←back to thread

169 points mattmarcus | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.201s | source
Show context
EncomLab ◴[] No.43612568[source]
This is like claiming a photorestor controlled night light "understands when it is dark" or that a bimetallic strip thermostat "understands temperature". You can say those words, and it's syntactically correct but entirely incorrect semantically.
replies(6): >>43612607 #>>43612629 #>>43612689 #>>43612691 #>>43612764 #>>43612767 #
nsingh2 ◴[] No.43612629[source]
Where is the boundary where this becomes semantically correct? It's easy for these kinds of discussions to go in circles, because nothing is well defined.
replies(1): >>43612960 #
nativeit ◴[] No.43612960[source]
Hard to define something that science has yet to formally outline, and is largely still in the realm of religion.
replies(2): >>43613202 #>>43613541 #
1. stefl14 ◴[] No.43613541[source]
Shameless plug of personal blog post, but relevant. Still not fully edited, so writing is a bit scattered, but crux is we now have the framework for talking about consciousness intelligently. It's not as mysterious as in the past, considering advances in non-equilibrium thermodynamics and the Free Energy Principle in particular.

https://stefanlavelle.substack.com/p/i-am-therefore-i-feel