Intelligence and Consiosness
Nucleus
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I don't think many would argue we as humans are born without intelligence, for me this is the ability to learn, although I could be mistaken.
If intelligence is the ability to learn then we at our most intelligent when we are newborn and at our most stupid when we are old.
I heard a statistic once that said we have learned 90% of what we will learn (our entire life) by the time we are 5 years old.
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So are we are born conscious or not?
I think we are not only born consious but we have it before we are born. At exactly what stage of phoetal development this happens I don't know but there is evidence that babies remember music they here in the womb (for example).
As for when we develop self-consiousness, that's probably a lot more difficult to determine.
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I gravitate towards thinking that intelligence makes consciousness possible, rather than consciousness being required for intelligence.
This probably depends on your definition of intelligence, and as far as I can make out, your definition differs from mine (I don't really have one but I know it's not the same as yours).
RE: Is consciousness necessary for intelligence?
Cells themselves obviously are not self-aware or we might have a war inside our bodies, in addition to the current daily fight of disease and harmful bacteria vs healthy cells. The collection of cells creates a being, which due to the right combination and interaction of luck, dna, and cell matter has self-awareness.
This conversation could last forever. Here's my tangent:
How many of you people have seen comatose patients, TV or not? Yeah that's what I thought. Now...did that person know he or she was alive? We don't know, unless they wake up. Some people don't even remember that they were in a coma. BUT, we, as non-comatose people, have two choices. 1) Say "Yes, that person is alive." 2) Say no, he or she is braindead, and therefore not alive. (And technically there is a third: "I don't know/care")
Back to the...dare I say it?...abortion issue!
Now the "fetus" as people like to call "it" starts out as a few cells, yes. But we too are a few cells, multiplied millions upon millions of times. This collection of cells forms an unborn baby. Wow aren't we all geniuses? I bet you didn't know that!
Now imagine the baby after it has formed a head, torso, arms, and legs. Look at yourself. See how you and the unborn baby both have those parts? Ta-da. Soon-to-be-born human. Now imagine yourself when you were that tiny. Hard to do? Try imagining intruments ripping you away from your life source-- your mother. Of course, now half of you (at least) are saying, "but I wouldn't know, because I didn't have self-awareness."
Have you ever looked at a live ultrasound? The baby kicks-- moves. The baby touches himself or herself. Yes, a machine can do the same. Yes, we can program it to do so. But like was said before, humans are advanced machines. They just get more advanced--evolve, if you will--as they get older. If the baby were to touch the wall surrounding him or her, would it be out of reflex or would it be because he or she was saying, where am I? Surely the brain at that point would not be able to remember anything at that point. It only has a few cells. The baby probably has to re-write over his or her memory at that point.
::Move hand:: = stored for seconds, gradually building time to eventually add to motor-movement area of the brain
::Touch surroundings:: = stored for a few seconds, to prevent repetitive action, eventually building to eventually become the "I need to get out" feeling the baby has before birth.
And so on and so on. Multiple occurances happen at once, which adds to the possiblity that the baby is self-aware.
YOU were once a tiny few-celled organism, hard as it may be to believe. And look at you now. Self-aware as ever! What may not be self-aware before birth, becomes self-aware eventually.
One of the things a person must have to be intelligent is the ability to make decisions. The unborn baby has to make the decision to move or touch, or else it's just reflex. So if the baby knows he or she exists, he/she can move his/her arms and legs because he/she knows they're there and can make decisions with them (i.e. touching surroundings).
self-awareness ----> decisions----> intelligence
Re: Artificial Intelligence
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Originally posted by kedaman
[B]Self Awareness vs Awareness vs Conscious.
If something is intelligent, it can process information.
Then by this definition computers are already intelligent. I would say a key element of intelligence is the ability to adapt and learn and to think in different ways.
At present perhaps computers can be programmed to learn a set topic, but they have yet to be programmed with the ability to learn in a generic sense.
If you can learn in a generic sense then it follows it is possible to learn about one's self in relation to the universe i.e it is possible to learn self awareness.
For me it is intelligence and in particular the ability to learn in a generic sense that permits the possibility of self awareness.
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AI usage
Are we really ready to accept the risks of getting outclassified? Are we ready to dump the hard work of billion years of evolution? Wouldn't it be better to try to get off our lazy asses and think ourself? You might consider biological evolution slow, would a
cybenetic variant outevolve us? In that case I think there's enough moral in us to not let that happen. Evolution accommodated moral and ethical rules since individuals in societies are better off to survive and to keep societies coherent, moral laws are To not let ourself get extinct there are moral laws for judging whether AI is such a good idea.
