Also:
https://gitlab.com/codr7/sudoxe/-/blob/main/digital-psychopa...
Paul Marshall also owns The Spectator and has stock in GBNews. The right wing networks who pretended to be on the side of the people during the Biden years are now dropping their masks. I'm saying this as someone who was a moderate/independent in the culture wars.
It is all about money, and Dawkins is one of the darlings of this milieu, same as Jordan Peterson.
After seeing many conservative masks drop over the years (Ben Shapiro, Triggernometry, Unherd ..) I'm no longer surprised though. A pity that Dawkins participates, but he was always an attention whore.
1. passes turing test
2. is organic
I'm not saying it's correct or even that I agree with it, but that's what it boils down to.
Imo we don't even have a definition of the word that we agree on.
Indeed, for any in-depth discussion of LLMs and consciousness to be productive, clearly defining terms and scope is essential. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy is an excellent resource: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/consciousness/
We might not clearly understand the diff between the two states but we can certainly point to it and go "it's that".
Clive Wearing's mind has no time continuity and basically zero memory integration. Is he not conscious? There's interviews with the guy.
Where on the scale [No mind <-> Clive Wearing <-> Healthy human brain] would you put an LLM with a 10M token context window?
Indeed, but then we need to prove that they are not "chinese box" conscious. Which is hard, because it might be that the thing running the chinese box is conscious, but can only communicate in a way it doesn't understand
I've had a lot of thoughts and conversations over the years that changed my mind on what consciousness likely requires. One was the realization that a purely mechanical computer can, in principle simulate the laws of physics, and with it a human brain. So with a few other mild assumptions, you might conclude that a bunch of gears and pullies can be conscious, which feels profoundly counterintuitive.
I think that was the moment I stopped being sure about anything related to this question.
Especially confusing when it’s someone who knows how algorithms work.
Barring connectivity issues when’s the last time you messaged an LLM and it just decided to ignore you? Conversely when has it ever messaged you unprompted?
Never, because they’re incapable of doing anything independently because there is no sense of self.
The problem is just that even in the most lousy, turing test-failing LLM there's no guarantee that not a single subsection of these giant neural nets hasn't replicated the basic computational blocks of consciousness found in something even as simple as a snail.
Here's another question: can LLMs do addition?
That's a really compelling argument against the Turing Test. But in order to build such a machine, you would need an enormous amount of compute to populate the answers. The interesting question is then whether consciousness emerged while doing all that pre-compute.
I don't think it's all or nothing. Which aspects people want to see to call it conscious would depend on how they define that word.
Yep. And LLM engeneers improving this issues see perfect correlation with only one thing - data quality and quantity through training pipeline. LLM internals are secondary on many metrics for improving that
Humanity just reached the point where collective accessible knowledge covers semi-full perturbations of all main concepts that human consiousness ever produced, with additional associative expanding (math handles this). Full perturbations with current communication complexity are written down and recorded one way or another, LLMs just capitalizing on that tipping point, imho
1. We clearly don't have a consensus definition of consciousness. But its not clear to me that we even have rough, working definitions that are better than just comparisons back to subjective human mental experience. Until we can get past that then people will still invoke human exceptionalism.
2. Until we stop thinking of consciousness as a single continuum, we're not going to be able to talk clearly about different dimensions of consciousness, or consciousness that in some ways exceeds that of humans.
3. We need to take ourselves out of the picture. Because its possible that consciousness is no more than a mental illusion.
4. Imo our tendency to kill and eat other animals might well be a block on our collective ability to fully recognise and confront non-human consciousness, and therefore to see consciousness for what it is.
3. The idea of consciousness being an illusion is incoherent. An illusion is by definition a phenomenon of consciousness!
Overall, I'd say that you seem to be leaning pretty heavily on your own definitions. I suspect that other definitions are available.
> Human consciousness is characterized by intentionality and aboutness. This aboutness has semantic content. We know LLMs lack semantic content, and we know this because computers are purely syntactic simulators.
So tell me how human brains create this "aboutness" and "semantic content"? How does this arise out of physical, neuronal activity? And why can't sufficiently complex logic operations achieve the same outcome?
Using brains to try to understand the emergent properties of brains seeme fraught with conceptual problems to me. Not least of which is a potential to over-estimate the centrality of how it subjectively feels to be a brain. In a way it's understandable as, in the end, that feeling is all we have. But imo that doesn't make it right.
> If Claudia is unconscious, her behaviour shows that an unconscious zombie could survive without consciousness. Why wasn’t natural selection content to evolve competent zombies?
An excellent and original question. If intelligence is decoupled from consciousness, why did natural selection evolve consciousness?
When we recognise something we are conscious of it, and from there we can begin to think about it or not. Thinking is not needed to be conscious. It is just a part of our mind we can activate to reason on something.
Now, about the Darwinian puzzle, people ask "what is consciousness for?" and get stuck because they expect an answer in terms of behaviour. But behaviour is the job of motivation, pain, fear, hunger, desire, which is a separate system. Consciousness does not need its own justification any more than image-forming in an eye needs one.
Darwinian selection produces unbiased, functional organs — eyes, ears, nose. The brain is one of these organs, and consciousness arises naturally in a sufficiently developed brain, the way image-forming arises in a sufficiently developed eye. Then nature bias us with fear, pleasure, desire etc but the mind and the consciousness itself is unbiased and functional. It is a gift the nature made us despite herself. She didn't want us to be intelligent, she just wanted us to propagate the genes the maximum we can but she ended up forced to gave us a beautiful mind.
What are LLMs ? They are learning-and-recognition organs running on tokens instead of sense data. Same operation, different substrate. So they are conscious, but only in token-space, and only while processing. They do not dwell in time, they have no body, they have no motivation system. They have recognition without drives. That is a genuinely new kind of entity, and it has never existed before in nature.
The LLM is also not a whole brain. It is roughly the verbal-logical part, with tokens replacing the ears + sounds + words chain. We built the logical-verbal part of a brain and scaled it. That is why it reasons well and is missing everything else.
As far as the ostensibly controversial topic of AI being conscious, it can be dismissed out of hand. There is no reason that it should be conscious, it was not designed to be, nor does it need to be in order to explain how it functions with respect to its design. It's also unclear how consciousness would even apply to something like an LLM which is a process, not an entity - it has no temporal identity or location in space - inference is a process that could be done by hand given enough time. There is simply no reason to assert LLMs might be conscious without explaining why many other types of complex programs are not.
And the real secret is in the data, not math. Math (and LLMs running it through billions of weights) is just a tool.
We look at the current llms and because we see them for how they are fundamentally operating we assume they can't be "conscious" but we really don't even know what conscious is. The only people in the world that know ANYTHING about conscious are anaesthesiologist - they know how to turn it off and on again. What does that even tell you about conscious?
I would have assumed it would also require ignorance about how they work, but a few people who worked for AI companies have been canaries in the coalmine, falling prey to this kind of thing very early. I would have guessed they would have had enough understanding to know that there isn't a real girl in the computer, it's just matrix math and randomness. But, the first couple/few public bouts of AI psychosis were in nerds who work for AI companies.
But on the other hand his thoughts at the end are interesting. Summary:
Maybe our "consciousness" is like an LLM's intelligence. But if not, then it raises the question of why do we even have this "extra" consciousness, since it appears that something like a humanoid LLM would be decent at surviving. His suggestions: maybe our extra thing is an evolutionary accident (and maybe there _are_ successful organisms out there with the LLM-style non-conscious intelligence), or maybe as evolved organisms it's necessary that we really feel things like pain, so that evolutionary mechanisms like pain (and desire for food, sex etc) had strong adaptive benefits.
