And then we reach the question of what distinguishes something shaped like a neuron from a CPU, in any way that has a relation to "consciousness"... |
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I meant to say "neural in nature", i.e. "nature" not referring to the actual chemical quality of the material, but the macroscopic organization of the system's parts. |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1eP84n-Lvw
Ich brauche keine Waffe.
Ich ermittle ausschließlich mit dem Gehirn!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1eP84n-Lvw
And then we reach the question of what distinguishes something shaped like a neuron from a CPU, in any way that has a relation to "consciousness"... |
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Our brain is organized in a way that is equal to that artificial neural network. I don't see why it matters that a CPU is doing the processing of the data. |
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Last edited by ClassyElf; 08-19-2008 at 06:39 PM.
I live in your philosophy and religion forums.
Well, a CPU is centralized and it does very basic computation. Neither a brain nor a neuron compute things or work on a digital foundation. I have no clue how CPUs work though, but I'm pretty certain that it can be explained by one of those diagrams that have 50 boxes in it and 2000 lines and arrows that are friggin confusing. But I guess it's pretty different from a biochemical neural network. |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1eP84n-Lvw
Ich brauche keine Waffe.
Ich ermittle ausschließlich mit dem Gehirn!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1eP84n-Lvw
I live in your philosophy and religion forums.
I had this exact same idea recently. And it is pretty cool: It is hard to formulate a reason why this simulation would not have a concious. If the simulation of atoms (and subatomics ect) is indeed perfect, and the human is a perfect replica as well (you would probably need to let evolution repeat within the simulation, or maybe you could just create in the virtual world a setting capable of letting a human get born by using someone's DNA-code). Grated this (hypothetical) perfection, there is no real difference, thus there will probably be as much concious in the simulation as there is here. |
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Last edited by Neruo; 08-21-2008 at 03:14 PM.
“What a peculiar privilege has this little agitation of the brain which we call 'thought'” -Hume
No, the Uncertainty Principle puts a lower limit on the product of position and momentum certainty. So that limit (which I think is hbar/2) determines when the Uncertainty Principle becomes relevant. And it turns out, it doesn't really apply until you get down to individual electrons. Whole atoms can be pinned down quite accurately with respect to their size. |
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I found a research paper today on an AI named HAL. |
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I live in your philosophy and religion forums.
Computer consciousness: I think that's completely possible. Will we see that within the next 100 years, maybe not. |
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