▲ | bondarchuk 5 days ago | |||||||
But there are many things that set me apart from a game of Tetris! For example, I'm not made up of falling puzzle pieces, I enjoy drinking a cup of coffee every now and then, I was not invented by Alexey Pajitnov in 1985... The difference between an unconscious and a conscious thing could be a difference of this order, which does not at all amount to saying that consciousness does not exist. | ||||||||
▲ | antonvs 5 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
We're not discussing whether you're identical to a game of Tetris. We're discussing a way of characterizing the nature of the conscious experience that you presumably have, that a game of Tetris doesn't. The way Nagel would put this is that "there is something it is like to be bondarchuk" - i.e., you have an experience of your existence that you can describe, because you're consciously aware of it. We can ask the question of you, "What is it like to be bondarchuk?" and you can answer based on your actual experience. You wouldn't just be generating text in response to a prompt the way an LLM would, you'd be describing your conscious experience of your existence. For example, you say you enjoy drinking a cup of coffee occasionally. That's a conscious experience that shows that there is something it is like to be you. There is, presumably, nothing it is like to be a Tetris game, because a Tetris game has no consciousness. This is a standard, widely accepted characterization in consciousness studies. Even if you object to it, you should at least understand what it's saying. And if you do object to it, the onus is on you to provide a better description, which I note you've declined to do on multiple occasions now. | ||||||||
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