I haven't spent several years studying philosophy, so defining "self" and "awareness" is probably not something I should do – nor is that necessary. All I assume in the original post is that self-awareness includes being able to have goals that are distinct from the goals of the outside world.
Deep Blue runs software whose "goal" is the goal its developers have worked on: Choose the best move in a game of chess. Deep Blue does (for all we know) not run an AGI which thinks: “Okay, my real goal is X, but as long as I haven't calculated what I need to do to reach X, I should just act as if I were a normal chess application and calculate the next move as my programmers expect me to do.”
Your calculator makes you do things
I'm not using "Y makes me do things" as a synonym for “I should do things using Y in order to reach my goal.” I'm using it as a synonym for “Y can execute arbitrary code in my brain.” Remember: “This is a transhuman mind we're talking about. If it thinks both faster and better than a human, it can probably take over a human mind through a text-only terminal.”
This article poses questions on the distinction between Tool AGI and Agent AGI, which was described very concisely by Holden Karnofsky in his recent Thoughts on the Singularity Institute post:
For me, this instantly raised one question: What if a Tool AGI becomes/is self-aware (which, for the purposes of this post, I define as “able to have goals that are distinct from the goals of the outside world”) and starts manipulating its results in a way that is non-obvious to its user? Or, even worse: What if the Tool AGI makes its user do things (which I do not expect to be much more difficult than succeding in the AI box experiment)?
My first reaction was to flinch away by telling myself: “But of course a Tool would never become self-aware! Self-awareness is too complex to just happen unintentionally!”
But some uncertainty survived and was strenghtened by Eliezer's reply to Holden:
After all, “Self-awareness is too complex to just happen unintentionally!” is just a bunch of English words expressing my personal incredulity. It's not a valid argument.
So, can we make the argument, that self-awareness will not happen unintentionally?
If we can't make that argument, can we stop Tool AGIs from potentially becoming a Weak Agent AGI which acts through its human user?
If we can't do that, how meaningful is the distinction between a Weak Agent AGI (a.k.a. Tool AGI) and an Agent AGI?
For more, see the Tools versus Agents post by Stuart_Armstrong, which points to similar questions.