Well, Raul (
http://conscious-robots.com/raul/ )said he would consider my responses for a time and respond soon with his opinions on my Conscious Machine Prototype, Alldroid.
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My Summation.That would be great Raul. It seems I have run right into the "No Phenomenology No Consciousness" proposition of Igor Aleksander, with my assertion of "Consciousness because of Semantic Human Thinking."
My basic evidence is a series of questions I asked myself: If I lost my leg could I still be conscious? Yes. If I lost legs and arms? Yes. If I lost eyes? Yes. If I lost seeing, hearing, smell, taste, and touch? Yes. I could still be in my brain semantically thinking about things, i.e. I could still be conscious.
From this evidence, I concluded that:
If mechanical semantic human thinking (elementary deductive reasoning we all do, and can be seen in brain scans) is created, then machine consciousness has been created, in other words, the machine would be conscious just as myself, in the situation described above. I then built the prototype implementing (1) semantic (2) human thinking, and so I conclude from the principle that I've built a conscious machine.
I suppose this is the central, essential point, and where I differ with some other Machine Consciousness researchers/inventors.
Common Reference Points:
http://www.conscious-robots.com/en/publications/papers/apa-newsletter-phenomenal-machine-consciou.htmlwhere is found:
Essential Phenomenology for Conscious Machines: A Note on Franklin, Baars and Ramamurthy: "A Phenomenally Conscious Robot"
Igor Aleksander
Slippery Steps Towards Phenomenally Conscious Robots
Pentti O.A. Haikonen
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For those who are interested in this new, wide spread, ever growing field of Machine Consciousness, with researchers and University departments in every country, here's a good resource:
http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Machine_consciousness