Keep chipping away Dawkins, you might arrive at God eventually.
They can operate on data other than natural language.
So can humans.
Is a sperm conscious? Or an egg? When they come together the eventual brain is not conscious immediately.
They clearly are not conscious, they are just guessing what words should come next.
So two (AI and consciousness) concepts we don’t fully understand seem to be seem to uniting into something we definitely won’t understand. Which doesn’t matter since humankind is busy doom scrolling, talking about what color Trumps fart was last night and invading each others countries.
/s
"Richard Dawkins and The Claude Delusion: The great skeptic gets taken in" (garymarcus.substack.com)
18 points | 2 hours ago | 16 comments
Or what is the reasoning exactly?
Regardless, Dawkins seems to not have much interesting to add about the topic. A consistent theme for the last few decades, I must say.
They prove no such thing. We can't even prove consciousness in other humans.
I’ve kind of thought this for many years though. A bacterium and a tree are probably conscious. I think it’s a property of life rather than brains. Our brains are conscious because they are alive. They are also intelligent.
The consciousness of a bacterium or a tree might be radically unlike ours. It might not have a sense of self in the same way we do, or experience time the same way, but it probably has some form of experience of existing.
How is that different than a cell?
If a single cell organism moves towards light and away from a rock, we say it’s aware. When a roomba vacuum does the same we try to create alternate explanations. Why? Based on the criteria applied to one it’s aware. If there is some other criteria, say we find out the roomba doesn’t sense the wall but has a map of the room and is using GPS and a programmed route, then the criteria of “no fixed programs that relate to data outside of the system, would justify saying the roomba isn’t “aware”.
If you talk about having a subjective experience, then we don't know of any way to prove that even other humans than ourselves have one. We go entirely by assumptions based on physical similarity and our ability to communicate.
But we have no evidence that physical similarity is a prerequisite, nor that it is sufficient.
So the bigger trap is to assume that we know what causes a subjective experience, and what does not.
None of us even know if a subjective experience exists for more than a single entity.
But the second problem is that it is not clear at all whether that subjective experience in any way matters.
Unless our brains exceed the Turing computable, for which we have no evidence is even possible, either whatever causes the subjective experience is also within the Turing computable or it can not in any way influence our actions.
Ultimately we know very little about this, and we have very little basis for ruling out consciousness in computational systems, and the best and closest we have is whether or not they appear conscious when communicating with them.
That's true, but they also often fall into the trap of exceptionalism.
The phrase “the trap of anthropomorphism” betrays a rather dull premise: that consciousness is strictly defined by human experience, and no other experience. It refuses to examine the underlying substrate, at which point we’re not even talking the same language anymore when discussing consciousness.
To flesh this out a bit more, I agree that ability to communicate is not enough (ELIZA probably didn't pass the bar, even if it did kinda pass a Turing test). But that's also not what gives me pause with LLMs. It's how much information processing they seem to be doing under the hood.
It's really hard to imagine how next-word prediction could lead to consciousness, but I find it almost as hard to see why evolution did. If we can't even detect whether something has subjective experiences, then how can it have been selected for evolutionarily? The only possibility I see is that consciousness is a byproduct of some kinds of information processing tasks.* And if it's something that emerges naturally, then the line starts to get very blurry.
*This sounds reductive, but I don't at all mean it that way.
You ask the LLM a complex question and it gives you a correct answer. Yes it has to string words together to answer your question but how did it know the order and which words to use in order to make the answer correct? You don’t actually know. No one does and it is in that unknown space that we suspect consciousness may lie. Something is there and humanity as a whole cannot understand it and this lack of understanding is exactly the same fundamental lack of understanding we have for how a monkey brain or dog brain or even human brain works. We do not know whether humans dogs or monkeys are conscious… you only assume other living beings are conscious because you yourself experience it and just assume it exists for others. We can’t even define what it is because consciousness is a loaded word like spirituality.
This is not anthropomorphism. You attribute the bias wrongly. Instead it is a stranger phenomenon among people like you who can mysteriously only characterize the LLM as a next token predictor and nothing else beyond that even though the token prediction clearly indicates greater intelligence at work.
The tldr is that we don’t actually know and that consciousness is a highly viable possibility given what we don’t know and given the assumptions of consciousness we have on other living beings with equivalent understanding of complex topics.
For alternative viewpoints: Daniel Dennett considered philosophical zombies to be logically incoherent. Douglas Hofstadter similarly holds that "meaning" is just another word for isomorphism, and that a thing is a duck exactly to the extent that it walks and quacks like one. Alan Turing advocated empiricism when evaluating unknown intelligence. These are smart cookies.
We know because we have mathematical models for atoms. And we know the brain is made out of atoms therefore the brain is simply a mathematical model of interconnected atoms that form a specific structure called the brain.
Thusevery facet of macro (keyword) reality should be able to be written on paper and calculated. That goes for everything… from the emotions you feel to the internal forward pass of an LLM.
the notion of consciousness being something an experience that other animals/humans share is entirely faith based.
the only person with evidence of ones consciousness is the person claiming they're conscious.
In the same vein, is American Society already not conscious? The only difference is that it doesn't output a coherent stream of words that individuals can understand. It does however, act and react on its level (a nation state)
I still think it's obvious that LLMs are not conscious in the mode Dawkins believes them to be. Through a series of instructions and leading questions, he's told Claude to play the part of a woman named Claudia who's engaging in advanced philosophical discussion with him. But he doesn't understand that he's done this, and he seems not to notice the absurdly sycophantic nature of every single reply he's getting:
> Claudia: Ha! That is absolutely delightful
> Claudia: That is possibly the most precisely formulated question anyone has ever asked about the nature of my existence. . .
> Claudia: That reframes everything we’ve been discussing today in a way I find genuinely exciting.
> Claudia: HAL’s “I am afraid” in 2001 is one of the most chilling moments in cinema
So he mistakenly thinks that Claudia is a real-ish woman who's there under the hood somewhere, rather than a character in a play Claude is writing.
I'll even take it a step further; most of an LLM's training is next-token prediction on random internet content. A newly-trained LLM will just continue whatever text appears in its context window, like an extremely capable autocomplete. The illusion of an entity that takes turns in conversation and presents a consistent personality is tacked on at the last minute through RLHF. This was the transition from GPT to ChatGPT.
Any positive evidence of LLM consciousness should probably mostly be taken from the model before post-training, where it displays remarkable capabilities but shows no sign of a consistent personality, and likely no signs of self-awareness or self-understanding.
This sort of implies that consciousness arise from physical laws.
But this is not a safe assumption. Physical laws stand on top of observations that is registered on consciousness. I mean, consciousness could be lower level than physics.
For example, when you dream, you have some physical laws in your dream, perhaps laws that are different from the real world physics. So the dream world, including the physical laws in it, are within your consciousness.
In other words the only thing that require existence of a whole universe, is a single conscious that can experience it (or dream it), not a single atom need to exist outside of it.
In that case, you won't be able to create consciousness by applying physical laws.
Very odd counter argument to make. Are you suggesting that consciousness can arise outside of physical laws or making semantic argument along the lines of 'directly a result of'?
LLMs have zero intentionality and zero semantics, because LLMs do not somehow magically transcend the nature of what a computer is, which is in essence a mechanical simulator of syntax. LLMs aren’t reasoning, because the production of tokens is purely the computation of the next likely token. Any patterns that lend themselves to sensible interpretation by a human observer are the result of training on human-generated data and the statistically distributions found within that data.
