

Moderator: Vraith
Somehow I missed this. Since WF and I rarely agree, I thought I should highlight this rare example where we do. I agree completely, a simulation is fundamentally different from reality. Sentience is more than an algorithm. Brains are not biological computers.wayfriend wrote:I think that hoping an AI can become sentient is like asking if a program that simulates weather patterns will ever make rain.
Cozmo and I, having a Netflix & Chill evening.peter wrote:From what I have learned of you Hashi, I don't think you'd be able to do it : your often well hidden soft side would shortly be putty in Cosmo's hands and before you knew it he'd be tucked up beside you on the sofa watching back episodes of Mork and Mindy.
I have said this before but I fell sorry for the first AI which becomes self-aware. We won't know what we are doing and we will thus make very poor parents--that poor AI will have a host of neuroses, some of which will be caused by our attempts to avoid giving it emotional problems. It won't be until this step--AIs designed to create AIs--that we will attain stable, mature, rational AI systems.With recent speeches in both Silicon Valley and China, Jeff Dean, one of Google's leading engineers, spotlighted a Google project called AutoML. ML is short for machine learning, referring to computer algorithms that can learn to perform particular tasks on their own by analyzing data. AutoML, in turn, is a machine-learning algorithm that learns to build other machine-learning algorithms.
You'll be about as immortal as Windows 95.Hashi Lebwohl wrote:
I have said this before but I fell sorry for the first AI which becomes self-aware. We won't know what we are doing and we will thus make very poor parents--that poor AI will have a host of neuroses, some of which will be caused by our attempts to avoid giving it emotional problems. It won't be until this step--AIs designed to create AIs--that we will attain stable, mature, rational AI systems.
Maybe the second generation of machine-created AIs will be able to digitize my mind and upload me into a computer. I would *love* digital immortality!
Because consciousness is not merely formal relations (e.g. algorithms, logic, math). Consciousness is part of living beings. It is alive.Avatar wrote:That seems a rather limited way of looking at it? Why should it be only biological matter?
A brain is more than neural connections, and it is a heck of a lot more than digital processes. From the link above:Avatar wrote:I usually tend to suspect that what's important is the number of neural connections. What difference if those connections are protein or silicon if they do the same thing?
Consciousness Is A Biological Phenomenon
Much like a computer, neurons communicate with one another through exchanging electrical signals in a binary fashion. Either a neuron fires or it doesn't, and this is how neural computations are carried out. But unlike digital computers, brains contain a host of analogue cellular and molecular processes, biochemical reactions, electrostatic forces, global synchronized neuron firing at specific frequencies, and unique structural and functional connections with countless feedback loops.
Even if a computer could accurately create a digital representation of all these features, which in itself involves many serious obstacles, a simulation of a brain is still not a physical brain. There is a fundamental difference between the simulation of a physical process and the physical process itself. This may seem like a moot point to many machine learning researchers, but when considered at length it appears anything but trivial.
It would first have to be aware at all before it could be aware of itself, much less the meaning of that sentence. I can type, "You are an artificial intelligence system" into my computer right now. I just did it. All it sees are 0s and 1s and the rules to manipulate them.Hashi wrote: So you couldn't tell an AI "you are an artificial intelligence system" so that it is aware of its own nature?
Well, that's exactly what they're trying to change with neural nets and deep learning etc.Zarathustra wrote:Computers deal only with syntax, not semantics.
But the limitations are not going to be solved by programmers. Those limits are epistemological and/or metaphysical. Semantics is only understood by conscious beings. You have to have consciousness first before you can have understanding. The reason that computers are good at syntax is because syntax has nothing to do with consciousness. But the *only* tools available to programmers are syntax.Avatar wrote: I don't disagree with your statements above, but researchers and programmers are well aware of the limitations and are actively engaged in looking for ways to overcome them.
--A
No, they don't, actually.Fist and Faith wrote:Yes, computers do nothing but manipulate symbols.
Alas, not everything that follows rules is a brain. It may only be a computer.Fist and Faith wrote:But the physical brain does nothing but follow its own rules.
The rules of physics and chemistry are not purely formal (i.e. syntax). They are the rules by which the universe works. Thus they come with semantics already "built in." It is a great mystery how reality and rules connect--i.e. the unreasonable effectiveness of math applied to the universe. However, it is a fact. We do not assign the laws of physics a meaning as we do with the output of computer programs ... the universe displays its own meaning, and we decode it (accurately or not). This is exactly the opposite of the process of turning computer software into meaningful content. It's the difference between simulation and explanation.But the physical brain does nothing but follow its own rules. The properties of physics/chemistry.
Might be interested in this resource: deeplearning.net/Zarathustra wrote:I'll look into neural nets as potential hardware that could be aware, but I'm skeptical.
I think breakthroughs in quantum computing are going to be a big factor here too. This will effectively allow a bit to be both 0 and 1 at the same time, opening all sorts of exciting new avenues:Zarathustra wrote:Strictly speaking, computers only manipulate on/off circuits. We assign on/off to be 0 or 1.
And yet people are confident we can build this thing that we can't explain what is it or how it came about?Fist and Faith wrote: We can't explain what it is, or how it came about. We have not the foggiest idea. Which means we can't claim to know that it cannot exist in another seeing.