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Erhmmm ..I thiknk they have either played you for a fool or they got it totally wrong.lizbethrose wrote:I'm not sure if this is the proper forum for my question. If it isn't, mods, please let me know and move it.
If an accurate and completely artificial copy of the human brain functions were possible, and I've been told it is technically possible, what do you think the moral and ethical questions and responsibilities would be? Do you even believe such a feat is possible?
HexHammer wrote:SPOILER!!!!!
The movie i.Robot with Will Smith covers the ethical issue with robots in a good way imo, when an AI gains superiority complex and thereby views humans in a different light. We'r basicly a bunch of whiney, narsicistic paranoid idiots who can't really help our foolish ways, why it's best with big brother system and erradicate the most troublesome humies.
Why do you contradict youself.lizbethrose wrote:If an accurate and completely artificial copy of the human brain functions were possible, and I've been told it is technically possible, what do you think the moral and ethical questions and responsibilities would be? Do you even believe such a feat is possible?
Liteninbolt wrote:All the possible synaptic pathways available are considered to be more than the total atoms of in the known universe.
lizbethrose wrote:He's the one who maintains that AI is technically feasible now, but that there are moral/ethical reasons for not doing so at this point in time

it couldn't possibly be the case that there are more synaptic pathways than atoms in the universe
lizbethrose wrote:I'm not sure if this is the proper forum for my question. If it isn't, mods, please let me know and move it.
If an accurate and completely artificial copy of the human brain functions were possible, and I've been told it is technically possible, what do you think the moral and ethical questions and responsibilities would be? Do you even believe such a feat is possible?
Tab wrote:think of each synapse as a node in a network.
James S Saint wrote:I was an intelligence designer in the 80's-90's and even then there was nothing humanly possible that wasn't capable of being made artificially superior.
James S Saint wrote:Morally, for complex reasons, when a fully functioning life is created, it must be allowed to pursue that life.

James S Saint wrote:Everything the human mind does is fully achievable by non-human means (AI). I was an intelligence designer in the 80's-90's and even then there was nothing humanly possible that wasn't capable of being made artificially superior.
in that case the fact is trivially true:
Carleas wrote:That sounds like a cool gig, what kinds of systems did you work on? Also, I thought computers still struggled with 'natural' language processing, which humans do innately.
Carleas wrote:James S Saint wrote:Morally, for complex reasons, when a fully functioning life is created, it must be allowed to pursue that life.
I think this is a good way of expressing this, but I'd like to add the proviso that, at least when it comes to copying an already extant mind, a person can relinquish certain aspects of their freedom and so can be severed from certain moral implications. In other words, when we copy a mind, we can ask/inform it beforehand such that the new mind is created with its own permission, and so can agree to situations that would be immoral if we were creating a new life from scratch.
Rafajafar wrote:I'm a computer scientist. You are wrong so long as you are referring to our current architectures. You are very wrong if you think intelligence you designed in the 80's-90's were all capable of being artificially superior.
You need to be more careful with what you say, you keep coming off as a liar and a kook.
Rafajafar wrote:Computer Vision
Natural Language Comprehension
Preemptive reasoning
James S Saint wrote:Rafajafar wrote:I'm a computer scientist. You are wrong so long as you are referring to our current architectures. You are very wrong if you think intelligence you designed in the 80's-90's were all capable of being artificially superior.
You need to be more careful with what you say, you keep coming off as a liar and a kook.
You have shown that you assess and condemn people on what you DON'T know, so I imagine that I (and many) will always seem to be a "liar and kook" to you.
James S Saint wrote:Rafajafar wrote:Computer Vision
Natural Language Comprehension
Preemptive reasoning
And yet you have so much difficulty doing those for yourself.
Carleas wrote:Liteninbolt wrote:All the possible synaptic pathways available are considered to be more than the total atoms of in the known universe.
I have a hard time believing this, but perhaps I'm just misinterpreting it. Assuming each unique synaptic pathway is at least one atom in length, it couldn't possibly be the case that there are more synaptic pathways than atoms in the universe, even summing together all synaptic pathways of all people in the world. That's probably a fair assumption as well, since even neurotransmitters, which are what's passed form neuron to neuron at the synapse, are fairly complex molecules.
But there is some ambiguity in the term "synaptic pathway." For instance, if we want to talk about synaptic pathways as a function of brain states, so that the actions at a synapse in brain state A are a different synaptic pathway than the same actions at the same synapse in brain state B, then there could be more SPs than atoms; if x were the number of neurons synapses and y were the number of things a synapse could do independently of brain state, then the total number of actions of a synapse under all possible brainstates would be on the order of y^x, a really really big number.
Tab wrote:I'd come across the "more pathways that particles" bit before in reading - and was surprised a little that you hadn't.

Even when we get over the technical hurdle of producing a computer that has sufficient concurrence to replicate brain activity, programming it to do so would be a feat.

Carleas wrote:Tab wrote:I'd come across the "more pathways that particles" bit before in reading - and was surprised a little that you hadn't.
I may have; "more x that particles" is said so often, it's hard to keep track. In any case, if I'd seen it before, I didn't give it enough thought to figure out what "synaptic pathways" meant
Imo we don't need the supercomputer aspect, already our common PC's are able to do more complext calculations faster than any human, what is left is to crack the egnigma of conciousness, and the ability of abstract learning.Carleas wrote:Came across this today, I thought others in this thread might be interested. It's the most complete human brain map ever made, combining tons of data from different methods of looking at brains. But even plotting data from a few million anatomical regions, it's several orders of magnitude less complex than it would need to be to simulate on a supercomputer, even if we had one fast enough to handle the task.
HexHammer wrote:our common PC's are able to do more complext calculations faster than any human

I interpet that under the abstract learning.Carleas wrote:HexHammer wrote:our common PC's are able to do more complext calculations faster than any human
Yes and no. PCs can do number crunching faster than humans, but humans perform visual, spacial, language processing, and social calculations way faster. It's all about parallelization: our most parallel computers have hundreds of cores, but humans have billions.
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