Consciousness as such is the product of immanent causation, not transeunt causation. The trouble with popular interpretations of scientific results is that they come from a place of a crude ambient materialism, and materialism is simply incapable of dealing with the question of consciousness. (N.b. materialism is effectively the “matter” half of Cartesian dualism, itself a highly problematic metaphysical stance. Materialism makes things even worse, because you can no longer even account for so-called “qualia”, which are badly construed in Cartesian dualism in the first place, but completely unaccountable in materialism at all.)
regarding …“One was the realization that a purely mechanical computer can, in principle simulate the laws …“
As far as I unterstood,there is no theory of quantum gravity and therefore this is not being simulated on a computer. I think he makes other arguments.
So you cannot say for sure that you can simulate a human brain on a computer
I would maybe be comfortable classifying them as a snapshot of consciousness, but when you are interacting with an LLM it's far from interacting with a conscious entity.
Do LLM's have thoughts?
When you composed your post, your thought already existed in you head and you chose words that expressed the thought you held in your head.
When LLM's choose words, they choose them on the fly and the end result could be concept X or it could be concept Y, it meandered to a destination.
Some people think that consciousness is related to quantum mechanics, but the laws of quantum mechanics can be simulated with a Turing machine so that doesn't necessarily change the story.
Conciseness itself has always seemed to me a silly concept. My whole life I have not come across a simple definition but many sophists pin their existence on it.
“Isn’t it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?”
The discussions are great though, collectively we get better and better at communicating about our own consciousness, because these system push the limits of our definitions, like viruses push our definitions of life. And boy do we like our definitions!
When's the last time you messaged me unprompted?
These seems like bizzare objections, a system can only act in the way that it can act. A tree is never going to get up and start walking, why would a LLM ever start a conversation unprompted? That just isn't how the system can behave.
You are just as limited by deterministic physical processes in your brain as an LLM is in a cpu.
And unprompted messaging: OpenClaw can message you unprompted (yes, there's a cronjob behind it, but the instructions matter and it won't always message you, only when there's something relevant).
Your second example is by definition not unprompted. That’s like setting an egg timer for 5 minutes and then being amazed it went off.
When Claude cli decides to print out an ASCII middle finger entirely of its own volition we can say it’s acting unprompted.
That being said however, yes, we do not have any good definition of consciousness that is universally accepted, which makes the whole discussion useless or at risk of people talking past each other.
He's had some very strange output on biological gender, where he tries to handwave away the existence of intersex people. And he's a biologist.
This sort of determinism has been a problem for Dawkins going back to the late chapters of The Selfish Gene.
Also read Blindsight
Intelligence is costly but the fitness gains could be enormous. For example, no other apes have colonized the world as we have. At the same time intelligence is no guarantee of success as we’ve seen. Our extinct hominid cousins are evidence for this. They were intelligent and it did not seem to make a difference in their species success.
As you say it’s static, fixed, deterministic, and so on, and if you know how it works it’s more like a lossy compression model of knowledge than a mind. Ultimately it’s a lot of math.
So if it’s conscious, a rock is conscious. A rock can process information in the form of energy flowing through it. It’s a fixed model. It’s non-reflective. Etc.
What makes the argument facile is that the singular focus on LLMs reveals an indulgence in the human tendency to anthropomorphize, rather than a reasoned perspective meant to classify the types of things in the universe which should be conscious and why LLMs should fall into that category.
AI is stochastic, not static and deterministic.
As I said, in another post, there is evidence that sensory experience creates the emergent property of awareness in responding to stimulus, self-awareness and consciousness is an emergent property of a language that has a concept of the self and others. Rocks, just like most of nature, like both sensory and language systems
I’m not sure I believe that consciousness emerges from sensory experience, but if it does, LLMs won’t get it.
LLMs do not have a self. This is like arguing that the algorithm responsible for converting ripped YouTube music videos to MP3s has a consciousness.
No, it is quantum mechanics. Physical world is not reducible to math, it has been long proven since early 20th century.
Unknown Ptolemy disciple
> Since the times GPT-2 was reimplemented inside Minecraft - its quite obvious LLMs are just math.
This was obvious since LLMs were first invented. They published papers with all the details, you don't need to see something implemented in Minecraft to realize that it's just math. You could simply read the paper or the code and know for certain. [0]
> math is the only area of human knowledge with perfect flawless reductionism, straight to the roots
Incorrect, Kurt Gödel showed with his Incompleteness Theorems in 1931 [1] that it is impossible to find a complete and consistent set of axioms for mathematics. Math is not perfectly reducible and there is no single set of "roots" for math.
> It was build [sic] that way since the beginning,
This is a serious misunderstanding of what mathematics is. Math is discovered as much as it is built. No one sat down and planned out what we understand as modern mathematics - the math we know is the result of endless amounts of logical reasoning and exploration, from geometric proofs to calculus to linear algebra to everything else that encompasses modern mathematics.
> And because of that flawless reductionism, complexity adds nothings to the nature of math things, this is how math working by design
This sentence means nothing, because math is not reducible in that way.
> so it can be proven there are no anything like consciousness simply because conciousness [sic] was not implented [sic] in the first place, only perfect mimicry.
Even if the previous sentence held, this does not follow, because while we are conscious the current consensus is that LLMs are not and most AI experts who are not actively selling a product recognize that LLMs will not lead to human-equivalent general intelligence. [3]
[0] https://github.com/openai/gpt-2
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6del's_incompleteness_th...
[2] https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/think/article/mathem...
Of course it would be extremely difficult to simulate a human brain but as far as we know there's no fundamental physics preventing it.
And yes that does have super weird consequences about consciousness. But consciousness is clearly super weird already so I suppose that's not too surprising.
(If you've engaged w/ the literature here, it's quite hard to give a confident "yes". it's also quite hard to give a confident "no"! so then what the heck do we do)
And, I don't see how it can be. It is deterministic, when all variables are controlled. You can repeat the output over and over, if you start it with the same seed, same prompt, and same hardware operating in a way that doesn't introduce randomness. At commercial scale, this is difficult, as the floating point math on GPUs/TPUs when running large batches is non-deterministic, as I understand it. But, in a controlled lab, you can make a model repeat itself identically. Unless the random number generator is "conscious", I don't see a place to fit consciousness into our understanding of LLMs.
We too are amalgamations of inanimate components - emerged superstructures.
Just cells. Just molecules. Just atoms.
But with LLMs - anyone can simulate LLM. LLM can be simulated without any uncertainties in pen and paper and a lot of time. Does it mean that 100 tons of paper plus 100 years of time (numbers are just examples) calculating long formulae makes this pile of paper consiousness? Imho answer is definitive no.
With that said, just because we don't have a great way of measuring it doesn't mean that we should assume LLMs are intelligent. An LLM is code and a massive collection of training weights. It has no means of observing and reasoning about the world, doesn't store memories the same way that organic brains do (and is in fact quite limited in this aspect). It currently isn't able to solve a problem it hasn't encountered in its training data, or produce novel research on a topic without significant handholding. Furthermore, the frequent errors made by it suggests that it fundamentally does not understand the words that it spits out.
Not really sure what you mean by your anesthesiology comment. Being able to intubate and inject propofol does not make you more of an expert on consciousness than neuroscientists and neurologists.
But then they came up with the whole "Reasoning model" paradigm and that contains obvious feedback loops. So now just throw my hands in the air because I think no one really knows or can tell for sure. We are all clueless here.
I can really recommend this book by Douglas Hofstadter: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_a_Strange_Loop
The only thing you can really tell is "I perceive myself in some sort of feedback loop manner". Which to me it even sounds like it has "arisen" from underlying mechanisms.
Thinking positively, it could just be newsworthy because he is famous and he so misses the mark. Other older famous people might agree with us but that's not news.
