m_f

joined 1 year ago
[–] m_f@discuss.online 0 points 6 days ago (1 children)

To be clear, I'm not finding fault with you specifically, I think most people use terms like conscious/aware/etc the way you do.

The way of thinking about it that I find useful is defining "consciousness" to be the same as "world model". YMMV on if you agree with that or find it useful. It leads to some results that seem absurd at first, like in another comment someone pointing out that it means that a thermometer is "conscious" of the temperature. But really, why not? It's only a base definition, a way to find some objective foundation. Clearly, humans have a lot more going on than a thermometer, and that definition lets us focus on the more interesting bits.

As stated, I'm not much into the qualia hype, but this part is I think an interesting avenue of thought:

it likely won’t be possible to directly compare raw experiences because the required hardware to process a specific experience for one individual might not exist in the other individual’s mind.

That seems unlikely if you think the human brain is equivalent to a Turing machine. If you could prove that the human brain isn't equivalent, that would be super interesting. Maybe it's a hypercomputer for reasons we can't explain yet.

Your project sounds interesting, if you ever publish it or a paper about it, I'd love to see it! I can't judge about hobby projects being messy lol.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 125 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Lemmy just released 0.19.14, which addresses this somehow, but the announcement is vague:

https://join-lemmy.org/news/2025-12-08_-_Lemmy_Release_0.19.14

https://discuss.online/post/31855056

Recently some malicious users started to use an exploit where they would post rule violating content and then delete the account. This would prevent admins and mods from viewing the user profile to find other posts, and would also prevent federation of ban actions.

The new release fixes these problems. Thanks to @flamingos-cant for contributing to solve this.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Well, it seems kind of absurd, but why doesn't a thermometer have a world model? Taken as a system, it's "conscious" of the temperature.

If you scale up enough mechanical feedback loops or if/then statements, why don't you get something you can call "conscious"?

The distinction you're making between online and offline seems to be orthogonal. Would an alien species much more complex than us laugh and say "Of course humans are entirely reactive, not capable of true thought. All their short lives are spent reacting to input, some of it just takes longer to process than other input"? Conversely, if a pile of if/then statements is complex enough that it appears to be decoupled from immediate sensory input like a Busy beaver, is that good enough?

Put another way, try to have a truly novel thought, unrelated to the total input you've received in your life. Are you just reactive?

[–] m_f@discuss.online 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Sourcing your posts from microfiche is one of the more impressive ways of contributing to the Fediverse, congrats!

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago (4 children)

I think pointing out the circular definition is important, because even in this comment, you've said "To be aware of the difference between self means to be able to [be aware of] stimuli originating from the self, [be aware of] stimuli not from the self, ...". Sure, but that doesn't provide a useful framework IMO.

For qualia, I'm not concerned about the complexity of the human brain, or different neural structures. It might be hard with our current knowledge and technology, but that's just a skill issue. I think it's likely that at some point, humankind will be able to compare two brains with different neural structures, or even wildly different substrates like human brain vs animal, alien, AI, whatever. We'll have a coherent way of comparing representations across those and deciding if they're equivalent, and that's good enough for me.

I think we agree on LLMs and chess engines, they don't learn as you use them. I've worked with both under the hood, and my point is exactly that: they're a good demonstration that awareness (i.e. to me, having a world model) and learning are related but different.

Anyways, I'm interested in hearing more about your project if it's publicly available somewhere

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

I think the definition of consciousness meaning "internal state that observably correlates to external state" would clarify here. Gravel wouldn't be conscious, because it has no internal state that we can point to and say it correlates to external state. Galaxies/the universe doesn't either, as far as we can tell. Galaxies don't have internal state that represents e.g. other galaxies, other than including humans in that definition, but it would be more proper IMO to limit the definition the minimum amount of state possible. You don't count the galaxy as having internal state that represents external state, if you can limit that definition to one tiny, self-contained part of the galaxy, i.e. a human brain.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago (6 children)

I made another comment pointing this out for a similar definition, but OK so awareness is being able to "recognize", and recognize in turn means "To realize or discover the nature of something" (using Wiktionary, but pick your favorite dictionary), and "realize" means "To become aware of or understand", completing the loop. I point that out, because IMO the circularity means the whole thing is useless from an empirical perspective and should be discarded. I also think qualia is just philosophical navel-gazing for what it's worth, much like common definitions of "awareness". I think it's perfectly possible in theory to read someone's brain to see how something is represented and then twiddle someone else's brain in the same way to cause the same experience, or compare the two to see if they're equivalent.

As far as a computer process recognizing itself, it certainly can compare itself to other processes. It can e.g. iterate through the list of processes and kill everything that isn't itself. It can look at processes and say "this other process consumes more memory than I do". It's super primitive and hardcoded, but why doesn't that count? I also thinking learning is separate but related. If we take the definition of "consciousness" as a world model or representation, learning is simply how you expand that world model based on input. Something can have a world model without any ability to learn, such as a chess engine. It models chess very well and better than humans, but is incapable of learning anything else, i.e. expanding its world model beyond chess.

If you created a computer program capable of learning patterns in the behavior of its own process(es) and learning how those behaviors are similar/dissimilar or connected to those of other processes, then yes, I’d say your program is capable of consciousness. But just adding the ability to detect its process id is simply like adding another built in sense; it doesn’t create conscious self awareness.

