- #106
Tisthammerw
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TheStatutoryApe said:Tist, You seem to make quite a few assumtions without much other reason than "There must be something more."
Why exactly must it be that there is something more?
Why is a complex, mutable, and rewritable system of rules not enough to process information like a human?
I'll try again.
The Chinese Room
Suppose we have a man who speaks only English in a room. Near him are stacks of paper written in Chinese. He can recognize and distinguish Chinese characters, but he cannot discern their meaning. He has a rulebook containing a complex set of instructions (formal syntactic rules, e.g. "if you see X write down Y") of what to write down in response to a set of Chinese characters. When he looks at the slips of paper, he writes down another set of Chinese characters according to the rules in the rulebook. Unbeknownst to the man in the room, the slips of paper are actually questions and he is writing back answers.
The Chinese room can simulate a conversation in Chinese; a person can slip questions written in Chinese under the door of the room and get back answers. Nonetheless, although the person can respond to questions with valid output (via using a complex set of instructions acting on input), he does not understand Chinese at all.
The Chinese room shows that having a complex system of rules acting on input is not sufficient for literal understanding to exist. We'd need computers to have something else besides a set of instructions (however complex) manipulating input to overcome the point the Chinese room makes. It's difficult to conceive how that could even be theoretically possible. What could we possibly add to the computer to make it literally understand? A magic ball of yarn? A complex arrangement of bricks? What?
(Remember, variants of the Chinese room include the system of rules being complex, rewritable etc. and yet the man still doesn’t understand a word of Chinese.)
What does the soul do that is different than this?
I believe that literal understanding (in addition to free will) requires something fundamentally different--to the extent that the physical world cannot do it. The soul is and provides the incorporeal basis of oneself.
Lets hit that first. What is "understanding" if not a manner of processing information?
Grasping the meaning of the information. It is clear from the Chinese room that merely processing it does not do the job.
To this I am sure that you will once again invoke your chinese room argument, but your chinese room does not allow the potential AI any of the freedoms of a human being.
By all means, please tell me what else a potential AI has other than a complex set of instructions to have literal understanding.
You ask what else do you add to an AI to allow it to "understand". I, and others, offered giving your chinese room homunculus a view of the world outside so that the language it is receiving has a context. Also give it the ability to learn and form an experience with which to draw from. You seem to have rejected this as simply more input that the homunculus won't "understand". But why?
I never said the homunculus wouldn't understand, only that a computer won't. Why? (I've explained this already, but I see no harm in explaining it again.) Well, try instantiating this analogy to real computers. You have cameras and microphones, transducers that turn the signals into 1s and 0s, then use a complex set of rules to manipulate that input and produce output...
And we have the exact same problem as last time. It's the same scenario (set of rules operating on input) with a slightly different flavor. All you've done here is change the source of the input. A different person may ask different Chinese questions, but the man in the room still won't understand the language.
Note: the text below goes off topic into the realm of the soul
Simply because the AI homunculus doesn't possesses the same magical ball of yarn that your soul homunculus has?
Actually, my point is that the soul is the figurative "magical ball of yarn." Physical processes seem completely incapable of producing real understanding; something fundamentally different is required.
Does it somehow already supernaturally know how to understand brainspeak?
This is one of the reasons why I believe God is the best explanation for the existence of the soul; the incorporeal would have to successfully interact with a highly complex form of matter (the brain). The precise metaphysics may be beyond our ability to discern, but I believe that this how it came to be.
What is the fundamental difference between the situations of the chinese room homunculus and the soul homunculus?
The soul provides that “something else” that mere computers don't have.
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