Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 1:56 pm
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 12:32 pm
Are we human beings just "meat machines" as one notable philosopher (forgotten which one) once put it? And if we are machines that are made of meat and we are conscious beings, then are other machines that are made of things other than meat also possibly "conscious beings"? And what is "consciousness"? How can we know if something is "conscious" or not?
Meat machine -
meat is the flesh of a mammal and generally no longer present in the whole organism and no longer alive, meant for eating. So, it certainly comes nowhere near to describing us and not everything in us could be meat and certainly isn't while we're walking around.
machine - machines are made for purposes by, so far in our knowledge, humans. No machine is as complicated as any of us. So, it's kind off.
I mean, that's me looking at it literally. In a poem, while lamenting, as an outburst... sure, maybe. But as a definition it's terrible and one, if not intended to deflate, minimize, shame the reader, would be a insult to do that.
I concur that it does seem demeaning to us to call us "meat machines".
It could have also been expressed, that way, to just get you human beings to just 'look at', and/or to just 'see' things in a different way or from a different perspective, without have any 'demeaning' qualities at all about it.
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
I was listening to a lecture on the topic of philosophy of mind years ago and in the lecture, the professor cited some other philosopher who used the term "meat machines" to describe human beings.
So called "professors" and/or "teachers" do have a habit of 'citing' 'others', which could be a sign of lack of knowledge on the subject or topic "them" 'self'.
For obviously just because some person, or any person for that matter, says or claims some thing, then this does not make the thing claimed, in and of itself true, nor even wrong.
All things 'stand on their own', as some might say here. But, are only 'known' through and by you human beings.
And, how the Accuracy and Correctness, of all things, is obtained, and how what is 'Objectively True and Right' is obtained, is really a very, very simple and easy process, in deed.
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
When I studied Philosophy of Mind in a college classroom,
When you studied the 'love-of-wisdom of Mind', or some other 'philosophy of Mind, in a college classroom, what did you actually learn in, and take away from, that classroom, about the Mind, Itself?
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
I was fascinated by the question of what is consciousness or why do we (or "I" to be solipsistic for a moment) have conscious experience but presumably a computer made of plastic and silicone, etc. does not?
Did you ever ask any one, including a "teacher" or "professor" in that classroom or anywhere outside of that classroom?
If yes, then what answer did they or it give you?
But, if no, then why have you, still, not asked any one 'this question' here?
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
Or is it possible to create a conscious machine using plastic and silicone, etc.?
Again, have you asked absolutely any one?
If yes, then what response did they give you?
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
And if it were, how would we ever be able to discern if the machine was indeed conscious or not?
By what it tells you.
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
I mean, would we ask it if it's conscious?
you could if you wanted to, but if you would, or not, then only you would know.
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
And if we did and it said, "yes" does that mean we 'programmed' it to say 'yes' or did it say 'yes' because it was conscious?
I suggest you just 'listen' to it first, 'hear' what it has to say, and then, and only then, challenge, and/or ask, it some clarifying questions. That is; if you are not believing what it is telling you.
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
I feel like the field of AI is propelling us into a future that is beyond anything we've ever yet experienced
Well, if 'you and others' have not yet ever experienced some thing, like so-called and Wrongly called "artificial intelligence", before, and the Falsely called "artificial intelligence" comes along, then it goes without saying that 'you and those others' will experience some thing beyond 'what you and them' ever had before.
This exact same phenomena applied when computers, internet, cellular phones, phones, televisions, airplanes, radios, horseless vehicles, and print came along, originally.
And, all of 'those fields' could have had the appearance of 'propelling 'you human beings' into a future that was, literally, beyond any thing that you had ever yet experienced, previously.
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:09 pm
and that it will raise ethical concerns that we only imagined before their invention.
Did any of those things I listed above not raise 'ethical concerns', as well? Which, you human beings had only, (and even had never even), imagined before each of their inventions?