Literally just mainlining marketing material straight into whatever’s left of their rotting brains.

  • Yurt_Owl
    ·
    7 months ago

    Why is the concept of a spirit relevant? Computers and living beings share practically nothing in common

    • oktherebuddy
      ·
      edit-2
      7 months ago

      You speak very confidently about two things that have seen the boundaries between them shift dramatically within the past few decades. I would also like to ask if you actually understand microbiology & how it works, or have even seen a video of ATP Synthase in action.

      • VILenin [he/him]
        hexagon
        M
        ·
        7 months ago

        Love to see the “umm ackshually scientists keep changing their minds” card on hexbear dot net. Yes neuroscience could suddenly shift to entirely support your belief, but that’s not exactly a stellar argument. I’d love to know how ATP has literally anything to do with proving computational consciousness other than that ATP kind of sort of resembles a mechanical thing (because it is mechanical).

        Sentience as a physical property does not have to stem from the same processes. Everything in the universe is “mechanical” so making that observation is meaningless. Everything is a “mechanism” so everything has that in common. Reducing everything down to their very base definition instead of taking into account what kind of mechanisms they are is literally the very definition of reductionism. You have to look at the wider process that derives from the sum of its mechanical parts, because that’s where differences arise. Of course if you strip everything down to its foundation it’s going to be the same. Is a door and a movie camera the same thing because they both consist of parts that move?

        • oktherebuddy
          ·
          7 months ago

          I have no idea what you are trying to say. I think you agree consciousness must have a mechanistic/material base, and is some kind of emergent phenomenon, so we probably agree on whatever point you're trying to make. Except I guess you think that even though it's an emergent phenomenon of some mechanistic base, that mechanistic base can't be non-biological. Which is weird.

          • VILenin [he/him]
            hexagon
            M
            ·
            7 months ago

            My argument has nothing to do with the fact that computers aren’t biological. I’m saying that the only blueprints for consciousness we have right now are brains. And decidedly not computers, which I have no reason to believe will become sentient if you extrapolate it for some reason. I don’t think the difference between computers and brains is biological, it’s just a difference. If you replicated an entire brain I think it would be sentient even though it wouldn’t be strictly “biological”. I guess you could call that a computer, but then you’re veering into semantics. I’m referring to computers strictly in the way that they are currently built.

            I think there’s a mechanistic road to sentience, but we know vanishingly little about it. But I think we know more than enough to conclude that computers, as they operate today, will struggle to be anything more than a crude analogy. My point is that artificial sentience needs to be more than just “a mechanism”, because literally everything in the universe is a mechanism. It needs to be a certain kind of mechanism that we don’t understand yet.

      • Yurt_Owl
        ·
        7 months ago

        Go be a computer somewhere else

        • oktherebuddy
          ·
          7 months ago

          Go be spooky somewhere else. Calling things "reductionist" like some kind of creationist.

    • daisy
      ·
      7 months ago

      Let's assume for the moment that there's no such thing as a spirit/soul/ghost/etc. in human beings and other animals, and that everything that makes me "me" is inside my body. If this is the case, computers and living brains do have something fundamental in common. They are both made of matter that obeys the laws of physics. As far as we know, there's no such thing as "living" quarks and electrons that are distinct from "non-living" quarks and electrons.

      • Yurt_Owl
        ·
        7 months ago

        How very crude and reductionist just like the source comment says.

        • daisy
          ·
          edit-2
          7 months ago

          I'm having a hard time understanding your reasoning and perspective on this. My interpretation of your comments is that you believe biological intelligence is a special phenomenon that cannot be understood by the scientific method. If I'm in error, I'd welcome a correction.

          • VILenin [he/him]
            hexagon
            M
            ·
            7 months ago

            Biological intelligence is currently not understood. This has nothing to do with distinguishing between “living” and “non-living” matter. Brains and suitcases are also both made of matter. It’s a meaningless observation.

            The question is what causes sentience. Arguing that brains are computers because they’re both made of matter is a non-sequitur. We don’t even know what mechanism causes sentience so there’s no point in even beginning to make comparisons to a separate mechanism. It plays into a trend of equating the current most popular technology to the brain. There was no basis for it then, and there’s no basis for it now.

            Nobody here is arguing about what the brain is made of.

      • silent_water [she/her]
        ·
        7 months ago

        this argument fails because you've presupposed that the fundamental model of computation maps neatly onto the emergent processes conducted by brains. that we only have a single model for information processing right now does not mean that only one exists. this is an unsolved problem - you can suppose it's true but that doesn't mean the rest of your argument follows. the supposition requires proof.