Well of course there is an objective morality against which we can compare people's values. The whole setup does not work otherwise, since you can just select any set of values you like the justify anything you like and then change it again. Ethics is pointless if it has no foundation in anything solid, since it has no force to control the behaviour of people.
The universe may well be unfair. Perhaps it has neglected to provide us with an objective basis for ethics. Perhaps ethics are all pointless. Saying "but that would be
bad" isn't a good argument against that being the case.
It is more complicated than that. The point I was making is that since appearances are factual (100% certain) while the existence of any external reality is uncertain (not false but less than 100% certain), thus you cannot built an ethical system based upon knowing what the objective facts beyond your appearances actually are.
In the real world, we can never be certain about anything. We
have to build an ethical system on fundamental uncertainty, or simply not build any.
Also, that does not follow. The mere fact that some things are more certain than others does not mean that the more certain things are a better basis for morality.
Additionally, it is still
appearances by which Reelya assigns moral worth. It is just a deeper sort of appearance, one that you must investigate in order to see.
Since morality is built upon what people appear to be doing rather than what they are doing, things like images actually start to matter. Violence against an image of something is akin to violence against the thing itself, because the ethical signifier (?) is the appearance and not the reality.
(All things moral are built on subjectives) -/-> (all subjective things have moral worth). That is confusing the superset and the subset. In other words, simply because all morally-important things happen to be subjective, does not mean that all subjective things are morally important.
Have you ever read Asimov's Relativity of Wrong?
You are modelling things using minds and then assuming that there is some other mechanic involved 'really'. Why is the other mechanic even needed then?
Minds are not, and cannot be, fundamental. They are far too complex. They must be made of smaller and simpler pieces. If I want to be as accurate as possible in my models, I should consider the pieces as well as the whole.
You are looking at the fundamental mechanics of the *brain*, not the mind.
What is a memory? We can tell by noticing the difference between "having a memory" and "not having a memory." This difference is within the brain; the memory is stored in the connection of neurons. Similarly for all other quasi-fundamental mental objects (which may also be stored in other forms of biological information, such as hormones).
The relationship between minds and the contents of the mind is interesting though, is the mind best seen as a container into which stuff 'goes' or instead a collection of things which are thrown together?
I do not see any important difference, nor is there a way to check either definition's validity. This is meaningless philosophy.
Explaining away is when you ignore a fact that you reasonably should know to be the case and then you invent a theoretical construct to explain the effect of that thing on the world.
This continues to
not be the definition. Explaining away is when you show that an alleged object/entity/phenomenon, said to be responsible for a certain physical effect, need not exist - the effect is caused by something else. Explaining is when you show how an object/entity/phenomenon is made up of smaller things.
See here for more.You for all practical purposes know that the mind exists, but you insist on ignoring it's existence and seeking to ultimately explain all behaviour through mindless mechanics.
This is an incorrect summary of my beliefs and words. I know that the mind exists, and do not ignore its existence. Rather, I seek to understand its functions and composition. The mind is made of of non-mental things, just as a mountain is made up of non-mountain things, and an airplane is made up of non-airplane things. In order to better know a mind, you must also know the non-mental things which make it up.
It's was not a personal attack.
I never said it was.
Ad hominem arguments rely on showing a belief's proponent to be flawed, and using this as a counter-argument. This is fallacious and non-productive.
It was just that the core of the strain of 'wrongness which leads to folks thinking that minds and brains are somehow the same thing is rooted in nothing except the a-priori rejection of the notion of an 'immaterial soul'. There must at all costs not be such a thing, which explains all other argumentation.
This psychoanalysis is incorrect, but beside the point. As I have said, showing an belief's proponents to be flawed is not an argument against the belief.
You can argue this about anything. Any belief could conceivably be held as an
a priori, absolute, unreasonable belief - including yours. As such, this possibility is not an argument against any particular belief. (See Bayes as it applies to arguments.)
There aren't necessarily any fundamental particles, there might just be just things you have not figured out how to split yet.
Perhaps not, but it seems unlikely.
The brain is not the mind, this means you cannot ever understand the mind by studying the brain.
How do you
know that?
That rules out neurology for certain, though psychology not so much.
People's actions result from their neurology. There is no point where a metaphysical process leaps in and shifts an atom to the side, changing someone's actions. We can draw a casual chain back from "Bob raises his right hand" to "an electrical signal stimulates the muscles in Bob's right arm" to "an electrical signal is emitted by the brain down a particular set of nerves" to "a complicated set of signals is passed between neurons, which we describe as Bob deciding to raise his right arm" and so on.
Nothing is 'observed' to have goals and make decisions. We take as an a-priori assumption that the thing is conscious and we then explain it's behaviour in that fashion. If we take as an a-priori assumption that the thing is just a mindless bot, we simply explain it's behaviour as a programmed response to input and internal variables.