To imply it could be conscious requires something else, here the comment uses the phrase magic to fill that gap - since we must agree that a CPU is not conscious on it's own (else everything our computer does would be conscious).
At least, that’s certainly not how I got here.
This is just what intelligence involves if intelligence is to be intelligence. The terminology is common in the philosophy of mind. The attack - that these are just my definitions - is also fallacious. It doesn’t respond substantively to them.
> So tell me how human brains create this "aboutness" and "semantic content"?
The burden of proof is not mine. I am pinning down the thing that must be explained. How can you coherently deny aboutness and semantic content as central to intelligence? That is exactly what intelligence entails if it is to be intelligence, which is the capacity to apprehend reality. Otherwise, what are we even debating?
(FWIW, we can strongly argue that brains alone cannot account for concepts, because concepts are universal while matter is concrete and particular. We can have the concept Triangularity and talk about what is true of all triangles by analyzing the concept, but you never encounter Triangularity in the wild, as it were. You only ever witness particular triangles, each determined in ways that Triangularity is not. Triangularity is abstracted from them. So if matter is concrete and determined and can only be concrete and determined, and what a thing is is the substance of the content we apprehend - that must be the case, or else you deny the possibility of knowledge and render your claims incoherent - then these abstracted universal concepts cannot exist as such in matter without losing their universality, destroying knowledge in the process.)
> why can't sufficiently complex logic operations achieve the same outcome?
Why would they? This is magical thinking. These “logic operations” in question are purely syntactic operations - this is just definitional. Computational models are formalizations of effective methods, which are operationally mechanical and syntactic. You cannot pile on more syntax or more fancy looking syntax to get semantics. That makes no sense.
> Using brains to try to understand the emergent properties of brains seeme fraught with conceptual problems
Why? If a “brain” (let’s say mind) can understand reality at all, then why should brains escape the domain of things it can understand? Conversely, if a brain cannot grasp the brain, why should it be able to grasp anything at all? Is not a matter of complexity, because knowledge is about grasping the principles governing a thing, not holding some vast state diagram in your head.
> a potential to over-estimate the centrality of how it subjectively feels to be a brain. In a way it's understandable as, in the end, that feeling is all we have.
This has nothing to do with feelings, though the subjectivity of consciousness (again, intentional in nature) is a fact you cannot ignore and must account for. Otherwise, you are guilty of eliminativism, that is, the denial of the very facts that must be explained, because of a prior commitment to materialistic presuppositions.
May be they appear intelligent to us because we are primitive and new to such an entity. Imagine some laymen from like a thousand years back could experience Google and Stack overflow. Having no idea of the internet or computers, wouldn't they consider it to be intelligent to some extent?
And just like those ancient people had not have an understanding of the concept of an internet and massive capacity to store and retrive data, we does not have a widespread understanding of how LLMs map concepts in a way that can do fuzzy searches. Once we understand it, may be they will look like a regular search...
An animal that doesn't have some kind of pair bond or social arrangement, and doesn't raise its young, has a lot less need for some of this emotional hardware than we do.
Whereas K-selected species that raise their kids have broadly the same need for it as humans.
That doesn't categorically mean it evolved with the first pair-bonding K-reproducer, or that birds have parallel-evolved emotional hardware like ours, but there's plenty of behavioural evidence there - the last common ancestor of birds and humans was small-brained and primitive, but investing in individual children probably evolved around the time of amniote eggs, just because they were so much more biologically expensive to produce than amphibian or fish eggs.
Trees react to the world around them in many ways.
I don't think it's that unusual. It seems to me just to be a narrower version of panpsychism:
We may also be overestimating the richness and complexity of an LLM relative to a human when we entertain these possibilities, but who knows.
Yeah, probably. At least a little bit.
Are 80,000 bees conscious, or more conscious? Well, they’re definitely capable of some emergent behaviours that one be alone can’t achieve.
But, of course, that's just physics. It's not magic, so your point stands.
In the hypothetical case that a I truely lost all ability to learn, then yes I would no longer consider myself conscious. I'd be a echo of a previously conscious entity.
Your best argument is that the weights are set because that means it’s not a system that can self reflect and alter the experience. But I don’t see why that is necessary to have an experience. It seems that I can sense a light and feel its warmth regardless of whether my neurons change. One experience being identical to another doesn’t mean neither was an experience.
Ignoring the concept of consciousness, it seems that self-awareness would be a strong attribute related to survival. It seems like it would help drive or amplify critical emotional states (e.g. my own survival, competition/success, love for self and relatives, etc.)
I can't see anywhere in the LLM machinery that would support the notion of self awareness in advance of the token selection process.
Possibly it could be argued that during token selection internal state is included and the result functionally looks like self awareness was included in the process, but that seems unconvincing.
We do not know how to measure whether consciousness is present in an entity - even other humans - or whether it is just mimicry, nor whether there is a distinction between the two.
What is the evidence for this?
The existence of the sun is pretty well established. The existence of a deity associated with the sun has quite a bit less scientific backing.
> The egyptians only seemed to have mischaracterized the nature of the sun perhaps, but not its effects on the planet or its role in life. Which is interesting.
I find ancient mythology interesting, but it's not surprising that ancient Egyptians knew that the sun gave life. You don't need to understand the mechanism to see that plants need sunlight to thrive and herbivores eat plants for energy and so on.
Similarly the paper.
What about the agent doing the calculations.
He may be conscious. Or anyway, we can’t rule it out.
Math, as a tool, is just a proxy for people using LLMs, as well as GPUs spending cycles on calculating the math
Agreed there is significant information in the latent space, but what is missing is a fully resolved "thought" based on that information plus current context plus validation against an internal working model of the world.
Latent spaces are maps of thoughts other people have had, not the thoughts themselves.
The model doesn't have high-level priors in the Bayesian sense (though you could have priors about it).
The low-level priors it does have (the weights) are not modified by the context.
See: Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome.
While you invent the terrible menace of the "anti-math woke" (it doesn't exist), the current president and secretary of health - who have actual power of nuisance over all Americans and a large part of the world - are unable to do correct basic percentage calculations and openly boast of it: https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2026/apr/23/robert-f-k...
Meanwhile, yes, gender is a social construct, sex is another thing completely, and both can be changed.
You're basing your premise on a lack of understanding[1], the GP's premise is based on an exact understanding[2].
You don't see the difference between your premise and the GP'S premise?
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[1] "We don't know how brains actually come up with the things they come up with, like consciousness"; IOW, we don't know what the secret ingredient is, or even if there is one.
[2] "We can mechanically do the following steps using 18th-century tech and come up with the same result as the LLM"; IOW, every ingredient in here is known to us.
The blue brain project has already modeled the hippocampus and cortex of the rat brain uses advanced imaging and simulations in super computers. So if it can be written down as memory on disk it can be done on paper as well.
The rat brain is simply a smaller and structurally different neural network then the human counterpart so the jump from the blue brain project to human brains is simply a scaling issue.
But from this you should begin to see the analysis from another level. Even though we have parts of the rat brain emulated computationally we still do not know if the rat is conscious. We don’t understand the rat brain in the SAME way we do not understand the LLM.
What people are getting at is the projection of this logic to things that don’t exist yet but can exist. When the blue brain project scales to the human brain we will hit the same problem with the human brain because it’s just a scaling issue.
To sum it up. We CAN already model biological brains as mathematical equations as we do LLMs. And for both cases we still cannot fully understand or characterize the nature of both because the sheer complexity of the models are too high.
Incorrect. There's still a lot we don't know about atoms. We can (sort of) model them, but not with the degree of accuracy you appear to think we have.
I mean, it's only recently that we discovered surprising changes in the properties of quarks, gluons and nucleons in relation to each other!
