Are humans really conscious? Take a pain response to something sharp as an example: you feel something sharp and it hurts, so you are triggered into trying to eliminate the cause of the pain. A machine could be programmed to pretend to do the same - a sensor detects damage being done and sends the value 255 (representing "mega-ouch") to the CPU by some means or other. The CPU runs a routine to handle this data with the result that another routine is run to deal with the problem, maybe just sending the word "OUCH!" to the screen, but nothing felt any actual pain at any point of the process. In the human version of this, something either feels pain or generates data that claims it felt pain, but most of us feel that the pain is real and not just an illusion. This is quite important, because if the pain is just an illusion, there can be no real harm done by torturing someone and that would mean there was no genuine role for morality: you can't torture a computer, and if all the unpleasant sensations of being tortured are just an illusion, you can't really torture a person either.bonch wrote:Do you think computers could ever be conscious the way humans are?
Let's assume for now that pain is real, because if consciousness is all an illusion the whole question becomes uninteresting (other than why data about a fake phenomenon should need to be generated by the brain). How can we know pain is real? Well, we just feel it. But there's a serious problem with this. Imagine a computer with a magic box in it where pain can be felt by something. The 255 input from the pain sensor is sent into the magic box where it is felt as pain, and then the magic box sends out a signal in the form of another value to say that it felt pain. The program running in the computer takes this output from the magic box and uses it to determine that the magic box felt pain, therefore something must have hurt, and then it sends the numbers 79 12 85 12 67 12 72 12 33 12 to the screen at B8000, and yet it didn't ever feel any pain itself - it just assumes that the pain is real purely on the basis that the magic box is supposed to output a certain value whenever it feels pain. The magic box itself does nothing other than feel pain when it receives a "pain" input and send out a "pain" output signal when it feels the pain - it isn't capable of expressing any actual knowledge of that pain to the outside. If you ask the machine if it genuinely felt pain, all it can do is tell you that the magic box sent out a pain signal, so it's fully possible that the magic box is just faking it, or it may even be feeling pleasure while reporting that it feels pain.
Are people any different from this magic box example? If I ask you if you felt pain when you sat on a drawing pin, you would tell me in no uncertain terms that you did, but the computations done in your head to understand my question and to formulate your answer are all done by mechanisms that aren't feeling the pain - they look up the data and find it recorded somewhere that you are feeling pain (or they read the output from the magic box again), and then they generate a reply to say "it hurts", but they can't know that it hurt - they just trust the data to be true.