I do not, in fact, take something's consciousness as an
a priori assumption. I look at its behavior, and see whether it demonstrates a tendency to act to satisfy a certain set of criteria. If it does, then I call that "goals and decisions," and move onto the next criterion.
If you can invent a mindless explanation for everything that may well *work*. But since you are a mind, you know minds exist meaning in the end that this model is incorrect in any case.
A mindless explanation does not make minds cease to exist, just as quantum physics does not make bridges and planes and mountains cease to exist, despite there being no term for "bridge" in the wave function.
Remember that when you move your arm, you are not in fact moving your actual arm at all. You are instead moving an image of your arm inside your mind. Supposedly the actual material arm exists and the brain (which may also not exist) picks up on your moving the imaginary arm, executing the necessary functions to make the actual arm move.
I do not actually remember this.
This means that on a physical level the brain *must* be able to actually do everything that the mind does.
This is true, because they are the
same thing. (Or close enough to be "hardware" and "software.")
Because the mind is outside of the observable material universe
Only in the same sense that the redness of an object is outside of the observable material universe. That is, not at all.
Is it made of physical stuff? Then it's material. Is it unobservable? Then how do you know it exists? The only observable immaterial things are mathematical concepts, perhaps.
then this 'causality' cannot be tracked, the effect can be observed but not the cause.
Then how do you know there is even any cause?
You can thus invent a theoretical cause you believe to be within the material world (not actually a directly observed one) to explain away the mind.
No, I can't, because
minds are real. What I
can do is
look at a person, and see what they do, and look inside them, and see what happens, and so on. Very little of this is "theoretical," and that's not even an insult like you think it is.
This may well 'work' and this is what is dangerous, we know that this is not what is going on only because we know that minds exist.
In a purely material world, intelligence could still exist, and people could still think that minds exist. Therefore, (thought that minds exist) -/-> (minds are non-material). (See the contrapositive.) [That is, you're saying that A -> ~B, where A is mind-feeling and B is material world. However, ~(B -> ~A) => ~(A -> ~B), QED.]
Remember that *my* consciousness *is* to me the *only* fundamental fact.
How do you know this to be true? Do you suppose, out of all possible mind-instantiations that are equivalent to yours, that none of them will be embodied in a world where your
a priori belief is false? (See Bayes.)
Your 'consciousness' on the other hand, well it may not even exist. You may be a philosophical zombie that is programmed to mimic consciousness, this rather well explains why 'your' idea of consciousness rather fits my idea of 'fake consciousness'.
Excuse me? I am most definitely conscious, and my lack of
a priori belief in fundamental consciousness does not invalidate my subjective experiences nor my moral worth.
Your argument makes no sense. By your own definition, there is no observable difference between Zombie Chatbots and Real Humans, since the only difference is an unobservable metaphysical source of consciousness. Therefore, nothing that I do can be evidence toward me being a Zombie Chatbot. (See Bayes.)
Actual control implies consciousness. So we have an illusion of control being executed over those who are unconscious.
It does? So anything that exercises control has a Metaphysical Consciousness Source, or will the Zombie Masters come and install a Fake Consciousness Source in every AI I design?
I don't see how you could possibly obtain any of this "information" yourself to any degree of reliability.
This reminds me of the days of yore (I think it was the 18th century) when clockwork was all the rage. They had this clockwork duck which replicated nearly all the functions of the real duck to the minds of the audience.
If you replicate the behaviour of the thing that does not mean you have made the thing unless you do so by the same mechanisms the thing you are replicated was using. Mind is from the perspective of the material universe a mechanism, not an object; outside of material reality it is an object.
It is a mechanism, but not one that can be changed without affecting the physical universe. This mechanism is the same sort of mechanism as an engine - it's a physical thing that does things. It can also be broken down into non-mechanism parts.
If consciousness is possible then it is just a question of combining whatever things it is that makes consciousness together, whether accidentally or not. The problem is that it is impossible, (well without horribly unethical experiments) to actually isolate the 'conscious generating' elements of the human from everything else. Only when you have isolated this element, that is we have 'cut it away' from everything else (likely literally) can we then replicate the essential and replace the 'inessential' elements with other elements of our choosing to make a strong AI.
Only when? Are you saying that it is impossible to make a self-reflective thing without that thing having True Consciousness?
Remember that I am not saying that the perfect Cleverbot (that is the perfect fake consciousness) would not genuinely be a conscious being. I am saying that it would be impossible to tell, that is because if Perfect Cleverbot is actually conscious it is an accident of us having inadvertently ended up using the actual mechanic that brings about consciousness in the process of making a fake one. Because however Cleverbot is consciously designed as a perfection of a fake consciousness, it is impossible to determine whether we 'accidentally' stumbled on the right mechanic.
So this mechanic is physical, then?
