Robert Maxwell,
Do you believe in the concept of materialism?
Do you believe in the concept of materialism?
Robert Maxwell,
Do you believe in the concept of materialism?
More or less, yes.
There are no doubt aspects of the physical universe we have yet to understand
but I don't believe in gods or anything of that sort.
Anything--even consciousness--can be explained scientifically, given enough study.
The honest answer is, we won't know if it's conscious unless and until we reach that point, and it all depends on us having a fully accurate model to begin with--which we cannot be entirely certain we do.
We may realize we are getting close to such a point, and then would be a better time to grapple with the ethical questions,
at the moment your criticisms are more akin to people talking about landing on the moon and you worrying about the implications of warp drive.
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.
Robert Maxwell,
Actually we're getting fairly close now. Even if we can simulate a badly damaged rat-brain, that's still an amazing feat. We might not be at the point where we can simulate a properly functioning rat or human brain, but we aren't terribly far away.We may realize we are getting close to such a point, and then would be a better time to grapple with the ethical questions,
I think it would be good to begin considering the ethics of this now rather than later.
Going to the moon vs warp-drive? I think that's a *very* gross exaggeration...at the moment your criticisms are more akin to people talking about landing on the moon and you worrying about the implications of warp drive.
CuttingEdge100
We are not "fairly close now." Did you read anything I said? We are--at a minimum--decades away from having to worry about this.
What ethics would you propose, anyway? "Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind"?
No, I'd say it's pretty accurate. You're worrying about something that is quite far off.
Honestly I think it's a decade away. I've even heard scientists say that by 2020 or 2030 we'll have the capability.
Robert Maxwell,
At most we are a decade or two away probably...We are not "fairly close now." Did you read anything I said? We are--at a minimum--decades away from having to worry about this.
What I would propose? I think it should be considered unethical, if not outlawed to create an artificially sentient being for experimentation purposes.What ethics would you propose, anyway? "Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind"?
Honestly I think it's a decade away. I've even heard scientists say that by 2020 or 2030 we'll have the capability.No, I'd say it's pretty accurate. You're worrying about something that is quite far off.
Honestly I think it's a decade away. I've even heard scientists say that by 2020 or 2030 we'll have the capability.
In 1960, scientists were saying we'd have intelligent machines in 10 years or so. There was a lot of excitement about AI when it was new, with everyone certain we'd have the thing licked in no time.
Well, it didn't turn out that way. And here's the thing----no one is even trying anymore. Not for real intelligence. The goal these days is to push AI to be better at making basic decisions, such as whether a given image contains a car or a boat. This has nothing to do with intelligence in the human sense----it's just about mathematical patterns, state space search, and logical inference.
There are still a few researchers in the "if we mimic humans maybe we'll get similar results" mindset, but the vast majority have given up on that angle as fruitless, and decided it's more useful to push computers towards the stuff they're actually good at, rather than trying to force them to be something they're not.
I just checked around the website of the group doing this simulation. From their Frequently Asked Questions page:
What computer power would you need to simulate the whole brain?
The human neocortex has many millions of NCCs. For this reason we would need first an accurate replica of the NCC and then we will simplify the NCC before we begin duplications. The other approach is to covert the software NCC into a hardware version - a chip, a blue gene on a chip - and then make as many copies as one wants.
The number of neurons various markedly in the Neocortex with values between 10-100 Billion in the human brain to millions in small animals. At this stage the important issue is how to build one column. This column has 10-100'000 neurons depending on the species and particular neocortical region, and there are millions of columns.
We have estimated that we may approach real-time simulations of a NCC with 10'000 morphologically complex neurons interconnected with 10x8 synapses on a 8-12'000 processor Blue Gene/L machine. To simulate a human brain with around millions of NCCs will probably require more than proportionately more processing power. That should give an idea how much computing power will need to increase before we can simulate the human brain at the cellular level in real-time. Simulating the human brain at the molecular level is unlikely with current computing systems.To what extent will the computer give the same response as actual living brain tissue?
Our goal is not to build an intelligent neural network, but to replicate in digital form the NCC as accurately as possible. We will perform similar experiments on the virtual NCC as in the actual NCC and keep doing this until the virtual NCC behaves precisely the same in as many ways as we can measure, as the actual NCC. Once this replica is built, we will be able to do experiments that normally take us years and are prohibitively expensive or too difficult to perform. This will greatly accelerate the pace of research.http://bluebrain.epfl.ch/page18924.html#1Do you believe a computer can ever be an exact simulation of the human brain?
This is neither likely nor necessary. It will be very difficult because, in the brain, every molecule is a powerful computer and we would need to simulate the structure and function of trillions upon trillions of molecules as well as all the rules that govern how they interact. You would literally need computers that are trillions of times bigger and faster than anything existing today. Mammals can make very good copies of each other, we do not need to make computer copies of mammals. That is not our goal. We want to try to understand how the biological system functions and malfunctions so that this knowledge can benefit mankind.
It's a highly impressive, project, no doubt. But I don't think we need to be talking about ethics at this point.
It's a highly impressive, project, no doubt. But I don't think we need to be talking about ethics at this point.
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