Re: The Totally Blind Zombie Homunculus Room

From: Colin Geoffrey Hales <c.hales.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Wed, 29 Nov 2006 07:47:22 +1100 (EST)

see the end


>
> Colin Geoffrey Hales wrote:
>> This discussion is a hybrid of a number of very famous thought
>> experiments. Unlike those thought experiments, however, this experiment
>> is
>> aimed purely and only at scientists. The intent is to demonstrate
>> clearly
>> and definitively the nature of subjective experience (phenomenal
>> consciousness) and its primal role in a scientist's ability to function
>> as
>> a scientist.
>
>
>> Imagine a room. Its walls and celing and floor are matt black. There are
>> no doors or windows. All over the walls are digital displays which
>> announce numbers in warm, friendly colours. Up against all four walls
>> and
>> up to international standard control desk height (roughly 750mm) is a
>> sloping console. Covering the console around all four walls are
>> pushbuttons. The number of displays is equal to the number of sensory
>> nerves entering a typical human brain from the peripheral nervous
>> systems
>> including all sensory input. The number of pushbuttons is equal to the
>> entire set of effector nerves emanating from a typical brain. This total
>> number of displays and pushbuttons is in the millions.
>
>
>> There is a comfortable chair upon which is seated the room's sole
>> occupant, Marvin the human. Marvin is normal except for never having
>> been
>> outside the room and having never otherwise acquired any knowledge of
>> anything other than that of the room and its contents. He knows
>> absolutely
>> nothing of any sort of external world or any other people. He has no
>> clue
>> about the external world except for what he can surmise from the
>> displays
>> and buttons.
>
>
>> Marvin, like all healthy humans, has an experiential life which is the
>> collection of private phenomenal scenes delivered by his brain material.
>> These are operating normally except that Marvin has been deprived of all
>> the phenomenal content (experiences) that he ever could have received
>> had
>> he been allowed outside the room. He has had a lifetime of experiences,
>> but all of them have been confined to depicting the room.
>
>
>
>> Marvin is a scientist. He studies the science of not-room. His life
>> consists of experiments which involve the pressing of buttons and the
>> recording of patterns in the displays. Over time an enormous volume of
>> data begins to show patterns for which Marvin constructs models. The
>> models are generalisations of the behaviour of the displays after
>> buttons
>> are pushed in a certain way. He tests and refines the models and has
>> developed a form of symbolic representation of the behaviour of the
>> displays. Certain features on the display occur regularly enough that
>> names have been given to notional not-room phenomena. One is called the
>> tronelec. The mathematics of not-room includes a lot of rules about the
>> behaviour of tronelecs. In time Marvin realises that his exploration of
>> not-room can be done according to routine rules and he sets about a
>> systematic, exhaustive assay of the entire range of possible
>> button/display relationships.
>
>
>> Everything is going nicely but then one day a well known pattern does
>> not
>> occur the way it used to. After a while the old pattern resumes. The
>> whole
>> mathematics of not-room is undermined. It takes a long time for Marvin
>> to
>> construct a new model that accounts for the novel behaviour. A new
>> entity
>> called gytravi is needed. Then things settle down and routine systematic
>> exploration resumes.
>
>> In time a massive collection of not-room entities and behavioural rules
>> is
>> constructed and begins to repeat itself. So much so that Marvin, after
>> checking and rechecking, finds that the model seems to have stabilised.
>
>> At this point we stop to survey the situation.
>
>> The first thing to note is that the room is an empirically verified
>> physiologically accurate representation of the sensory circumstances of
>> a
>> human brain. Nervous activity effect/affect is replicated by
>> buttons/displays and all signals are standardised. There are no
>> experiential qualities (perceptual sensation qualities) associated with
>> this nervous activity. This is a physiologically verified, well
>> established empirical fact. Indeed the room is a little too kind - If
>> you
>> discarded all the buttons and displays, then that is a more
>> physiologically accurate circumstance .
>
>
>
>> The main point is that this collection of totally sensationless signals
>> is
>> exactly what is available to a human brain and through which all sense
>> measurement arrives. Consider the room without a Marvin in it. Based on
>> what evidence is there any reason to even conceptualise the existence of
>> an external world?
>