The odds of other beings being mindless goes up the more different you are from me, but is probabilistic thing. As for the evil part, I am the one arguing that actual consciousness is actually irrelevant, hence it does not follow that a medium cannot be unethical because no actual conscious beings were hurt because it is the appearance that matter.
It is the appearance of calling something not-a-person that matters, in a consequentialist sense. Perhaps you treat chatbots well, but I doubt everyone does. This is a
very bad idea.I think you are using a decidedly different definition of "object," but that is irrelevant; the concepts matter more than the terms.
Minds are things. They are not fundamental things. They are, as the buzzword goes, "emergent" (but so is everything else that is not a quark). For something to be a mind, it has to have certain capabilities. These capabilities can be carried out by any Turing machine, as well as more specialized machines such as the brain.
From the perspective of the material universe (in so far as we think we understand it) the mind is not an object but a mechanism, from the perspective of the mental universe the material universe is a mechanism to explain the objects in the mind.
This seems like useless, meaningless philosophical gibberish to me. Have you found any actual evidence for this non-material universe yet, or are you still just asserting its existence?
Or rather the fact that there are mental objects that we cannot simply wish away (material reality is an mechanical explanation for the lack of Matrix spoon bending).
Alternatively, we cannot wish away mental objects because brains do not have conscious self-editing powers.
I do not see why conscious things, specifically, must necessarily have complete self-knowledge.
That is because consciousness does not exist in material reality. If the mind were the brain, the brain is also the mind. That means what we are aware of (the mind) is the functioning of the brain. That being so we would be able to learn about the internal functioning of the brain from introspection.
No. I do not see how you are getting this. We experience
some functions of the brain, not all. You are basically saying A is a subset of B, therefore B is a subset of A. That is not valid logic.
That our mind teaches us nothing about the internal mechanics of our brain establishes pretty solidly that the mind and brain are completely different things.
Do you think, in a purely material universe, all conscious beings would always have complete self-knowledge? And
how do you know that?I am not claiming that the brain is made up of consciousness. Consciousness is not an element. It is not a peculiar type of molecule. It is a process, and this process may not have complete knowledge of the substrate on which the process is carried out.
Yes, consciousness/mind is not a material thing.
Taboo "material", please.
The brain is a material thing, hence it is not the mind/consciousness.
Consciousness is not a physical thing you can pick up, but it is a physical thing that happens in the physical world. It's the difference between a log and fire. It's a
process, with physical causes and physical effects. No metaphysics involved.
Well. If I mess around with your brain, you act differently. I'd say the mind is in the brain, then. Where else could it be?
The mind is nowhere (that is it has no location).
That is reserved for concepts. Processes have locations.
The brain does many things, in fact most things mindlessly. You can also change the appearances in the mind by altering material reality, of which the brain is a part.
How does the physical world affect the mind? And if you had never learned about Phineas Gage, would he have been (at least weak) evidence against dualism, in your view? (What would you have predicted beforehand?)
What do you mean, the "projecting machine"? Where would this projection be projected onto? And is this projection epiphenomenal?
The projection machine is the 'function' of the universe that produces consciousness.
You are misusing a mathematical term. Functions are maps from sets to sets (or a more general version of the same).
We have reason to believe that the projecting machine is the material object behind the appearance we call the 'brain'.
We do, do we? Would you care to share the reason for supposing the existence of a "projection" at all?
It is actually epiphenonomal in any case, consciousness is clearly a byproduct of something material, which is to say something unknowable.
Do you know what epiphenomenalism even is?
The material is not unknowable. It is the only knowable thing. It is not
certain, but it is knowable.
The problem here is that there is the mental imput (the mental appearance) but in order for certain aspects of consciousness to exist (free will) the output must also allow an returning-input. *That* means that the projector is not simply projecting an image, we are projecting a user-interface to something.
The second part is a problem since it ties consciousness to material reality as a mechanic. The fatalistic 'movie consciousness' can work quite nicely with mindless mechanics, the 'user-interface consciousness' needs to function as a mechanism (though that does not make it a material object).
I do not follow. This all seems baseless speculation, anyway.
How do you make your decisions, then? And how are you certain that what you do is right?
(Hmm. If you cannot cope with uncertainty, it does not surprise me that you have turned to these ideas. They offer complete and utter certainty, without even needing any evidence. Still, finding a cognitive reason for your statements is not equivalent to refuting them. I am just making an observation, and perhaps you would like to consider it.)
My ideas purport that all material facts and all other consciousnesses are inherently uncertain and there is no way to ever make it otherwise, not exactly any refuge from uncertainty there. The only certain thing is the existence of my appearances in themselves (apart from their supposed material cause), hence to answer your question I make my decisions, ethical or otherwise based upon appearances.
Yes, but you do not
need material facts, correct? You are giving the uncertain up for lost, and basing everything on the certainty of your thoughts alone. You are, in fact, thinking that minds are metaphysical; this is all you can know, and all you need to know. Right?