So to condense what we have so far, a conscious system must have…
...a sense of self. That is, it must store and access “meta-information” about what it knows and its own behavior and be able to use this information to change its behavior (it’s state).
Merlin - Apr 3, 2011:
a sense of self and your situation
C R Hunt - Apr 3, 2011:
The current state information must be accessable to the system in the same or similar manner as other information. So must the information that the system has access to such current state information about itself.
Hans Peter Willems - Apr 3, 2011:
A system that is aware of it’s own awareness.
C R Hunt - Apr 3, 2011:
Social animals definitely have some higher form of conscousness. You must be somewhat aware of the fact that you have a current state in order to understand and use the fact that those around you do as well. (Theory of mind and all that.)
Gary Dubuque - Apr 3, 2011:
I think for this discussion, when the machine convinces us its view of what’s happening and/or what’s going to happen is better than our view, with it being able to explain our view as well as its own, we might consider it conscious. This is similar to a child reaching the age where they don’t think we can read their thoughts anymore. That’s somewhere around 2-4 years old. Of course the child may be conscious before that, but they don’t have a sense of self as we usually define it. They don’t clearly know what’s mine and what’s yours at an early age. A sense of a separate self is one of the requirements promoted here for computer consciousness.
...the ability to plan future actions.
Merlin - Apr 3, 2011:
The ability to visualize (plan) and conceptualize the future result of an action even without actually having the action take place.
Victor Shulist - Apr 3, 2011:
Based on this knowledge of where [the chatbot] was running, and the situation (the fact that the power was to be turned off), it CORRELATED that with the expected consequence. The consequence was undesirable (it being shut down, or effectively “dead”).
...the ability to store and access information about the environment and change behavior in response.
Merlin - Apr 3, 2011:
Knowledge of the current environment. The ability to understand how actions will effect self and teh environment.
Carl B - Apr 3, 2011:
Ability to contextualize a given input and provide output based on temporal memory.
C R Hunt - Apr 3, 2011:
A system that uses information about its current state, as well as environmental information and static information, to influence its current state.
Victor Shulist - Apr 3, 2011:
We have an endless stream of physical impulses reaching our brain. The 5 senses. At every moment in time, we are receiving these events. Our minds correlate or integrate these sequences of impulses in time, and our minds realize how they fit together, converting those sequences into semantic meaning.
Victor Shulist - Apr 3, 2011:
I think it is possible for a computer to have its own Qualia. All kinds of analog peripherals could be connected to the system to give it this qualia information.
...processes like that of the human brain.
Jan Bogaerts - Apr 3, 2011:
The result of neural activity.
Jan Bogaerts - Apr 3, 2011:
‘the result of biological neural nets. A modal of a neural net is just that, a model (just like the drawing of a pipe is just that, a drawing). As such, it can only model consciousness.
Gary Dubuque - Apr 3, 2011:
And a real answer to your proposition (in tune with the Buddhists), consciousness is suffering.
Hans Peter Willems - Apr 3, 2011:
...emotions and feelings, goals and desires,...
...a spectrum of ability. That is, many levels of consciousness are possible.
Hans Peter Willems - Apr 3, 2011:
I think there are ‘levels of consciousness’, both in that our own level can fluctuate or differ, and that other entities can have other ‘levels of consciousness’.
C R Hunt - Apr 3, 2011:
certain systems may have access to more or less information about their current state and the fact that they have one, and may use such information more or less to alter said state.
...a compilation of many distinct functions that give rise to consciousness collectively.
Gary Dubuque - Apr 3, 2011:
“...the self is “just” the Center of Narrative Gravity…” “there are just Multiple Drafts composed by processes of content fixation playing various semi-independent roles in the brain’s larger economy of controlling a human body’s journey through life”
His compelling argument is that when a system reaches a sufficient level of complexity, although it is only organized information processing dealing with its presence in the world, it can be assumed to be conscious.
Gary Dubuque - Apr 3, 2011:
...I can’t help but feel a kind of “power of the masses” group think is reaching the realm of consciousness. Maybe it is happening too fast for any individual to perceive it since we only see a small piece of the action. But if you include the contributions of the users on the internet, I fear in the last few years it may be so - the internet has it own consciousness.