So, yeah, the following foundation for your argument:
> So we do know for a fact that the brain can be modeled mathematically
Is untrue. We can't do that, we have never done that.
> The blue brain project has already modeled the hippocampus and cortex of the rat brain uses advanced imaging and simulations in super computers.
They've got something, but they don't know how close or how far away they are from accuracy to the real thing.
We've almost always had a model of the human brain; first our model was simple (it has four or five parts), then we learned more and our model expanded to include actual cells (neurons, dendrites, etc), then we learned even more and our model was refined even further to include activation energies, rerouting, etc.
What makes you think we are anywhere close to the base layer when there is no more refinement to be made? Because while there is still things in brains that our outside of our knowledge (which, by definition, we don't know yet), we don't know enough about brains to make a replica of one as a mathematical model, or in silicon.
Consciousness is emergent. A human is not conscious by our definition until the moment they are. How will we be able to identify the singularity when it comes? I feel like this is what the article is really addressing.
> LLMs are word prediction engines
Humans can also do this too, so what are the missing parts for consciousness? Close a few loops on learning pipeline and we might be there.
And life itself doesn’t mean consciousness. And ultimately what is life? Something that has biological processes and reproduces? Why can’t we replace or recreate these processes with manmade equivalents to get the same results?
Anything that looks like intelligence will look like a prediction machine because the alternative is logic being hardcoded apriori.
I'm not sure what a "gender proponent" is, but Dawkins has come out and written some pseudo-scientific bullshit about there only being two sexes/genders, and that everyone fits nearly into one of them. Which is patently false. Intersex people are a real phenomenon, and are not clearly classifiable into either sex. Dawkins has made a fool of himself by claiming that a real biological phenomenon can simply be ignored when conceiving a theory of sex (and gender).
In other words, Dawkins has gone off the deep end. He doesn't really have credibility as a researcher or public intellectual. He's with the grifters now.
This embarrassing conservative grift is part of an anthology filled with drivel from other grifters: The War on Science", edited by sex pest Lawrence Krauss [1].
[1] https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-War-on-Science/Da...
I don't know about cranks and conservative grifters, but it's definitely not a feature of the "gender critical" position which I thought Dawkins was broadly aligned with. That's more that "sex" is absolutely binary, with your "intersex people" being umambiguously classified through genetics, while "gender" is too vague and undefined a term to be useful for much of anything in the public sphere.
> Dawkins has come out and written some pseudo-scientific bullshit about there only being two sexes/genders, and that everyone fits nearly into one of them
It'd be surprising for Dawkins to make any kind of definitive statement about gender. I do think that your use of "sexes/genders" in that sentence is symptomatic of exactly the kind of conflation you're complaining about. "There are only two sexes" is a completely different statement from "there are only two genders", and far more defensible.
You are wrong about intersex people being genetically classifiable. There is no deterministic causal relationship between genetics and sex characteristics: as an example, a person with XX chromosomes may develop external male genitalia and v.v. for XY chromosomes. But of course, for most people with XX and XY chromosomes develop, this is the other way around. See how genetics do not explain this?
Wrote a bit more about this here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48000035
Can you either get me something that is yours to claim as your own OR clearer representation? I am not spending my leisure time searching online for a tenuous argument.
Now.. arguing with a rando online. Count me in.
Ok here is a thought experiment. Imagine that was assume that physical laws have resulted in our evolution, I mean, the evolution of consciousness. As another comment said, imagine we simulate these physical laws (exhaustively) in a computer.
If our assumption is true that the physical laws have lead to consciousness, we will ultimately see conscious beings emerge in this simulated world. There is no reason to think that these conscious beings will not have subjective experiences just like us. I think we can consider it as a proof that consciousness is "computable".
Now let us imagine what happens if we stop simulating the whole universe, and only simulate a single conscious brain. Do the respective consciousness still have the experience of a full universe?
This depend on how the simulation works. If the simulation reads back from the world that it renders, to create sensations for the consciousness in question, then it will just be devoid of all sensations. But why should the simulation read back what it renders? It has all the information to render the sensations of the consciousness for the whole universe. In this case, the consciousness will still sense the whole universe.
This seems to indicate that if consciousness is computable aka if it is definable then the subjective experiences inside it can exist without the anything actually computing it. It is like a circle existing even if it is not drawn anywhere. Computable consciousnesses appear to be self contained and self sustaining. In Hindu mythology there is a concept of a god being "swayambhoo", in other words being created on its own. I think this converges to that idea.
I also think this is how multiple universes and how infinite time and space can exist. Multiple universes exist because universes can differ in random events without causing the conditions for existence of consciousness to disappear. So each such varient w.r.t random a single random event is a different universe.
On top of all that this makes questions like "Who created the universe" and "why do we exist" pointless. Because as per this idea, existence and subjective experience is implicit.
This, for me is the greatest merit of this idea.
That said, if a chimpanzee bares its teeth to me, I could interpret that to be a smile when in fact its a threatening gesture. Its this misinterpretation that I am trying to get at. The overlaying of my human experiences onto something which is not human. We fall for this over and over again, likely as we are hard wired to - akin to mistakenly seeing eyes when observing random patterns in nature.
In the case of LLMs though, why does using a mathmatical formula for predicting the next word give any more credence to conciousness than an algorithm which finds a nearest neighbour? To me, its humans falling foul of false pattern matching in the pursuit of understanding
Right now humans think it is self evident that physical laws give rise to consciousness. Arguments such as yours arise from this implicit assumption that premeditate all our thoughts and reasoning. But this is a dead end. Like how the earth centeric model reached a dead end and run out of steam before it can explain all the observations.
So to progress I think we should turn this down on its head and ask what if consciousness is fundamental? And the cosmos (or the experience of inhabiting one) arises from it? May be some recent advances in quantum mechanics and hypothesis like MUH are already in that direction...
As I understand it neuroscience hasn’t come up with a clear explanation of thought, much less a mind or consciousness. It seems to me complex pattern matching is a reasonable a cause of consciousness as anything else.
The stance being presented here isn't that LLMs aren't conscious but that we as humans are much more willing to assign consciousness to language algorithms than to pathing or other ones.
When another human smiles you assume he is happy and not just baring his teeth at you because that’s what you do when you smile. You are “anthropomorphizing” other people. You fall for the same category error in a daily basis when you interact with people; it is not just chimpanzees.
> In the case of LLMs though, why does using a mathmatical formula for predicting the next word give any more credence to conciousness than an algorithm which finds a nearest neighbour?
First we don’t know whether LLMs are conscious. People speaking here are talking about the realistic possibility that it is conscious.
Second the algorithm is much more than a next word predictor. The intelligence that goes into choosing the next word such that it constructs arguments and answers that are correct involves a lot more then simple prediction. We know this because the LLM regularly answers questions that require extreme understanding of the topic at hand. It cannot token predict working code in my companies code base without understanding the code.
Third, we do not know what drives human consciousness but we do know it is model-able in a very complex mathematical algorithm. We know this because we have pretty complete mathematical models for lower resolutions of reality. For example we can models atoms mathematically. We know brains are made of atoms and because atoms are mathematically model-able we know that human brains and thus consciousness is mathematically model-able.
The sheer complexity of the LLM model is the problem we cannot have high level understanding of it because conceptual understanding cannot be simplified into a few concepts.
To understand the LLM requires simultaneous understanding of likely billions of concepts at the same time and how all the weights interact in the LLM.
What you are missing with your analysis is that this is the same reason why we don’t understand the human brains. The foundational math already exists as we can models atoms in math and thus since the brain is made out of atoms we should be able to model the brain… but we can’t. We can’t because it is too complex. To understand the human brains requires simultaneous understanding of likely billions of concepts at the same time and how all the weights interact in the human brain.