Just because computers may evolve to be more intelligent and potentially more self aware than us why to we have to prevent this from happening?
I guess we are the most intelligence form of life on earth and look how we treat forms of life less than ourselves. Perhaps one can extrapolate that a more evolved form of life would seek to dominate the world and us in a similar way? If this be the case then we should ensure we never delelop AI to the point of being able to learn.
I am attracted to the concept of a more evolved form of life in an abstract sense, but I guess I have to temper this attraction with the potental negative impact it would have on our own species. Here we are both operating under the assumption that a more evolved form of life will attempt to dominate all forms of life beneath itself.
As an extension to this assumption, should we consequently avoid developing AI to the point of being able to learn, lest it out evolve us almost immediately? A further corollary would be that we should avoid trying to contact life elsewhere in the universe lest we encounter a more evolved civilisation?
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Being lazy, tired of life?
Since we're an evolving species, we have the ability to get rid of our bad feautures and implement new ones, instead of pushing over the burden of "thinking" on machines, shouldn't we enhance that feature of us? Otherways we might get dumber than our ape-ancestors. This might just be the peak of our intelligence evolution. If computers are so good at calculations then why not commit fusion?
If you accept the assumption stated above then this follows nicely. This may come from a fusion of computers and humans, or it may come from genetic engineering or a combination of the two.
Scope, Subjectivity vs Objectivity
simon
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Kedaman, I think we're getting at the same thing (but from slightly different angles).
I didn't say information was intelligence. I said that a device should be considered intelligent if it can turn raw data into information.
Raw data is objetive and meaningless. Information is subjective and meaningful in a particular context.
Maybe we just are. If you think information is meaningless without raw data then we are, otherways we have endless information but no raw data. No objectiveness, only subjectivity. Let's just say we talk information here, "device independent information" so to speak.
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Software may process information (if that is the task that it is programmed to do) but it does not interpret information. The interpretation is provided by the programmer and the software is a mere tool for the device.
Applied Scope
Let's assume perspective is a concept that can exist without consciousness. You can point at any point in space and say it has a "vision" that it can see different things depending on where it is, even if is no "eye" placed there. This is what you do when you talk to other people, you assume that the other man/woman you are talking to have a perspective and that it is intelligent and react to what you say and so on... You do that without any provided proof that this man/woman actually is conscious, is not only a program or an illusion of your mind. You just assume it is so, because it is intelligent (observ my definition on intelligence degree).
Now if you assume the "tool pespective" everything in your enviroment turns into tools, you become a solipsist. The information is always only interpreted as your information, you friend is not providing information to you, he just act as a tool to retrieve information. He does not process information, he process raw data.
This is not applied scope, this is not how a social being should interpret it's environment, therefore we should leave this and stay consistent. If you have a solipsistic view, there's no need for anything except tools anyway.
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I would qualify this further. It is not information without an intelligent observer. Unless the observer can interpret the data, it remains data.
mixed up definitions.
if there's no data we have only information, if we have data and information we are observers, what is for sure is that we have information, and so is that we have intelligence (by definition). That implies there is no dependency of observations. Your definition is a further qualification but it does not work under all circumstances, I would consider a machine concluding 1+1=2 from mathematical axioms intelligent, the axioms being pure information.
Merging concepts won't help you, especially when the first is objective and the second is subjective. If you want to argue on that, we could do so all night, I have plenty of time.
Same definition after all
Simon
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I don't think information is meaningless without raw data. Rather, information is interpreted raw data. I'm not sure if I think that information can exist without raw data...but I doubt it. If there is no raw data, there is only interpreted nothingness and that would imply that only I exist and everything else I see and hear around me are illusions created by myself for my own entertainment.
Raw data - If there is an objective universe, we assume it is the raw-data, but since we don't know, the device interface which supplies our information could be defined to work for any environment. If we just forget about raw-data and concentrate on information, we just have to adopt the applied scope perspective.
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but there is no point in continuing this thread unless we assume (for the time being) that there does exist such a thing as raw data.
In fact I think, we just need to adopt applied scope, and everything will be just fine. Even if we can't produce something "real" we do produce what we want.
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We are intelligent because your brain turns raw data (comming in through the senses) into information by a process of interpretation. The fact that we can extract meaning from raw data (even if it might be an incorrect interpretation) makes us intelligent.
the essense of information
You might consider raw data as information itself, just unprocessed information. If that's how we see at it, we are in agreement, I think. Both our views will give the same definition of intelligence, although you assume interpretation is part of it while I assume it's part of the processing as well.
nucleus
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For a start I consider that software and hardware together form a computer. Hardware alone does not constitute a computer, nor does software in isolation.