> There is nothing in the room to conceptualise an
> external world because Marvin does all the conceptualising.
> Is this supposed to show that an you need phenomenality is
> needed to conceptualise an external world? It doesn't.
> We could imagine the control panel delivering non-phenomenal
> information to Marvin (such as he slips of paper used in the Chinese
> Room).
> Or we could split Marvin into two people, A Watcher who has the
> phenomena,
> and a Theorist that the watcher reports to non-phenomenally. IOW,
>
> The philosophical zombie is an exercise in conceivability.
> We can conceive of a version of your Room in which the interpretation
> (i.e. the basis for supposing that there is an external world)
> is separated from the phenomenality. We can still conceive of a version
> in which all the functionality is separate from all the phenomenality.
>
> It might be the case that the conceivability is not your concern,
> your concern is real possibility. But then you are no
> contradicting anything the philosophers are saying. And real
> possibility is not established by armchair thought experiments.
>
>
>> Nothing in that room gives any indication of it.
>
> That depends on what you mean by "indication". The Room contains
> all the information a real human has to go on, by hypothesis.
> There isn't a single light that goes on to say "Hey! There is an
> external world!". But Marvin seems to be able to process his data
> on the assumption that they are caused by some stable formation
> like a gytravi or a tronelec. Perhaps Marvin needs a apriori
> belief ore assumption that there is an external world, in order
> to proceed with an investigation of the signals "as if" they had
> external sources. There is no reason Marvin should
> lack such an assumption, there is no reason a real person should,
> there is no reason a zombie should lack it, and no reason
> a suitably programmed AI should.
>
>
>> There
>> is no a-priori knowledge of not-room.
>
> So you say. But is that scientifically accurate? The tabula
> rasa theory is rather out of date. And there is no reason
> a zombie or anything else should lack such knowledge, since
> it is not a phenomenon. And why would Marvin need *knowledge*
> anyway? Isn't an assumption or hypothesis enough?
>
>> No possible way to interpret any of
>> the signals. All there is is correlated behaviour - the behaviour of
>> displays correlated with other displays and buttons, none of which have
>> any other discernable impact.
>
> If you say that Marvin is the Theorist, the Interpreter,
> and you unplug him, there is no interpretation. Does that mean
> that interpretation and phenomena are all done by the same module
> in humans? I don't see any evidence for that, it all
> depends on your say-so. In any case, it doesn't
> affect conceivability arguments. It is still
> conceivable that phenomenology and functionality could be prized apart.
>
>> The room is quintessentially a zombie in the
>> sense it has no experiential life at all despite being wired as
>> extravagently as a complete human.
>
>> Marvin thinks of himself as a scientist. Exactly what is he a scientist
>> of? His science is, he thinks, the science of 'not-room'.
>
> Why would that be? You said the Room+Marvin system is supposed
> to be an accurate representation of a person. Well, unless the person
> is a solipsist, the Room+Marvin sytem would believe in an external
> world.
>
>> But is it? All
>> he has is a very sophisticated model of display/button correlations.
>
> So you say. According to you he has a "flat", or instrumental model
> that doesn't posit anything behind the phenomenal instrument-readings.
> But it is far from clear why tha must be the case. Since real-world
> scientists don't *have* to be instrumentalists, why should inner
> homunculi like
> Marvin? (More below [*])
>
>
>> His
>> science is not about 'not-room' at all! His science is the science of
>> room
>> display/buttons. He has absolutely no justification to any claim about
>> anything going on anywhere else, although that is how Marvin thinks of
>> it.
>
> A predictive model is justification for whatever entities it posits.
> Your claim of "absolutely no justification" is not itself justified.
>
>> His science is very very predictive of button/display behaviour. As to
>> the
>> reality of the model he has developed? He has no way of contextualising
>> any of the abstractions he has created with the actual state of affairs
>> in
>> 'not-room'.
>
> What does *that* mean? You mean can't step outside the room-world
> system,
> hover above them, and compare them directly. No he doesn't know in that
> sense. But if that is a problem
> (and I don't think it is, not as much as is claimed) it is a problem
> that affects everything. You cannot claim there is a magical solution,
> if that is
> what you are claiming. And it is an exaggeration that Marvin does not
> know
> at all because he lacks "transcendent realism". He still has
