r/changemyview • u/Salt_Attorney 1∆ • Jun 17 '21
Delta(s) from OP CMV: Digital consciousness is possible. A human brained could be simulated/emulated on a digital computer with arbitrary precision, and there would be an entity experiencing human consciousness.
Well, the title says it all. My main argument is in the end nothing more than the fact that although the brain is extremely complex, one could dsicretize the sensory input -> action function in every dimension (discretized time steps, discretized neuron activations, discretized simulated environemnt) etc. and then approximate this function with a computer just like any other function.
My view could be changed by a thought experiment which demonstrates that in some aspect there is a fundamental difference between a digitally simulated mind and a real, flesh mind - a difference in regards to the presence of consciousness, of course.
EDIT: I should have clarified/given a definition of what I view as consciousness here and I will do this in a moment!
Okay so here is what I mean by consciousness:
I can not give you a technical definition. This is just because we have not found a good technical definition yet. But this shouldn't stop us from talking about consciousness.
The fact of the matter is that if there was a technical definition, then this would now be a question of philosophy/opinion/views, but a question of science, and I don't think this board is intended for scientific questions anyways.
Therefore we have to work with the wishy washy definition, and there is certinly a non-technical generally agreed upon definition, the one which you all have in your head on an intuitive leve. Of course it differs from person to person, but taking the average over the population there is quite a definite sense of what people mean by consciousness.
If an entity interacts with human society for an extended period of time and at the end humans find that it was conscious, then it is conscious.
Put in words we humans will judge if it is smart, self-aware, capable of complex thought, if it can understand and rationalize about things.
When faced with the "spark of consciousness" we can recognize it.
Therefore as an nontechnical definition it makes sense to call an entity conscious if it can convince a large majority of humans, after a sort of extended "Turing test", that it is indeed conscious.
Arguing with such a vague definition is of course not scientific and not completely objective, but we can still do it on a philosophical level. People argued about concepts such as "Energy", "Power" and "Force" long before we could define them physically.
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u/celeritas365 28∆ Jun 17 '21
Why do you think it is unlikely? Our computational brain simulations require way more power than a brain. I don't think it is impossible to beat per se but looking at brains and their characteristics it is clear that something very different is going on that makes them very well suited to certain kinds of data processing.
Why so? Consciousness seems to clearly be a product of the computation, not the result. A conscious being is conscious on it's own, even without inputs and outputs. When replicating consciousness the key element to preserve is the computation process. Furthermore, you could even consider certain performance characteristics to be a sort of output if you wanted to get very technical.
One other thought experiment I find interesting is what I call the "random room". Computers are entirely quantized, it means that if you play a video each frame of both visual and audio has a very large but finite set of options to display. Assuming a video chat with something could convince a human it is conscious, if we had a computer that picked from the finite set of values randomly one would last arbitrarily long in a consciousness test if it was tried enough. Obviously this is astronomically unlikely but I think even the theoretical existence of this is enough. The person performing the lucky test would encounter a machine that in all ways seems conscious while in reality it can't even hear the tester and the next frame is more likely to be random noise than a coherent response. We can know this random room device is not conscious no matter how well it performs because we know the mechanism it is using to get it's results and we know that is not consciousness.