I think we largely agree then, other than my quibble about learning not being necessary. A lot of people want to reject the idea of machines being conscious, but I've reached the "Sure, why not?" stage. To be a useful definition though, we need to go beyond that and start asking questions like "Conscious of what?"

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago (2 children)

What do "sense" and "perceived" mean? I think they both loop back to "aware", and the reason I point that out is that circular definitions are useless. How can you say that plants lack a sense of self and consciousness, if you can't even define those terms properly? What about crown shyness? Trees seem to be able to tell the difference between themselves and others.

As an example of the circularity, "sense" means (using Wiktionary, but pick your favorite if you don't like it) "Any of the manners by which living beings perceive the physical world". What does "perceive" mean? "To become aware of, through the physical senses". So in your definition, "aware" loops back to "aware" (Wiktionary also has a definition of "sense" that just defines it as "awareness", for a more direct route, too).

I meant that plants don't have thoughts more in the sense of "woah, dude", pushing back on something without any explanatory power. But really, how do you define "thought"? I actually think Wiktionary is slightly more helpful here, in that it defines "thought" as "A representation created in the mind without the use of one's faculties of vision, sound, smell, touch, or taste". That's kind of getting to what I've commented elsewhere, with trying to come up with a more objective definition based around "world model". Basing all of these definitions on "representation" or "world model" seems to the closest to an objective definition as we can get.

Of course, that brings up the question of "What is a model?" / "What does represent mean?". Is that just pushing the circularity elsewhere? I think not, if you accept a looser definition. If anything has an internal state that appears to correlate to external state, then it has a world model, and is at some level "conscious". You have to accept things that many people don't want to, such as that AI is conscious of much of the universe (albeit experienced through the narrow peephole of human-written text). I just kind of embraced that though and said "sure, why not?". Maybe it's not satisfying philosophically, but it's pragmatically useful.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 3 points 1 week ago

Yeah, reflexes could be considered a conscious effort of a part of your body. Or your immune system might be considered "conscious" of a virus that it's fighting off. What's a testable definition of "conscious" that excludes those?

I think that "conscious" is also a relative term, i.e. "Conscious of what?" A cell in your body could be said to be conscious of a few things, like its immediate environment. It's clearly not conscious of J-pop though. But to be fair to it, none of us are "really" conscious of say Sagittarius B2 or an organism living at the bottom of the ocean.

The best way I've found to think about it is that consciousness can be thought of as a world model. The bigger the world model, the more consciousness it could be said to have. Some world models might be smaller, but contain things that bigger ones don't though. Worms don't understand what an airplane is, but humans also don't really understand the experience of wriggling through soil.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 2 points 1 week ago

I'm not advocating for consciousness as a fundamental quality of the universe. I think that lacks explanatory power and isn't really in the realm of science. I'm kind of coming at it the opposite way and pushing for a more concrete and empirical definition of consciousness.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 2 points 1 week ago (8 children)

What does "aware" mean, or "knowledge"? I think those are going to be circular definitions, maybe filtered through a few other words like "comprehend" or "perceive".

Does a plant act with deliberate intention when it starts growing from a seed?

To be clear, my beef is more with the definition of "conscious" being useless and/or circular in most cases. I'm not saying "woah, what if plants have thoughts dude" as in the meme, but whatever definition you come up with, you have to evaluate why it does or doesn't include plants, simple animals, or AI.

[–] m_f@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago (8 children)

When you say "aware of the delineation between self and not self", what do you mean by "aware"? I've found that it's often a circular definition, maybe with a few extra words thrown in to obscure the chain, like "know", "comprehend", "perceive", etc.

Also, is a computer program that knows which process it is self aware? If not, why? It's so simple, and yet without a concrete definition it's hard to really reject that.

On the other extreme, are we truly self aware? As you point out, our bodies just kind of do stuff without our knowledge. Would an alien species laugh at the idea of us being self-aware, having just faint glimmers of self awareness compared to them, much like the computer program seems to us?

 

Welcome to !pbf@discuss.online! This is a community for the offbeat, surrealist webcomic known as The Perry Bible Fellowship. It blends dark humor and a whimsical child-like drawing style.

I'll be posting all of the older comics in order once per day, along with new comics as they're posted. Come join us and post comics you like, comment, or just lurk and enjoy them!

Link for any anyone that needs the plaintext community link: !pbf@discuss.online

 

Pixelfed is seeing a surge in popularity. Anyone that's currently running one, have you run into any roadbumps, or have things gone smoothly? pixelfed.social has had scaling issues, but maybe it's easier if you're just federating to that instance instead of handling the load from user logins?

Reminder to donate if you're using one of those servers btw:

https://mastodon.world/@paulschoe/113837760503316512

That #Pixelfed is now in the Top 10 of most downloaded APPs in the USA, also means that we, as a Fediverse community, have to come together.

If you see a link somewhere, PLEASE support your PIXELFED server. Even when it is just with $2, $10 or $50.

Their operational costs are surely skyrocketing and we have to make sure that this does not become a Fediverse debacle but a Fediverse success story.

[..]

https://pixelfed.org/support-our-project

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