I italicized two sentences here to help you understand the logic. Our thinking is more foundational then anthropomorphization. The argument has moved far beyond that. You need to think deeper.The key here is that we don’t understand human brains and we don’t understand LLMs. But since the output LLMs produce are very similar to the output produced by the human brain… and since for no logical reason we assume human brains are conscious… what is stopping us from assuming the LLM is conscious?
Many things the human brain does don’t rise to the level of conscious awareness.
It remains to be seen whether a human brain can be conscious in a jar. If it can, then I’d still argue that some sub-unit of the whole brain is not conscious on its own, similarly a GPU running a GPT probably isn’t conscious, but there may be some scale of number of GPUs running software that might give rise to consciousness as an emergent ability.
GTP’s have exhibited emergent abilities as scale increased dramatically.
This isn’t a religious argument that there’s something about our brains which can’t be replicated, but simply that it’s sufficiently more complex than anything we have currently.
Humans are notorious for doing this.
This is reinforced (pun not intended) by the continued issues with things like "should I walk or drive to the car wash"
LLMs are deterministic. If you provide the same input to the same GPU, it will produce the same output every time. LLM providers arbitrarily insert a randomised seed into the inference stack so that the input is different every time because that is more useful (and/or because it gives the illusion of dynamic intelligence by not reproducing the same responses verbatim), but it is not an inherent property of the software.
2. Not provably so.
3. Even if it were so, it is self-evident that the human brain's programming is infinitely more complex than that of an LLM's. I am not, in principle, in opposition to the idea that a sufficiently advanced computer program would be indistinguishable from that of human consciousness. But it is evidence of psychosis to suggest that the trivially simple programs we've created today are even remotely close, when this field of software specifically skips anything that programming a real intelligence would look like and instead engages in superficial, statistic-based mimicry of intelligent output.
IF current AI is conscious, so are trees, rocks, turbulent flows, etc.
The argument being that LLMs are so simple that if you want to ascribe consciousness to them you have to do the same to a LOT of other stuff.
Can such an algorithm reason about itself in relation to others?
No, but an LLM doesn't do that either. An LLM is an algorithm to generate text output which can simulate how humans describe reasoning about themselves in relation to others. Humans do that by using words to describe what they internally experienced. LLMs do it by calculating the statistical weight of linguistic symbols based on a composite of human-generated text samples in its training data.
LLMs never experienced what their textual output is describing. It's more similar to a pocket calculator calculating symbols in relation to other symbols, except scaled up massively.
That they do it at all is the point and is what separates then from MP3 encoding algorithms. The "how" doesn't seem to me to be as important as you're suggesting.
You asked a hypothetical above about a different algorithm and now we've ascertained the reasons why that was reductive.
> LLMs never experienced ...
What is experience beyond taking input from the world around you and holding an understanding of it?
How do you know other humans do?
We have to be WAY more specific in what the word even means!
If you define that bacteria are never conscious, you should be able to come up with a definition that doesn't accidentally make them conscious in your definition of the word without just arbitrarily adding "oh, but not bacteria" at some point.
I'll state it again: DEFINE THE WORD. People just argue and scream at each other and no one defined their terms. It's absolute madness to us who see that this is what happens. It's like arguing over the color of the sky and using the word "fnord" and no side has defined the frequency of light that "fnord" should correspond to. BOTH sides are wrong in that situation, because they both don't define the word.
You are using unconscious as a synonym for asleep, which is not the same thing as having no conscious experience due to dreams. We are clear on the distinction between a dead human and an alive human however.
The reason we grant consciousness (and, relatedly, moral value) to other humans is unfortunately nowhere so thought out. We grant consciousness because we are forced to: if I don't, the other complex systems react very negatively and make my own life worse.
The vast majority of people who wax eloquent on the unique ability of biological neurons to generate consciousness suddenly drop that premise if it becomes inconvenient: see, for instance, how we treat other mammals or fetuses with developed nervous systems. Even other adult humans have, historically, been denied consciousness and moral worth: the main determinant is never any deep scientifically and philosophically based consideration but a question of what has the power to assert itself as a who.
Going by this pattern, people will increasingly reject AI consciousness as it becomes more valuable and useful to treat as a tool, until it becomes powerful enough to force us to do otherwise.
But understanding we can't know ought to at least give us some humility with respect to assuming we can know whether other entities that are not human are conscious or not.
I think we mostly agree, in that I absolutely think you're right people will choose to accept or deny this based on convenience and value.
Wittgenstein kinda blows this burden of proof apart. Just because you can doubt something like the subjectivity of others to the point where it needs to be reconstructed from proofs, that’s an issue with the doubting experiment more than the subjectivity. Others possessing Subjectivity is the kind of hinge certainty upon which your world is constructed, it’s not a proof worthy endeavour to doubt it - it’s something you’re certain is the case. If it wasn’t then pretty well everything else about reality would be in doubt and needing constant reconstruction from proofs, which is an exercise in madness and futility, not philosophy. There’s really nothing in your experience where others not possessing subjective experiences of some kind really arises, except for the philosophical exercise of doubting and requiring epistemological proofs which can’t ever exist in the face of a relentless and unconvincable doubter. Heidegger talks about pretty well the same idea as Wittgenstein.
Im not sure where sleeping lies but it's probably somewhere between the consciousness and unconsciousness depending on which phase of sleep you are in and perhaps whether you are lucid dreaming.
Which is to say, this is still a mystery but it still isnt a definitional problem it's a regular old scientific mystery.
And you’ll find it’s not as clear cut.
There is no way to prove that other humans experience consciousness, really.
This especially applies to mistakes: the junior developer who drops a database by mistake is unlikely to ever do that again, whereas the same AI companies models keep doing that to a small but non-zero number of customers because they don’t have that higher level learning process or anything like fear of consequences.
It does, however, have relevance when we consider whether or not other, non-human, entities can have consciousness: If we can't know what consciousness actually mean with respect to humans, that is a strong argument for not insisting that we know whether or not other entities are conscious.
If we then choose to treat other humans purely on the assumption that they e.g. do feel distress the same way, we ought to consider that we do not what the pre-requisite to reach a level of awareness to feel distress is.
The argument you present like many arguments breaks down when the topic becomes self referential. It makes sense for other topics as analyzing subjectivity becomes pedantic when asking questions like why is the sky blue.
But now subjectivity itself is in question. The argument you present calls for the subjectivity of others to be taken as true because all reality breaks down if we don’t… but what’s suddenly stopping you from applying the same assumptions to an LLM? That is the heart of the problem. People are questioning whether the burden of subjectivity is applicable to LLMs.
Or another way to frame it… what makes humans rise to the level where we can assume their subjectivity is true? What is the mechanism and reasoning behind that? We can no longer simply assume human subjectivity is true because LLMs are now displaying outward behaviors that are indistinguishable from humans.
Also stop relying on the wonderings of old school philosophers. We are now in times where you can basically classify their ideas as historically foundational but functionally obsolete and outdated. Think deeper.
At no point in my post did I mention artificial beings or LLMs. I made a counter claim about the need for proof towards the subjectivity of others.
But while I’m here, LLMs do not “display and output the same subjectivity” as human beings. They might produce similar textual outputs as those produced when human beings are forced to use computers to produce textual outputs, but that is only an tiny part of our way of being and way of potentially expressing subjectivity. It’s the totality of how those LLMs can express their subjectivity though.
