russ_watters
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I put the word in quotes because it's a word I don't subscribe to/think is irrelevant. In my view, if you are unable to detect/judge the criteria, then the criteria/definition you're using are irrelevant to the choices you have to make.gmax137 said:My reply to @russ_watters was an (apparently unsuccessful) attempt to point out that he himself, using the word in "does it really matter if it 'actually' is or isn't" is implying that there is some difference -- otherwise, what does he mean by 'actually'?
Agreed. I've joked in the past that I think PF is a simulation created for my amusement. There's no way for me to prove otherwise with the information I currently have*. So I make the same choice.I think the argument that "if you can't tell the difference why does it matter" is just as applicable to everything I see, hear, and feel around me - my experiences (including PF, russ, renormalize, etc) could all be a dream I'm having while laying in field of tall grass. I *choose* to believe the world is real, and act accordingly (be ethical, treat others as fellow humans, etc).
If we get to that point, yes. Even as we approach that point from some distance, I would expect any moral person to start struggling with the issue.I'm not following you here. Are you saying you won't shut off the AI computer because it "might actually" be a conscious, sentient, thinking mind?
I hadn't heard of that, but yes it's a good thought experiment for this. It rests on declaring/defining it to be true that a computer program can't, by definition, be [various words put in quotes in the article].This Wiki article is long but very interesting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_room
The moral problem isn't avoided even by the simple version of the experiment: what if you now have to choose to turn one of the "computers" off and the person and computer are indistinguishable? What do you do?
But beyond that, it's naïve to think the person won't eventually learn Chinese if you lock him in a room for years doing instruction-based English-Chinese translation. And similarly, was this thought experiment devised before machine learning was invented?
*Even setting aside the mostly joke about PF, a lot of people behave differently online than they do in real life in large part because they believe their two lives are not connected - their online life/persona isn't "real". Using my real name as a handle is a declaration that for me, at least, they are the same.
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