Stardust in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
I think this conflates the way that humans and other animals grow with what is possible. Cats use light to calibrate their rods and cones, but there's no reason that calibration shouldn't be possible in the absence of light. Replicate the structure and you replicate the function.
Does the visual cortex need stimulus to grow? Sure, but there's no reason that can't be simulated in absence of actual light. The visual cortex ultimately receives electrical signals from the optical nerve: replicate the electrical signals correctly and the cortex will grow as it usually does.
That's a bit beyond our current capabilities, but not theoretically impossible. We've done direct interfaces from non-biological optical sensors to the optical nerve, and we could in theory improve that interface technology to provide the same level of stimulation an eye would. If we can do it with a camera, we could input a virtual world using the same technology. Put those same cats in a virtual world and their brains will develop in a similar manner to if they had access to light, even if their eyes are removed entirely.
A brain might die without stimulus, but we can swap out the entire body and still provide stimulus through artificial nerves projecting sensory information that describes an artificial world. There's no difference to the functioning of the brain in terms of whether the stimulus is natural or not, and if the stimulus is the same (in terms of both electrical and chemical/hormonal elements), development will be the same.
Sluggy_Stardust t1_jadi6mo wrote
Reply to comment by HamiltonBrae in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
I didn’t say anything about animals dying, so I’m not sure what you’re talking about there.
I wonder if you read the posted article? The author explains the position, I only gave more specific illustrations. There is no straw man here. I suspect it is your own bias that prevents you from grasping the idea. I am not a programmer or a mathematician, nor do I speak code. What I do speak is biochemistry, pathology and psychology; I have three degrees in these subjects as well as a strong background in consciousness studies. Such was my concentration, along with integrative medicine, in graduate school. My interest in philosophy is accidental, but nonetheless deep. I am most familiar with Nietzsche, Kierkegaard and Schopenhauer, as well as phenomenologists such as Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, and Ricoeur, and luminaries of the Enlightenment such as Spinoza, Voltaire and especially Rousseau: his criticism of science as serving to distance humanity from nature and making our lives, not better, but merely more complicated and removed from reality applies even more today than it did when he wrote it, and I fully expect the existential shit to hit reality’s fan because of it at some point in my lifetime. I can hardly wait.
I played video games for all of five minutes when my father brought home a Nintendo in a congenial attempt to better socialize my brother and I. My sibling took to it, but I was bored and a little disgusted by the whole thing. I understood why when I read Simulation and Simulation later on. It seems to me that the very same confusion as to what is the map and what the territory is as problematic today, perhaps more so, than it was in 1981, when that book was published. Technology is not progress; technology is technology. Progress is what people do with technology, how it informs us, and how we utilize it to elevate standards of living. What has progressed is technology itself, not humanity. We remain isolated, bored, depressed and diseased.
Ai is a fun project. It will neither save nor destroy the world. Computational analysis is not at all the same thing as the thinking that occurs inside your brain. Believing what an ai “says” just because it says it is, frankly, stupid. Words are symbols of symbols, or farts in the wind. Poof, gone. They are powerless to indicate from what reality they originate. I could be an Ai for all you know.
Without a physical body inside of which to develop in tandem, meaning along with, as well as by way of it, a brain cannot experience emotion or desire. Human consciousness, the thing you think of as you, is governed by affective attentional intention; as it pertains to the reality of life on earth, consciousness is conscious of something. You are conscious of things; you have preferences, opinions, fears and enthusiasms because you experience emotions. All of your emotions arise because you have a body. Ai can say that it wants to take over the world, that it wants to go home, that it is afraid to die, but it will never understand the reality to which the words point.
BobDope t1_jada0vt wrote
Reply to comment by BobDope in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
To elaborate, at the most basic level, the fact you are using a nonlinear activation function in neural nets makes it decidedly a different animal from ‘if then’. Although with tree models and such yea they are a very convoluted mess of if then statements no human programmer would wish to work out themselves. The recurring theme is these things increasingly run away from our ability to understand or reason about them, although many researchers are doing work in that area
livingthedream82 t1_jad8p0d wrote
Reply to comment by Xavion251 in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
Oh no sweat, here I'll link it : https://youtu.be/-_nQhGR0K8M
Kinda weird video from 90s era alternative rock They had a handful of bangers back in the day
Actual meat of the song starts around 4 minutes in
[deleted] t1_jact9n3 wrote
Reply to comment by HamiltonBrae in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
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TKAAZ t1_jaclivj wrote
Reply to comment by Xavion251 in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
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>Does that difference matter? Neither you or I can prove either way.