Assuming this, computers are by definition intelligent.
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Learning is not simply to have a memory, how can one learn anything if one merely remembers what happened? I touch a boiling kettle, it burns my skin. Without the ability to learn I cannot change the way I interact with the environment even though I can recall the interactions. With memory alone I would never learn not to touch a boiling kettle. Memory is however a prerequisite for learning.
Mixed up definitions here. When you conclude that it is a bad idea to not to touch the kettle, you process information, that is use intelligence. If you have the ability to learn, that is store this information you processed, you can use this information later on, to process again, the information that you see a kettle, and recall that you shouldn't touch it.
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A hardware device can create self awareness:confused: . For me self-awareness is more likely software than hardware in so far as it is neither an input device nor an output device but rather part of the cognitive process.
I don't quite understand what you want to say. Self awareness, to me means to be aware of itself, there is an obvious implication of an input device.
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did you read the paragraph after this question where I go on to say that for our own self preservation we should prevent this from occurring based on the assumption that a more evolved form of life will attempt to dominate all forms of life beneath itself.
Yes, but I don't quite see the relevance.
I don't think you disagreed with me but I thought you did not see my point, well nevermind, why should this be relevant?
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So I would certainly not advocate AI that isn't allowed to store information, but AI that is not allowed to learn in a generic sense of the word.
generic sense of the word? I know what you want to say even if it's the wrong terminology you use. You mean that AI would start making conclusions on what it percepts and then use these as axioms in a war against us. It's not "learning" that is responsible here, it's the processing part, the intelligence of AI that might overthrow us.
Flesh out the issues, is Deep Blue Intelligent?
Well by my definition of intelligence, which includes the ability to evolve one's interpretation of data, Deep Blue is not intelligent.
Without further upgrades to its programming it will never be able to improve its chess playing ability by itself. On the other hand we can analyse how Deep Blue plays chess and over time alter our own interpretation in order to beat Big Blue.
I would consider Big Blue intelligent only if it could evolve its interpretation of data by itself.
We as programmers give computers the ability to interpret data at a high level relative to many other living creatures such as a dolphin or a cat, yet a humble mouse is eminently more intelligent than a computer. The reason being that at least the mouse was able to evolve to its current level of interpretation and will continue to evolve further, where as the computer requires us to instill it with any ability to interpret data and most importantly has no potential to evolve its interpretation any further.
If you define intelligence only as the ability to turn data into information that is contextually meaningful, and a computer as the combination of hardware and software, then Deep Blue is intelligent.
Re: Let me get this straight
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Originally posted by simonm
[B]Nucleus
If I have a set of raw data and I draw a graph then I have interpreted the data. I have employed a set of rules that allows me to re-present the data in such a way that it allows my brain to more easilly turn it into information. (Note: it is not information until I read the graph. To someone else who looked at the graph and didn't understand it, it wouldn't be information).
Now, if I transfer my set of rules in to an automated process (such as a software program), the graph can now be automatically generated from the data. Does this mean I have transfered intelligence to the graph generation process? I think not. The program has not interpreted the data, merely re-presented it. It is only by someone looking at the graph, extracting meaning from it and interpreting it that turns it into information. The graph has no meaning to the software program that generated it. It is just an automated process set into motion by it's programmer.
I don't follow any of the logic in the last two paragraphs. You say "If I have a set of raw data and I draw a graph then I have interpreted the data" further you go on to say that the automatic generation of the graph by a computer "has no meaning to the software program that generated it". From this I deduce that you are saying that the act of drawing the graph is considered interpretation of the data when the entity drawing the graph is able to extract meaning from the graph, and the act of drawing the graph is not considered interpretation of the data when the entity drawing the graph is unable to extract meaning from the graph. Is this really the point you wish to make here :confused:
subjective definitions - useless definitions?
Simon
You define something is intelligent if it can extract meaning from raw data. You also define something can extract meaning from raw data, if you think so. Consider the usefullness of this definition, for a society where common knowledge is important. Try qualifying something artificially intelligent if everyone thinks differently. Since you think this is all fine, I suspect you don't care of the possibility of AI, you can always deny or accept it's existens if you want, if so, why are you here then?
In case I have missunderstood you, can you explain how you qualify something to be able to extract meaning from raw data?
Hypnos
You can consider consciousness as nonexistent. If something exists, it is physical, since consciousness isn't physical, it doesn't exist.