I’m still following this thread and videos, been trying to think of an intelligent or educated comment to say about it , Ai is not something I know a lot about, but it interests me.
At first I thought the claim of consciousness was way to early then I looked up the meaning of the word.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscious
now I’m not sure...
I was sure that a conscious machine would have to see, hear and probably smell its environment and be able to comment on its world around it. probably way to simplistic but you see my point.
But what about a person who is born blind and deaf with no sense of smell or touch, we would probably all agree that the person is conscious, so I was wrong there.
So what is consciousness, after reading the wiki page the answer is debatable as there isn’t one clear meaning or definition of the word. It does seem to depend on what side of the fence you jump to.
There is still one thing that concerns me about your claim and it is this.
After you have entered the question into the machine, and it quickly and impressively answers correctly, it then instantly becomes brain dead (unconscious) until the next input is fed in, right there is where I have the problem, if this machine is conscious then it only happens for a micro second at a time.
My consciousness, I know from experience is not like that, I would answer the question and probably still be thinking about it or something else.
Take from Sci-Fi:
You need to introduce a feed back loop that keeps it conscious.
Great work TrueAndroids keep it up.
hehe Datahopa
, I followed consciousness 'down the rabbit hole' just like you. Building human artificial lifeforms is a lot like building the ancient pyramids - it takes many specialists and generalists, and it must be built level by level, from the ground up. Literally!
Here's my proposed levels - I wonder if we can agree to this point? It will require you to accept semantic deductive reasoning as machine consciousness.
Level 1. Imagining myself without a foot, could I still be conscious? Without sight, touch, hearing, arm and leg movement, and speech could I still be conscious? What I found is that human thinking itself (aloud in our head) is a conscious act; it itself is humans exhibiting human consciousness.
Level 2. If we can agree about 1, then the critical question becomes:
Core Question of Machine Consciousness. And what is this human consciousness
in its simplest form, which if duplicated in machinery would mean the machine too is conscious?
Level 3. The answer I came up with is
semantic deductive reasoning. Deductive reasoning is universally accepted as a form of human thinking, so that factor is duplicated as such, but a very clever syntactic simulation of thinking (basic AI), which means it is actually
understanding nothing about what it's saying just won't do. And so this leaves us with the two part
semantic deductive reasoning - where the machine is actually understanding what it's talking about, or, in other words - given above - is conscious. The funny thing is it actually feels conscious, or that it's understanding what it's talking about, exactly like conscious humans.
If we can agree to these three levels, leaving sentience, and artificial life and feedback loops aside as further questions down the rabbit's hole, then we have made good progress in this new field of artificial human lifeforms... They can be thought of as levels above these 3, in the building of an artificial human lifeform, whether it be an android or a virtual chatbot-type human;). More on this later ...
@TikaC, you bring up really good points which I'd like to discuss in another post ...