> "empirical;
> realism". He can construct robust, predictive models.
>
>> Absolutely anything could be out there driving the displays and Marvin
>> will never know.
>
> Since Marvin can reject theories as over complex (Occam's razor) or
> falsify the predictively, "absolutely anything" is unwarranted.
>
> But he still has limitations. If he has observed that phenomenon X is
> followed
> by phenomenon Y, he can suppose that there is an external
> process characterised by the tendency to cause those phenomena.
> But he doesn't know what that "thing" might be in itself.
>
> He is no in a state of absolute ignorance, of total
> knowledge. He has good-enough knowledge about certain things.
>
>> Indeed worse than that, there may be an infinite number
>> of different ways that not-room could present the same display values
>> and
>> Marvin would never know. The display data is fundamentally,
>> intrinsically
>> ambiguous.
>
> If the external world has in-itself properties then it is undetermined
> by Marvin's knowledge. If it is completely characterised by
> the tendency to cause phenomena in onlookers, it isn't. You have
> to make an assumption about the metaphysical nature of the world
> to come to a conclusion about how ignorant we are (or Marvin is) about
> it.
>
>> Even if the displays and buttons were nicely grouped and
>> labeled all that would happen is that there would be expectations of
>> related behaviours in a group, which Marvin does not have to name
>> himself.
>> It could even be named 'sight', 'sound' and so on and Marvin may
>> understand what that might mean, but it delivers no claim to any
>> definitive or unambiguous knowledge of not-room.
>
>
>> And that, fundamentally, is the real nub of the matter.
>
>> What is outside the room? It doesn't really matter. It could be an
>> elaborate multistory building with a ratsnest of electrical
>> interconnections done with a computer. It could be a control room in the
>> head of a giant robot. It could be literally wired up to a human body
>> with
>> no brain. It could be a spaceship. None of that matters except in the
>> details. Marvin can never know because he has no experience available to
>> even imagine it.
>
> Marvin can exclude a lot of possibilities with Occam's' razor and
> falsification.
>
>> To finish off the room scenario we now take Marvin out of the room. In
>> his
>> place we leave a machine that is based on his systematic scientific
>> behaviour. It runs with clockwork and pneumatics from punched cards.
>> None
>> of the displays are needed, none of the buttons are needed - they are
>> all
>> directly connected to the new machine. The massively complex model
>> Marvin
>> has constructed, which has nothing whatever to do with 'not-room' except
>> in the most indirect of abstracted ways,
>
> i.e. accept inasmuch as it *does* have something to do with the
> not-room...
>
>> goes on being verified and
>> occasionally amended using more rules for amending the model, also
>> devised
>> by Marvin.
>
>
>> The model can never say anything about any changes in
>> 'not-room'. All it can sense is novel (unexpected according to the
>> model)
>> behaviour in the sensing displays, which is an entirely different thing.
>
> Not at all. If the model start with the assumption that the
> phenomenal displays are driven by some sort of external world, and
> there is no
> reason why it shouldn't, then the most
> obvious explanation for a change in the behaviour of the phenomena
> is a change in the world. A rule-driven, self-modifying model is just
> as capable of formulating hypotheses about what external-world
> entity could be causing its phenomena as a scientist.
>
> (or course if it isn't self-modifying, it is a bit stuck. By why
> make that assumption? It has nothing to do with
> phemomena. Self-modification, is functionality, not phenomenality)
>
>> The main message to take from this is that this bizarre concoction is
>> the
>> necessary circumstance that would exist in a human if it weren't for
>> what
>> phenomenal consciousness provides a human scientist.
>
> You haven't demonstrated anything of the kind. The conclusion that
> "Marvin" plays a vital role is just produced ready-made
> at the end. It is not justified.
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> [*] See separate posting "Phenomenology"
>

All your comments are shooting from hip without actually reading and
thinking. They are all of the class "<colin has assumed X but what if it
isn;t like that" when the point is that the circumstances are needed to
demonstrate the outcome. In no case have you shown any way that the
alternates claimed limited by teh thought experiment can be redrressed in
the circumstances.

Stop wasting my time.






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Received on Tue Nov 28 2006 - 15:47:52 PST

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