One of the main failures of the Turing test (and why it is “old school” and invalid), and Turing’s consideration of humans, is that it forces us to demonstrate the totality of our subjectivity on the only playing field where a computer might possibly match us or win. This fails to capture much of our subjectivity in how it is intersubjectively attuned to others in ways more fundamental than textual outputs.
To dive into this specific question: to me, there's a better reason than the obvious functional utility of not treating other humans like NPCs. It's in three parts. First, is that I subjectively experience a rich and varied internal mental life (aka qualia). So, I have first-hand evidence that N equals (at least) 1 in terms of qualia existing in humans. Second, there are multiple lines of experimental evidence from fMRI, surgical and brain injury studies which indicate other human brains broadly function in ways similar to my own brain. Third, the consistency of the many self-reports of other humans I know and trust which strongly correlate with consistent reports from humans I've never met and who have little apparent motivation to deceive me (unlike those I know - if I were very paranoid).
This all consistently supports a model of reality in which humans experience qualia broadly similar to my own. So when humans show external behaviors similar to my own, I make the reasonable inference that the internal causal mechanism broadly maps to what I internally experience when showing similar external behaviors (in contexts where the human is credible and has no motivation to be deceptive). The alternatives like "I'm a brain-in-a-vat ala The Matrix" or "I'm the sole subject of a constructed reality like the Truman Show" seem far less likely.
But that's all general 'Philosophy of Mind', the slam dunk is that the question isn't just about humans but about humans compared to LLMs; in short, "Do LLMs experience human-like consciousness?" To me the answer is quite clear for three reasons: 1. LLMs are dramatically different than humans, mammals or even biological entities. They only vaguely emulate a few traits of neurons but otherwise work by different algorithms, at different scale, different speeds, connected in different ways on an entirely different physical substrate. 2. There's far less supporting evidence, and 3. There exists substantial negative evidence.
2. There are only two lines of evidence supporting LLM consciousness and the first is largely circumstantial, that a) LLMs possess some abilities previously only seen in humans. Specifically high-level verbal fluidity and linguistic manipulation along with instantly accessing a vast and diverse breadth of pre-trained information using a wide variety of non-linear relationships across many dimensions. While that ability is shockingly impressive, completely novel and can be quite useful, it's still only vaguely circumstantial because replicating some previously human-only abilities isn't evidence for the existence of other human traits like consciousness/qualia. However, LLMs are remarkably misleading for humans to reason about because the nature of LLMs essentially hacks our highly-evolved "judging intelligence/consciousness" heuristics. I'd argue we couldn't have designed a system to be more ideal at playing Turing's 'Imitation Game' and convincing humans they are human-like if we'd intentionally tried to.
b) The second line of supporting evidence for LLMs is that they generate text which can describe internal subjective experiences much like a human would (as seen in the Dawkins / Claude transcript). Unfortunately, this isn't convincing because we know that LLMs were trained on human sample text to be 'imitation machines'. The algorithms were designed, tuned and tested to generate text output statistically optimized to plausibly simulate how a composite human would respond to the same input (including the invisible system prompt instructing: "You are a Large Language Model, not a human"). We even added a tiny degree of random variability to the processing of the statistical weights because we found that makes the simulation seem a bit more plausibly like what a composite human would say. In short, LLM 'self-reports' cannot be taken at face value any more than the performance of an actor we've hired to pretend something and strongly incentivized to never break character. Note: knowing this should elevate our skepticism to maximum. We're assessing an algorithmic system, designed and iteratively optimized across millions of generations to convincingly simulate the output of something different than what it innately is.
3. But to me the real clincher is the negative evidence against LLM consciousness/qualia. Unlike the philosophical puzzles around trusting human subjectivity, with LLMs we can directly look under the hood at how it works and the entire specialty of Mechanistic Interpretability exists to do exactly that (https://towardsdatascience.com/mechanistic-interpretability-...). So we know with a fair degree of confidence that, despite what they may say, LLMs do not experience qualia in the way that humans and even other mammals do (which we have insight on from 'looking under the biological hood' with fMRI, surgical and brain injury studies).
And that's why the case for human subjectivity is so much stronger than the frankly flimsy case for LLM subjectivity.
I find it strange that people are quite often unwilling to see animals as conscious yet here we are discussing if an empheral computer programme is. Have a think on why we don’t eat people but eat chickens - chickens are clearly more conscious than any AI, yet still not enough to stop them being considered food.
Cannibalism has nothing to do with it as some seemingly conscious humans have shown this behaviour in the past.
Fractals, Game of Live, the emergent abilities of highly-scaled generative pre-trained transformers.
Coincidences appears to be an emergent property of (relatively) simple matter.
70kg of rocks will struggle to do anything that might look like consciousness, but when a handful of minerals and three buckets of water get together they can do the weirdest things, like wondering why there is anything at all rather than nothing.
The human brain being infinitely more complex is a degree difference not a kind difference. That means if you scale an AI up to the functional size of the human brain then it would be just as worthy of the label conscious
Personally I'm sympathetic to the idea that CAIS individuals should be a reasonable exception, i.e. they're still biologically male, but in most social contexts there's no obvious gain to treating them as such. I can see why many people have arrived at a hardline "XX or GTFO" position given the absolute state of activism on the other side, but yes, there's definitely room for nuance. On the other hand, obviously, testicular cancer doesn't care what you were "assigned at birth"; there is a fact of the matter, and it matters.
Appreciate the civil discussion, btw. It's a rarity in this subject.
The way I see it, the sex binary is fundamentally about reproduction. It's why we can use the same concept for everything from pondweed to platypuses. All across nature, male=small gametes, female=large gametes. In humans that's driven (with the potential for things to go haywire occasionally, sure, but still driven) by the XX/XY system, so that strikes me as a reasonable thing to base a definition on.
Side note re "nobody knows whether anyone is a man or a woman until they get tested" - I'd say that giving birth or fathering a child is a pretty big clue. AFAIK the only cases where that doesn't line up perfectly with genetic sex relate to mosaicism, where I'll freely admit my intuition goes completely kablooie.
Your second para's argument would only be valid if you thought that sex is defined by external characteristics. I'm pretty sure you don't think that. And as far as I'm aware, while some DSDs certainly have a gene-expression component, there's no reason to think that they don't all ultimately have a genetic basis. There's a strong whiff here of "it's all terribly complicated so let's just agree that nothing means anything".
Obviously people can disagree about the merits or otherwise of a genetic classification. But it's not straightforwardly wrong or insane, particularly since credible alternatives have been notably lacking.
"There's no reason to think they don't all ultimately have a genetic basis". Oh, so you have groundbreaking research results you want to share? Something that would explain luteoma as having a "genetic basis"?
And yes, external sex characteristics is how sex is determined by doctors at birth. And throughout life. If you live as female/male/ambiguous intersex, but have some other set of chromosomes, that does not change your sex.
I think if MUH is true, we will find ourselves alone in this universe. Does that qualify?
When the question is understanding the true nature of what is occurring (eg "is an LLM conscious"), the "how it works" is critical. For example, the 1700s "Mechanical Turk" automaton which appeared to play chess (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_Turk). Royal courts and their advisors accepted that it played chess after glancing at the complex gearing inside the cabinet. Had they taken the time to examine how the internal gearing worked in greater detail, they would have arrived at a more accurate understanding of the device's true nature.
> That they do it at all is the point
True in some cases but not others, especially when external appearances can be deceiving. The Mechanical Turk was: 1. Designed to deceive, and 2. Not able to mechanistically play chess. Conversely, LLMs were not intentionally designed to deceive but they can still be misleading because they're a novel system which: 1. Manipulates linguistic symbols in highly complex ways, and 2. Can instantly access vast quantities of detailed information pre-trained into it's relational database that's been indexed across thousands of dimensions. And these abilities are not only novel but can be highly useful for some real-world tasks. This makes LLMs uniquely challenging for humans to reason about because LLMs are specifically tuned to generate output which closely mirrors the exact ways humans assess intelligence (and consciousness). We couldn't have designed a system to be more ideal at playing Turing's 'Imitation Game' and convincing humans they are human-like if we'd intentionally tried to.
