Today's post, Against Modal Logics was originally published on 27 August 2008. A summary (taken from the LW wiki):
Unfortunately, very little of philosophy is actually helpful in AI research, for a few reasons.
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Give me that explanation, and I'll tell you. It's clearly some kind of computational / information process, but it's not clear exactly what's going on there. It has a serve a survival purpose, or else we wouldn't have it. We'll probably be able to conduct experiments and find out down the line, but it's tough right now. I also suspect that subjective experience isn't a linear cutoff. It's probably a gradient of depth of insight that extends to organisms with simpler nervous systems and extends, at least in principle, past humans. But that's speculation on my part.
It isn't an information process, it's a chemical process- because information can't trigger a neuron.
I see no reason why subjective experience needs to have had a survival purpose in the past; isn't it also possible that self-awareness was a contra-survival byproduct of some other function, which was prosurvivial in the distant past? I don't think that sentience is the appendix of the mind, but "because we have it" isn't in the list of evidence against that hypothesis.
Suppose that we figured out how the enconding of the sensory and motor nerves, ... (read more)