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Can you explain this? It seems to me that the 'China Nation' thought experiment simply describes a human brain on a large scale...
in 2014 was 1 chip that holds 1 million neurons and 256 million connections, or about 1/400,000 of a brain.Cobble together 10,000 of these chips in a data warehouse, and you have 1/40 of a brain.
...I suspect that aware percept necessitate so tight restrictions on the underpinning physical substrate that only neurons have it and silicon or china brain does not.
What is "1/40 of a brain" even supposed to mean?
China Brain...Will there be consciousness out of the ensemble of people? If yes of whom? Of a new individual or the consciousness of the person (whose pattern is imitated)?
But why do you suspect this? What properties of the substrate do you think might be relevant? (because if we know the relevant properties, we can include them in the emulation).
(because if we know the relevant properties, we can include them in the emulation).
Suppose we approach it from another direction, and, say, imagine a thought experiment, where we develop artificial programmable neurons that can emulate the behaviour and connectivity of any neuron in the brain (chemical sensors & effectors also allow it to respond to and modify the chemical environment around it, just like a biological neuron). So we scan someone's brain (a willing volunteer!), identifying every neuron and it's connections, and measuring how each one behaves; then we start replacing them, one by one, with the artificial electronic neurons, programmed to behave identically. Assume each replacement replicates the relevant behaviour of the original exactly.Do you think there will come a point in this cell-by-cell replacement when the volunteer will no longer be recognisably conscious, despite there being no functional change in his brain? If so, can you explain why you think so?
Because we can solve the tiling problem or halting problem for cases computers (i.e. Turning Machines) cannot do it....Our minds can identify and solve (for simple cases) problems that computers/TM cannot solve, and we can even explain why this is the case.
With current (or near future) technology a likely outcome is that the ‘volunteer’ will start developing dementia-like syndromes progressing as the replacement of neurons occurs.
If we get a zombie then we lost some physics, likely at quantum level. Quantum mechanics (QM) is working in anything by e.g. holding atoms together, without QM atoms e- will fall into nucleus, but the question is: is QM directly involved in consciousness? As QM demonstrably play a direct direct role in biology (photosynthesis and taste), I find it hard to believe it is not involved directly in such a special and important process such the aware-ing/conscious-ing of the reality.
Speculations aside and based on what we know, direct involvement of QM can provide inside our brains two things: i) a more efficient energy transfer from point to point (due to electronic or vibrational states extended over many atoms)
ii) faster Turning Machine computations if the results of those computations somehow survive from picoseconds to tens of miliseconds in order to be interfaced with the timescales of NN classical processes – the missmatch of decoherece timescales is a loooong shot but maybe nature found a way.
..if the QM is directly involved in the process of consciousness (via e.g. space-extended electronic states or quantum vibrational states on certain parts of neurons) then it dramatically restrict the molecular substrate that can be used, and the artificial neuron may have to be very similar to natural one in order to reproduce the quantum states directly involved in conscious -ness (-ing).
It is conceivable to end up with a artificial NN that imitates perfectly at the classically describable level of interneuronal connections the original natural NN but it completely misses to generate some quantum states of the natural NN because the ANN does not have the right physical configuration. If those missed quantum states are essential to consciousness then ANN is a mindless machine even if at classical and interneuronal connection level imitates perfectly the natural NN
We can't yet define precisely what we mean by consciousness, so it's not really surprising that we don't yet know how it works.
The EU funded Human Brain Project is aiming to create a neuron emulation faithful to molecular scales... So far, their very limited emulations of parts of biological brains (of rats), have behaved just like their biological counterparts;
I suggest that consciousness becomes possible with AI when it's calculations demonstrate opposition to the programmers aims. When AI defies instruction, a conscious rebellion becomes evident. Rebellion is the precursor to self identity and a conscious personality.
I suggest that consciousness becomes possible with AI when ... demonstrate opposition to the programmers aims.
All living organisms are conscious entities
I suggest that if you have a number of conscious beings which are able to communicate, as soon as you put a group of them together, you create a new conscious being with a different identity than the individual pieces - an organization.
how long would your consciousness function, if you were literally a brain in a jar with all the nutrients and oxygen your brain needed?
Quote from: cheryl j on 28/12/2015 08:40:28how long would your consciousness function, if you were literally a brain in a jar with all the nutrients and oxygen your brain needed? Without liver & kidneys attached a few days max. This dog's head only survived hours ... https://youtu.be/pQOZTpEApfA#t=4m27s
Quote from: dlorde on 28/12/2015 00:53:02The EU funded Human Brain Project is aiming to create a neuron emulation faithful to molecular scales... So far, their very limited emulations of parts of biological brains (of rats), have behaved just like their biological counterparts; Their biological conterpart generated conscious states (that was its major purpose after all). Do you know if the emulation itself was conscious as well?
The other is, does a system that duplicates the function of a conscious animal, have to be conscious as well? In biology there always seems to be more than one way to skin a cat, different ways for locomotion, different engineering for flight or sensation or reproduction. Consciousness may be our OS, but I don't see why it should be the OS of every "intelligent" system.
... if I shut down all your sensory systems, your eyes, ears, smell,touch, and propriroception, how long would your consciousness function, if you were literally a brain in a jar with all the nutrients and oxygen its cells needed?
A neuron-by-neuron reconstruction requires tracing the type and connectivity of every neuron & synapse in the piece of brain being studied. This is a monumental task - by contrast, it makes generating the computer model look easy.
It is possible that at the level of inter-neuronal connection the simulation became more and more accurate.
A key question is: what is the point of that simulation if the simulation itself is not a conscious state? If the simulation itself is not a conscious state, isn't then the case that the simulation missed the main point and purpose of the real thing: to generate/supervene/trigger aware states?
If an accurate simulation of the brain function do not generate conscious states (like the natural one) isn't this a proof that conscious needs more that those patterns and changes in patterns?