Linguofreak
Well-known member
A machine does not feel. It has no sense organs and does not react to the environment the way life does. Machines just do what its software and plain sensors are supposted to do. Software and machines won't ever have consciousness because metall, plastics, rubber, silicon, ventilators, laser and electricity can't feel, think and, combined or not, won't become alive.
This all depends on your metaphysical assumptions.
If you believe (as I do) that there is a component to human conciousness which exists outside the physical universe (i.e. a soul or spirit), then you are most probably right, unless there is some metaphysical rule that says that every physical computational structure that meets certain requirements will develop a soul, or unless God (or some lesser being) sees fit to "assign" souls to machines. I think these conditions are most likely not met, and so I generally agree with you that machines can't feel, because I think that feeling involves more than just a physical processing of sensory information.
But if you believe that the human conciousness exists entirely in this universe, then feeling *does* break down to merely the physical processing of sensory information, and I don't see how you can say that a sufficiently complex machine could not emulate the human mind.
---------- Post added at 11:24 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:21 PM ----------
Do carbon chains feel?
According to you, yes.
By "carbon chains," he is refering to all the wonderful molecules that make up the human brain and body, and form the computational infrastructure behind the human mind.
---------- Post added at 11:27 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:24 PM ----------
If metal, plastics, rubber, and silicon cannot love or feel, how then do carbon chains do it? Without invoking magic.
I'm not sure about Moonwalker, but my answer is that carbon chains don't do it at all without invoking "magic," but I have no problems at all with invoking "magic".