Re: Bruno's argument

From: Brent Meeker <meekerdb.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Tue, 01 Aug 2006 16:50:57 -0700

Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
>
> John M writes:
>
>
>>Peter Jones writes:
>>
>>
>>>Hmm. Including limitations in time?
>>
>>Yes, if an infinite number of finite computations are run simultaneously on
>>a system with a finite number of physical states.
>>
>>Stathis Papaioannou
>>-------------------------------------
>>So if I have a system with finite number of physical states, it will take a
>>matching finite number of (base)-computations leaving an infinite number
>>untreated. Out of them I can take a deduction for muiltiplying the finite
>>number of physical states by the finite number of the base-states to get to
>>the total number of computability on that system in parallel - still a
>>finite number. I still have an infinite number of unbtreated cases left.
>>Damn that infinite! Cantor's curse.
>>
>>John M
>
>
> Suppose there is a very simple physical system that goes through two states,
> "on" and "off". You wish to map these states onto a binary sequence which at
> first glance seems too long: 10110100... You write down the following: on the
> first run, on->1 and off->0; on the second run, on->1 and off->1;

That one's not gonna work :-)

>on the
> third run, on->0 and off->1; and so on, for as long as you like. It is not common
> practice to change the code from run to run when designing a computer, but
> that is just a matter of convenience. If you specify exactly how the code
> changes the meaning is unambiguous, and in principle the two physical states
> can encode any number of binary states, or even more complex computations.
>
> The above probably seems silly to most people reading this, because the burden
> of the computation falls on the specification of the code, the physical processes
> being essentially irrelevant. Nevertheless, we may have the situation where the
> code specification is documented in a big book while the computer (such as it is)
> carries out the physical processes which, if we to refer to the book, performs
> perfectly legitimate computations. We could even design a driver for a monitor to
> display the computations, again using the book. Now, suppose the last copy of
> the book is destroyed. The computer would still do its business, but it may as
> well be a random number generator for all the good it does us without the code
> specification. But what if, by the book, the computer is actually carrying out
> *conscious* computations? Would it suddenly cease being conscious as the book
> is burned in a fire, or gradually lose consciousness as the book's pages are
> ripped out one by one?

The implication is that the computer was conscious before the book was
burned - but I would ask, "What was it's interaction with the world?"
If the answer is that the person with the book interpreted the output
and was informed by that or acted on that, then I'd say the
book+computer was conscious - but not the computer alone.

Brent Meeker

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Received on Tue Aug 01 2006 - 19:53:03 PDT

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