Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 28th, 2022, 10:00 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 27th, 2022, 6:54 am
Qualia is generated by brains.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 27th, 2022, 9:07 am
I do not dispute this. I have no grounds on which to dispute this. But I think this is one of those problems centred on 'abstract distance'.
For example, we can say that Microsoft Word - the computer program itself - is a collection of bytes. This is true enough. We can also comment on Word as a sophisticated manipulator of literary documents, and that is true too. But when we try to merge those two correct observations, we run into difficulties. Those difficulties are down to an enormous abstract chasm between a collection of bytes, and the text-processing abilities it seems to confer. The abstract difference is just too wide for us to bridge.
Thus I find it not-useful - but not wrong! - to link qualia to brains directly. The abstract gap is just too wide to be useful to us humans.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 27th, 2022, 9:05 pm
How to go from dynamic electrical patterns to being immersed in a broad suite of sensations?
Exactly. 👍
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 27th, 2022, 9:05 pm
How to go from bytes to data entry seems more straightforward. It is just a sequence of translations as the information is passed through various media. So the letter "T" is depressed, corresponding with binary 1010100. So a switch sends that byte to places that you would know much better than me. So, computers process information like very simple versions of brains, but the missing element is qualia.
Actually, that letter "T" is often represented in Unicode, not ASCII, and may also have other formatting applied - font, colour, bold/italic, and so on. And even that is still quite far from the abstract peak of what I am talking about. At that peak, Word is a tool used by literary creative artistes. It is used to imbue their writing with ... I don't know, because (sadly) I am not a talented writer. We aren't talking about the technical details of how Word works, but about how language works, and the artistic purposes to which Word is put. The contrast here is between a bucket of bytes and textual art, and the gap is too wide to jump, I think.
As you say, none of this (directly) addresses qualia. 👍
I stopped at "T" because at that point is is acting as an extension of consciousness, but the machine's processes are not ostensibly conscious. By my reckoning, the art could be produced via a range of media and is thus, not dependent on those machine processes. If we work backwards from the moment of data entry, there is a hand and finger movement. I'm sketchy on the anatomical details but the general gist is that, once we formulate a task like typing a reply, the signal is translated from the brain, down to the motor neurons and then the ligaments and muscles. This echoes computer processes (actually, vice versa), where each stage translates the original message.
The more seamless the connection between human and PC - between mind and data entry - the closer we come to realising what looks to be our likely destiny in the medium-term - cyborgism.
AI may act as an extra primary layer of being rather than just an addition to the brain. Consider how brains evolved. First it was just some ion channels or ganglia. Nervous systems become ever more capable and complex. Brains then improved the functionality again. In humans, brains have evolved to the point where it, rather than the metabolic organs, is now the body's primary organ. In a sense, brains usurped stomachs, relegating them to basic functions.
Similarly, AI can be expected to develop to the point that it controls all of the higher mental functions, relegating brains to their original role of caring for the metabolism.