Count Lucanor wrote: ↑April 7th, 2023, 1:25 pm Unless you can find another way to convey and assimilate meaning, there's no difference to discern. I can't see how you could come up with an abstract definition of "meaning" that completely bypasses the human experience of finding meaning, of making sense, the only one we can use as reference. Whatever you come up with, if it does not refer to that subjective experience, then it will be anything else, perhaps an alternative to meaning, but not meaning per se. Your scenario, for example, is a simple algorithimic, mechanical procedure, where there are no concepts and interpretation. A human account of meaning involves those factors, which are missing in your scenario, among other things.I can't find how to be clear.
In your opinion, what do you want to determine when trying to see if something is conscious?
Count Lucanor wrote: ↑April 7th, 2023, 1:25 pm The concept of meaning or subjective experience may still be fuzzy, but we have a pretty good idea of what sentience implies, in contrast with non-sentient behavior. Some key aspects are perceptual experience and sensation: in a dangerous scenario, a living being actually feels the danger, but in your scenario the device works with a signal, it doesn't experience fear, it doesn't experience at all. It's no different than a clockwork. Comprehension also involves abstract mental representations: the inherent ability to reproduce in your thoughts lived experiences and identify general patterns from particular instances. One can make complex algorithms for machines to simulate this, but that's what it is: a simulation.Do you think it will never be possible to program an AI to distinguish when something represents danger? If so, why do you think so?
It seems to me that when you mention a clockwork it implies that this entity would be of a nature other than a biological organism. That in the biological there is something more. That it is not a question of organization but something else that makes them different.
To understand is to conceptualize something. We could understand that something is dangerous and yet not consider it relevant. An agent uses understanding but that does not found his agency.
Count Lucanor wrote: ↑April 7th, 2023, 1:25 pm I would say, risking a novel interpretation: the mental organization of sensations, feelings and thoughts into an abstract model of the world that allows a living organism to cope with the environment, integrating past experiences. It involves attention, intention, memory and self-awareness. Information only becomes information when input from our sensory organs has been assimilated into this mental model.I agree with you that humans build that model!
But I don't notice that "meaning" is defined in your definition.
One approximation is to note that "meaning" has to contain those situations in which certain circumstances concern us. It is how we determine what is "important."
"Meaning" is not what is found but the fact that there is a distinguishable range of "importance" between what we notice in reality.
How is information important to an agent?
It would seem that a simple qualification of the information would do the trick. But it doesn't.
Why would a certain qualification seem important to an agent?