Tabooing isn't about understanding what something is or how it works. It's about understanding what another person means when they use a word.
When you say "fire" you refer to a thing that you expect the listener to know about. If someone who doesn't speak English well asks you what is "fire" - asks you to taboo the word "fire" - you will be able to answer. Even though you may have no idea how fire works.
I'm asking to taboo "consciousness" because I've seen many times that different people mean different things when they use that word. And a lot of them don't have any coherent or consistent concept at all that they refer to. Without a coherent concept of what is meant by "consciousness", it's meaningless to ask whether "consciousness" would be present or absent in a WBE.
I'm asking to taboo "consciousness" because I've seen many times that different people mean different things when they use that word.
I don't believe that they actually mean different things. Consciousness, like fire, is something we all know about. It sounds more like you're pushing people to give more detail than they know, so they make up random answers. I can push you about "fire" the same way, it will just take a couple more steps to get to qualia. Fire is that orange thing - sorry, what's "orange"? :-) The exercise isn't helpful.
- Eliezer Yudkowsky, "Value is Fragile"
I had meant to try to write a long post for LessWrong on consciousness, but I'm getting stuck on it, partly because I'm not sure how well I know my audience here. So instead, I'm writing a short post, with my main purpose being just to informally poll the LessWrong community on one question: how sure are you that whole brain emulations would be conscious?
There's actually a fair amount of philosophical literature about issues in this vicinity; David Chalmers' paper "The Singularity: A Philosophical Analysis" has a good introduction to the debate in section 9, including some relevant terminology:
So, on the functionalist view, emulations would be conscious, while on the biological view, they would not be.
Personally, I think there are good arguments for the functionalist view, and the biological view seems problematic: "biological" is a fuzzy, high-level category that doesn't seem like it could be of any fundamental importance. So probably emulations will be conscious--but I'm not too sure of that. Consciousness confuses me a great deal, and seems to confuse other people a great deal, and because of that I'd caution against being too sure of much of anything about consciousness. I'm worried not so much that the biological view will turn out to be right, but that the truth might be some third option no one has thought of, which might or might not entail emulations are conscious.
Uncertainty about whether emulations would be conscious is potentially of great practical concern. I don't think it's much of an argument against uploading-as-life-extension; better to probably survive as an up than do nothing and die for sure. But it's worrisome if you think about the possibility, say, of an intended-to-be-Friendly AI deciding we'd all be better off if we were forcibly uploaded (or persuaded, using its superhuman intelligence, to "voluntarily" upload...) Uncertainty about whether emulations would be conscious also makes Robin Hanson's "em revolution" scenario less appealing.
For a long time, I've vaguely hoped that advances in neuroscience and cognitive science would lead to unraveling the problem of consciousness. Perhaps working on creating the first emulations would do the trick. But this is only a vague hope, I have no clear idea of how that could possibly happen. Another hope would be that if we can get all the other problems in Friendly AI right, we'll be able to trust the AI to solve consciousness for us. But with our present understanding of consciousness, can we really be sure that would be the case?
That leads me to my second question for the LessWrong community: is there anything we can do now to to get clearer on consciousness? Any way to hack away at the edges?