Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 am
Some animal behaviours are novel and require thought. Dogs, corvids, cetaceans and octopus all exhibit advanced cognitive abilities. For example, a chimp, never having seen it done before, will move an object on which it can stand to beneath some high hanging food so that the food can be reached. To perform this operation a chimp must have been able to think thus: Ok, there’s some food up there that I want but I can’t reach it. Well, what can I do that will enable me to reach it? Mmm... Well, there’s a thing over there on the other side of the room that I could move and stand on. If I bring it over here beneath the food then I should be able to reach the food.
I've seen the experiments with chimps, rats, etc., and I don't deny any of this. Many species, specially mammals, exhibit complex behaviors, can solve problems, use tools, etc., and our closest relatives among primates can even talk with scientists in sign language (although during all the decades that this has been going on, they have not asked a single question yet). That behavior is within their nature and so is ours. But that's not the issue. We certainly have some extra features that allowed us to inaugurate a completely new way of dealing with the environment, and most importantly, a way of changing ourselves as a species by organizing our social experience, collectively and historically, in the domain of culture, a domain that simply does not exist in any other species, a domain that has its own complex dynamic and does not respond directly to the the same pressures of biological evolution as in the experience of any other species. There's no social construction, no cultural dynamic as such in whales, birds or tigers, nor they will be able to produce specific subdomains as art, technology, religion, philosophy, etc., nor develop in history a "whaleness" or "tigerness" distinctively different from that of thousands of years before. That's why the products of human activity, the artifacts of culture, can be justifiably set apart from the rest of natural production and be called "artificial". That's the issue.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 amOr is the building and tool making behavior of these other animals entirely mindless and determined while similar human behavior is entirely mindful and undetermined? Can we really say one is entirely determined and the other not at all? Why?
While one is determined in a way that allows very little variation, following innate mechanisms of response to the environment, the other is an emergent reality that works autonomously as an open field of undetermined human decisions and actions, with its contingencies and unpredictable historical developments. I'm not a subscriber of strong social constructionism, so I will not deny all of our innate mechanisms in play, but I'll highlight the importance of our "second nature", the field of human action, which sets up apart, for good or for bad, from the rest of nature.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 am
Count Lucanor wrote: Secondly, those human developments surpass the innate faculties of the human species, so one isolated human would not have made a dam by himself, nor a bridge, nor a house, unlike a bird or a beaver, which will do it by instinct, it’s within their nature. It takes what is within human nature: social cooperation, higher cognitive functions and learning abilities to make ever more sophisticated tools and use their natural environment to produce things that do not respond to mere instinctive necessity.
But we were once as they are. Go back a million years or so and we were just smart primates. And If modern humans went extinct, then perhaps in another million years chimps would evolve to be as smart as we are now. And other animals have cooperative behaviours. Some, like bees are not mindful cooperators but chimps plan and hunt cooperatively like our ancestors did. Again, the difference between them and us may be just a difference in degree and not in kind.
But we are talking about humans,
homo sapiens. Those other primates were not "we". We can justifiably see the connection as ancestors in the evolution process of hominids, but that's about it: there's something about the
homo sapiens species that made a a significant difference in the way forward. Cooperation in eusocial animals? Sure, but such innate mechanisms of cooperation are not subject to modification by historical circumstances created by those animals themselves while organizing consciously their whole collective experience. There will be no intrigues and power struggles in the ant nest, not any that has not been biologically predetermined. Nor will specialized labor be determined by contingent historical circumstances shaped by collective decisions and actions, but by innate biological mechanisms.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 am
Count Lucanor wrote: It is well documented that a feral child will barely survive and will not develop any characteristic associated with being a normal, functional human. Maybe there are some other cases in nature, but it will show that early upbringing in a social setting is key to future development, which in the case of humans is particularly important.
Agreed. But it’s the same with baby monkeys that are separated at birth from their mothers and not given the nurturing, socialization and teaching by a mother. These monkeys function cognitively and socially at a lower level than monkeys raised normally just as with human infants. I'm not seeing a lot of difference here.
Of course, chimps are close relatives, so we do share a lot of features, but there are also many key differences. One such important, well-known difference, is the relatively small brain size of newborn humans and its rapid postnatal enlargement, extraordinary as compared to other animals, including primates. This has been attributed to the size of the human maternal pelvis as an evolutionary tradeoff for bipedal locomotion. The point is that the extra pressure on the survival chances of human neonates that is countered with nurturing, also implies a bigger impact of that nurturing on brain development, which also highlights the importance of brain plasticity.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 am
I agree that current AI is not the same as the biologically housed intelligence of humans. Computers are capable of some of the processes we normally associate with intelligence, but computers don't currently have consciousness or an inner mental life. But is the progress made thus far in AI not reason to think that intelligence, and perhaps sentience, could eventually be housed in a non-biological substrate? Do you not think that we have made the first steps down that road?
I disagree mostly with the implications of stating that "computers are capable of some of the processes we normally associate with intelligence". We could say that of math calculators, even the first, rudimentary machines. If we implied with it that eventually math calculators will make progress to become able to reason mathematically, we would be making a fundamental mistake. It is of no help to point out that current electronic calculators are the first steps in that path, because they obviously aren't. The counterargument to this objection, if we followed the common logic among advocates of "AI as real intelligence", would be: "they are just a different type of math reasoning". The problem is: why then call it reasoning, intelligence, etc.? What advocates of "AI as real intelligence" are actually pretending is to embrace the computational theory of mind, with all its philosophical implications, as the ruling model of intelligence, and, even worse, this as the root of agency, sentience, life, and so on. Thus, the close relationship between AI and the singularity hypothesis.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 am
Count Lucanor wrote: Having no evidence of such technical capabilities one can only speculate, but the likelihood always inclines to the side where there is evidence. Meanwhile, once it is acknowledged that current technology can not achieve its current pretensions for fundamental issues in its conception and deployment, it is a fairly good reason to believe that such technology will not achieve it in the future. Perhaps another technology yet to be invented, but not this one making headlines, heralded by the tech lords.
Animals are one thing, computers are another. We are currently a very long way from creating machines that have non-organic brains which could host minds akin to even the minimal sentience of the simplest vertebrate. But I think we have made the first baby steps down the road to constructing such machines and this progress may indicate that it will be possible eventually to construct sentient, thinking, non-biological machines.
It is the second part of this statement that I disagree with, as explained in my previous response. No baby steps whatsoever, but you may think so if you embrace the computational theory of mind and believed that sentience and animal-like agency are emergent properties of computational minds, whether those are biological organs or man-made devices.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 24th, 2024, 5:14 am
Computers process things differently from us, but some of the processes they carry out achieve outcomes we generally associate with intelligence. For example, adding two quantities is an operation that both biological brains and non-biological neural networks are capable of. Yes, computers currently do it by brute force but, once we learn more about how biological brains do what they do, we should be able to build smarter machines and, eventually, machines which might rival our own cognitive abilities.
But being capable of, does not imply doing it the same way. Outperforming intelligent organisms in completing tasks is not the same as outperforming organisms in cognitive abilities. It is without question that the "smartest" computers don't understand anything, they just perform fast, automated (mechanistic/digital) calculations, but the implication that "understanding" and "reasoning" are simply a factor of such calculations, so that the more calculations, the bigger chances of reasoning and understanding emerging, is very highly debatable. It's the debate against the computational theory of mind.