Title of article :
Philosophical foundations of artificial consciousness
Author/Authors :
Chrisley، نويسنده , , Ron، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
SummaryObjective
ousness is often thought to be that aspect of mind that is least amenable to being understood or replicated by artificial intelligence (AI). The first-personal, subjective, what-it-is-like-to-be-something nature of consciousness is thought to be untouchable by the computations, algorithms, processing and functions of AI method. Since AI is the most promising avenue toward artificial consciousness (AC), the conclusion many draw is that AC is even more doomed than AI supposedly is. The objective of this paper is to evaluate the soundness of this inference.
s
sults are achieved by means of conceptual analysis and argumentation.
s and conclusions
shown that pessimism concerning the theoretical possibility of artificial consciousness is unfounded, based as it is on misunderstandings of AI, and a lack of awareness of the possible roles AI might play in accounting for or reproducing consciousness. This is done by making some foundational distinctions relevant to AC, and using them to show that some common reasons given for AC scepticism do not touch some of the (usually neglected) possibilities for AC, such as prosthetic, discriminative, practically necessary, and lagom (necessary-but-not-sufficient) AC. Along the way three strands of the authorʹs work in AC – interactive empiricism, synthetic phenomenology, and ontologically conservative heterophenomenology – are used to illustrate and motivate the distinctions and the defences of AC they make possible.
Keywords :
Prosthetic artificial intelligence , Artificial consciousness , Machine consciousness , Synthetic phenomenology , Interactive empiricism , Heterophenomenology
Journal title :
Artificial Intelligence In Medicine
Journal title :
Artificial Intelligence In Medicine