deedle-doo wrote:Kind of a poll. I've been rolling some old philosophy of mind chestnuts around with a sci-fi twist and want to take the Nexus' temperature.
1. If you could make an atomically accurate simulation of your body in a computer would the simulation have consciousness? Would it be your consciousness or would it be a separate entity?
2. If you slowly replaced your neurons, one by one, with computer chips that act exactly like neurons would you eventually lose consciousness?
3. What if you take the neurons out of your brain and replace them with microchips, but you simultaneously rebuild the neurons back into the correct structure of your brain in a robot body. Which entity would harbor your consciousness?
1. How do you know you aren’t already a simulation in a computer?
2. What you’re asking here (and above) is if a computer can be conscious. Even more generally we can ask
what can be conscious. I believe in the primacy of consciousness, so in a sense, consciousness is all that there is. But to answer the question, computer chips are not neurons, so it’s reasonable to assume that the nature of conscious experience for an assemblage of computer chips is not the same as that of an assemblage of neurons.
3. How would you know if all of your neurons were replaced while you slept last night?
Your question assumes that “you” are an actual entity. The idea of “I” is an abstraction – a convenient model used by consciousness to create a plausible explanation for a particular stream of conscious experiences.
gibran2 is a fictional character. Any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental.