Robert Maxwell,
Well, apparently the "Blue Brain" project did a pretty amazing job with the Rat Brain. Have you even read about their work?
They copied half a brain in every detail and ran it in a simulation. They even said they actually detected brain activity that would be considered consistent with thoughts. They copied it sufficiently accurately that the simulation was able to fucking think...
I went to their site and had a look at their information.
What they have
right now is a model that functions at the level of a severely brain-damaged mouse. Over 8000 CPUs working together are capable of simulating a small part of a mouse brain, two orders of magnitude slower than the real thing. Yep, sounds to me like we're on the verge of simulating a human brain!
It's starting to look like you're the one who didn't do your research. Electrical impulses--simulated or not--are not our baseline for intelligence, or even life itself.
If it's artificial
life you're worried about, by the way, you might want to be aware that Richard Dawkins created an artificial life program back in the '80's that displayed some interesting emegent properties. His artificial creatures didn't think, but they did reproduce and evolve.
In any case, just because you want to call these simulated impulses "thoughts" doesn't mean they are. Their system simulates about 10,000 neurons. For comparison, that's about how many an ant has. And, as I said above, it's two orders of magnitude slower than the real deal. That means, at a minimum, it's 100 times slower than a real one. So, pardon me if I'm not very worried about something that has the intellectual capacity of a crippled insect.
There is, however, great scientific value to found in such a model, as it can help us understand the workings of our own brains and brains and nervous systems in general. Your brand of alarmism is really unhelpful, and as someone else said it seems to be informed by B-movies more than real science.
Are humans, in fact, concious? OR is the concept a social construct to control behavior? Perhaps the belief of conciousness is one of those hard wired concepts that somehow improved species survival, much like group belief in god(s) or "there must be something more". It need not be true to improve survival, just as it improved survival to believe there is always a lion in the grass when movement is percieved.
Cogito, ergo sum, I suppose.

There is some debate over exactly what consciousness
is, to be sure. One of the more interesting theories I've read about is that of the "user illusion." Basically, your conscious awareness lags about half a second behind reality, that being the time it takes for your body to sense a stimulus and have it processed by your brain. What we think of as our consciousness doesn't always have a say in what we do--there are times when the brain reacts too quickly or can make decisions in the absence of conscious awareness. Think reflexes. Have you ever experienced highway hypnosis? I have. It's actually kind of interesting to think you can turn over the mechanics of a mundane, repetitive task to a lower level of brain function, leaving your consciousness free to do something else. That's why I think of it as a kind of "subprocess," rather than a "superprocess." It doesn't really control all the other activities in your brain, but rather observes and interacts with them. You can think of it almost like the user interface of a computer, which is actually where the term "user illusion" comes from.
Perhaps conciousness is a conceit. As something undefinable, certainly it cannot be duplicated or simulated. Once you put solid definitions to it, you realize other species possess it to some degree, yet we have no issues turning them "off" as needed.
Since we understand consciousness so poorly, I would agree that we'd have a very hard time simulating it. It seems like an emergent property, but at what point it emerges from a simulated collection of neurons, we have no idea. It's possible it won't emerge at all. There is some thought that the brain itself is more akin to a quantum computer, and therefore there are processes involved that we can't even model accurately, much less simulate on a significant scale.
I agree, though, that if we have no problem killing animals--for food, research, or any other purpose besides self-defense--it does come off as a bit reactionary to worry about "killing" a simulated ant.
Certainly, conciousness is not a binary thing, it must exist on a spectrum. Even among humans, we certainly are not equally concious, are we? When an AI matches the least of us, is that enough to consider?
Good point. Not only does it exist on a spectrum, there are those whose consciousness operates very differently from the rest of us. Schizophrenics, people with autism, etc. all interact with the world from a different frame of reference. And there are indeed those whose brains don't work so well, limiting their understanding of the world and their ability to control their interactions with it.
I suspect a large amount of what we do is pretty automatic. Smacking the alarm clock when you wake up in the morning to turn it off, taking a shower--how many of us really give that much thought to hygiene processes? Odds are it's very automatic, and you can mentally "check out" for the duration because it just doesn't require any real concentration.
Consciousness itself is mostly good, then, for situations that require particular concentration or making decisions that require up-front analysis. It is more of a long-term creature, trying to account for the big picture. I'm not aware of any animals that have the slightest idea about long-term planning.
We are roughly the same humans as existed 10, 20 thousand years ago. Perhaps conciousness comes with more free time. Then, we spent all our time surviving, conciousness was not an issue. Now we have a lot of time to contemplate our navels... so conciousness seems related to free time, in which case our pets are who we should be watching, specifically when we make apes pets/servants
I did see one theory that is almost like Darwinism in reverse--instead of nature selecting those who are the "fittest," nature actually selects those that are the most
efficiently lazy. If you think about it, a creature that can minimize the amount of time it spends hunting for food is indeed rewarded for being lazy. If you can provide for yourself in 1/10 the time of the next species, you have a distinct advantage. This also gives you time to rest and relax, and if you have a surplus of energy--
play. And animals do play.
Humans, I think, have taken this notion to quite an extreme.