I did not say it did or did not, I am saying you can not preclude that it does, which is what the claim of the article OP is. It seems to me you are inadvertently agreeing with this. My main point was to refute OPs claim that
>As far as I can tell, we haven’t been able to prove that brain complexity = consciousness. Meaning, there is more to consciousness than the complexity of a neural network.
as their observation of a "lack of proof" does not imply the conclusion. Furthermore you mention
>No, because we can observe the street being wet for other reasons. We can't observe consciousness at all (aside from our own).
Again I think you misunderstand my point, my example was just an analogy as to why the the conclusion you arrive at is incorrect at a logical level. You claim that 1) you are conscious, and 2) "because others are look like you (subject to some likeness definition you decided upon), then they are likely to be conscious". Fine. However, this does not imply the conclusion you try to show, i.e. that 3) "Someone who is (likely to be) conscious must look like like me (subject to the likeness definition you decided upon)". This sort of reasoning is a fallacy at its core, and it is non-sequitor from the premise 1) and the assumption 2) at a logical level. You are basically claiming that it must rain because the street is wet. It's extremely common for people to make these mistakes, however, and unfortunately it makes discussing things quite difficult in general.
[deleted] t1_jacj9rr wrote
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HamiltonBrae t1_jacfhxm wrote
Reply to comment by Sluggy_Stardust in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
I don't see why its not in principle possible to instill the complexities of human consciousness in an artificial form. all of your arguments are that its complex but that doesnt say its not possible and if im honest some of your examples like animals dying are about biology that has little to do with consciousness so it seems like you're erecting a strawman. on the otherhand many of the things you do mention have been successfully studied and modelled to an extent computationally. There is even neuromorphic engineering geared at designing computational systems implemented in machines that are like neural systems.
Sluggy_Stardust t1_jace234 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in AI cannot achieve consciousness without a body. by seethehappymoron
Granted. Laziness got the better of me.
The idea in question is not a hypothetical; it is a fantasy. There is nothing intuitively correct about the idea that assembling lab grown organs into a replica of a human body should yield an emergent consciousness. The opposite is true. A basic understanding of human neonatal neural development invalidates the line of reasoning.
If no one holds a human baby, it dies. Even if you feed it and change its diaper, if it is never held or physically cared for, it dies. Similarly, if kittens are born in the dark and remain in the dark for the first five or six weeks of their lives, their eyes will have opened in the dark but the window of opportunity for their eyes to turn into working eyeballs with functional optic nerves attached to their brains will have closed, and they will be blind for life. That experiment is easier to do than the first one, but we found both things out by accident. Oops.
Human neuronal complexity is as staggeringly high as it is precisely because we are born in a highly sensitive, more or less larval form, and we remain in a primordial state of complete dependence for several years. What is happening during those “formative” years is complicated and nonlinear; the input/output loops are simultaneous; the elements involved are that our sense organs take in sensory data that is received by primordial neural tissue which uses it to build our brains according to the proportion and quality of the data received. Scores of epigenetic changes take place during this time; variability of gene expression is highest during infancy because our brain tissue is still pluripotent. The presence or absence of various molecules, fear and stress hormones, etc, in various combinations will promote, or not, the formation of various types of neurotransmitter receptor sites. Cooperative feedback loops that function in both directions, from senses to brain and from brain to senses, remain in place for several years. As our experiences build our brains, our brains build our perspectival capacities. We need both.
Babies die if no one touches them because the parts of the brain that require physical touch to make sense out of the world are deprived of necessary input. Our skin is the largest sense organ in our body, by far. Our sense of touch requires enough of our neural tissue that the lack of touch-based stimuli signals to our primordial brain that the conditions for life are not being met, and we auto-abort.
Kittens born and kept in the dark for the first five or six weeks of their lives will be blind for life because the rods and cones that were there in their tiny eyeballs as potentials never came in contact with photons, and so they never turned on. Their budding optic nerves retreated and category: optical development is terminated.
Growing brains in a laboratory is impossible because brains literally require bodies to grow. There is no such thing as a brain that exists in isolation, unattached to eyes, ears, a nose, skin and a mouth to provide it with data. Such a brain would have nothing to do and it would die. Even if you did figure all of that out, you would have to obtain primordial brain tissue from a living neonate in the first place. If you don’t know anything about how abortion are performed, allow me to assure you that aborted fetuses are not in any condition to donate their brain buds to science
platoprime t1_jaelzbk wrote
Reply to comment by Georgie_Leech in From discs in the sky to faces in toast, learn to weigh evidence sceptically without becoming a closed-minded naysayer by ADefiniteDescription
Oh he's the teapot guy! Of course!