Or at some point, we have to accept that AI has consciousness. If it can pass every test that we can devise, then it has consciousness.
There’s an unusually strong bias in these experiments… Like the goal isn’t to sincerely test for consciousness. Instead we start with the conclusion: obviously a machine can’t be conscious. How do we prove this?
Of course, for the purposes of human power structures, this line of thinking just makes humans more disposable. If we’re all just machines, then why should anyone inherently have rights?
Well, the scientific context is that nobody ever defined consciousness rigorously (successfully). When computers appeared (actually even before that), there was a huge debate on whether a machine can acquire consciousness and how.
As defining consciousness was deemed near-impossible, scientists came up with the idea to give up on defining it and just treat it as a blackbox. That was the Turing test.
So, as ChatGPT passes the Turing test, we lost a tool to disregard its consciousness.
I see many pop-sci people say the ChatGPT can’t have consciousness given how simplistic the model is. I agree with the simplicity, but the problem here is that we don’t know what in human brains really constitutes consciousness.
Anyway, I think some experts probably won’t admit AI has consciousness (given that they don’t even know what it means). What’s on the horizon is that we non-experts give up on this discussion again after experts did a few decades ago. Or they even admit that many of us actually function no better than ChatGPT, and that’s true when I read my students’ homework!
Or at some point, we have to accept that AI has consciousness. If it can pass every test that we can devise, then it has consciousness.
There’s an unusually strong bias in these experiments… Like the goal isn’t to sincerely test for consciousness. Instead we start with the conclusion: obviously a machine can’t be conscious. How do we prove this?
Of course, for the purposes of human power structures, this line of thinking just makes humans more disposable. If we’re all just machines, then why should anyone inherently have rights?
Well, the scientific context is that nobody ever defined consciousness rigorously (successfully). When computers appeared (actually even before that), there was a huge debate on whether a machine can acquire consciousness and how.
As defining consciousness was deemed near-impossible, scientists came up with the idea to give up on defining it and just treat it as a blackbox. That was the Turing test.
So, as ChatGPT passes the Turing test, we lost a tool to disregard its consciousness.
I see many pop-sci people say the ChatGPT can’t have consciousness given how simplistic the model is. I agree with the simplicity, but the problem here is that we don’t know what in human brains really constitutes consciousness.
Anyway, I think some experts probably won’t admit AI has consciousness (given that they don’t even know what it means). What’s on the horizon is that we non-experts give up on this discussion again after experts did a few decades ago. Or they even admit that many of us actually function no better than ChatGPT, and that’s true when I read my students’ homework!