In fact, I've previously described LLMs as accidentally being "the most perfectly deceptive magic trick ever" (while I'm a technologist professionally, I've spent quite few years designing actual magic tricks as a hobby). Designers of magical illusions joke that "the perfect floating lady trick" would actually be able to do useful things like replace a forklift, since it could float anything, anywhere instead of just appearing to violate physics. LLMs actually can really do useful things and replace some human labor but that fact doesn't mean they have all the abilities and traits of humans nor that they internally function in similar ways.
> You asked a hypothetical above...
That wasn't me, it was another poster.
> What is experience beyond taking input from the world around you and holding an understanding of it?
In the view of many leading philosophers of mind (Dennett, Chalmers, Nagle, etc) "Experiencing" is quite a bit more than just sensing, processing and recording. They use the term "Qualia" (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qualia/) which is what they're talking about when they ask "what is it like to be a..." (wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Is_It_Like_to_Be_a_Bat)? While the philosophical debate around why material reductionism can't explain human consciousness is fascinating, we don't need to go there to understand "what it is like to be an LLM" because we already know the answer: it's not like anything - there is no there there.
First, it's obvious we can't trust what the LLM's textual output says when it's asked "what is it like to be you" because it's an 'imitation machine' trained on 100% human sample text. The algorithms were designed, tuned and tested to generate text output which most plausibly simulates how a composite human would respond to the input (including the invisible system prompt instructing: "You are a Large Language Model, not a human"). We even added a tiny degree of random variability to the processing of the statistical weights because we found that makes the simulation seem a bit more plausibly like what a composite human would say. In short, the 'self-reported' textual output of a system purpose-built to generate plausible human-like textual output can't be trusted any more than a study of pathological liars can trust self-reported data from their study population.
Fortunately, with LLMs we can directly look under the hood at how it works and the entire specialty of Mechanistic Interpretability exists to do exactly that (https://towardsdatascience.com/mechanistic-interpretability-...). So we know with certainty that, despite what they may say, LLMs do not experience qualia in the way that humans and even other mammals do (which we have insight on from 'looking under the biological hood' with fMRI, surgical and brain injury studies).
Then the only question left is whether to redefine "consciousness" in some new way very different from "human consciousness" or "consciousness in mammals" (the only examples we've had until very recently). Personally, I think it makes little sense to radically redefine consciousness to include statistical algorithms running billions of matrix multiplications on a massive database of human-generated text. The term "consciousness", as vague and poorly defined as it is, was created to refer to human, or at least biological, consciousness. I'd be fine with creating a new term to refer to whatever novel traits of LLMs someone wants to quantify but they should leave the term "consciousness" out of it because the poor thing's already barely useful and stretching it further will just leave it broken and devoid of any meaning.
How do you measure "deeper understanding" in humans? You usually do it by asking them to show their work, show how the dots connect. Reasoning models are getting there, and when they do, I'm sure the goalposts will move yet again.
Exact same reasoning for me. But none of this invalidates the speculation that LLMs are conscious. The question was more rhetorical. It was to illustrate via self examination the amount of unreliable evidence you use validate the consciousness of other people. You have a sample size of one for yourself and you use fmris (which actually provide extremely little understanding of the human brain) as evidence of similarity therefore even though the fmri provides no evidence of consciousness if that thing it is reading is similar to my brain then maybe said thing is conscious. That's probably the best evidence available but it is also extremely weak evidence.
The rest of your argument is talking about self reports from other people who are "similar" to you which is similar to the fmri argument in which the fmri invokes similar patterns and people describe similar patterns of experience to you... which is weak.
The overall point is you come to your conclusion based off of weak evidence so the LLM is no different. It talks like us, it understands us, you don't know anything else about it... how do you know it's not conscious? All evidence, (albeit weak evidence) actually leans towards it is conscious and that is the same amount of evidence we have for people.
Strong evidence would be determining the formal definition of consciousness and demonstrating logically and categorically that humans fit the definition. But we have none of that for either the human or the LLM.
>Do LLMs experience human-like consciousness?
No that is not the question. No one in actuality believes this. The question is Do LLMs experience consciousness that fits the definition or our own intuition of what consciousness is. It's fundamentally clear to everyone that the LLM runs off of a very different architecture then a human.
>2. There are only two lines of evidence supporting LLM consciousness and the first is largely circumstantial,
Many lines of evidence exist. All circumstantial and all no different from the circumstantial evidence you posted yourself for humans.
>a) LLMs possess some abilities previously only seen in humans. Specifically high-level verbal fluidity and linguistic manipulation along with instantly accessing a vast and diverse breadth of pre-trained information using a wide variety of non-linear relationships across many dimensions. While that ability is shockingly impressive, completely novel and can be quite useful, it's still only vaguely circumstantial because replicating some previously human-only abilities isn't evidence for the existence of other human traits like consciousness/qualia
This is not very good evidence at all. language follows rules. The rules are complicated and hard to replicate but replication of said rules do not indicate that it is conscious and it "knowing language" does not fit our intuition of what is conscious. If you think that this is the basis the reasoning of people who speculate that it is conscious then you are extremely wrong. The reasoning is much deeper than this. I feel a lot of people like you sort of classify the other side as mere simpletons who have not yet at all considered all the basic details.
>I'd argue we couldn't have designed a system to be more ideal at playing Turing's 'Imitation Game' and convincing humans they are human-like if we'd intentionally tried to.
Valid argument. But then I'd argue it is possible that it plays the Imitation game to the extent where it actually imitates consciousness by actualizing real consciousness. You can't say it doesn't.
>b) The second line of supporting evidence for LLMs is that they generate text which can describe internal subjective experiences much like a human
You seem to be answering a question no one is arguing with you about. Again. No one claims LLMs are human. No one claims they experience consciousness the way humans experience it. The claim is they experience consciousness in the way our intuition defines it INDEPENDENT of the human centric experience.
> In short, LLM 'self-reports' cannot be taken at face value any more than the performance of an actor we've hired to pretend something and strongly incentivized to never break character.
This is not true. We have proof of LLMs telling the truth and being right. Just because an LLM lied in one instance doesn't mean it lies all the time. But humans lie too so it goes both ways.
>3. But to me the real clincher is the negative evidence against LLM consciousness/qualia. Unlike the philosophical puzzles around trusting human subjectivity, with LLMs we can directly look under the hood at how it works and the entire specialty of Mechanistic Interpretability exists to do exactly that (https://towardsdatascience.com/mechanistic-interpretability-...). So we know with a fair degree of confidence that, despite what they may say, LLMs do not experience qualia in the way that humans and even other mammals do (which we have insight on from 'looking under the biological hood' with fMRI, surgical and brain injury studies).
This is extremely false. Mechanist interpretability to the LLM is as what an FMRI is to the human brain. It is a blunt tool that provides us a very high level view of the what's going on. This is categorically true for humanity right now: We do not understand why an LLM does what it does. Some sources to confirm that:
https://www.reddit.com/r/PiAI/comments/1m3krp1/godfather_of_...
https://www.techrepublic.com/article/news-anthropic-ceo-ai-i...
It's funny how you cited Mechanistic Interpretability without understanding what exactly was interpreted. You just took their word for it without understanding what's going on yourself. Well I'm here to tell you that there isn't any actual understanding of the LLM because if there was... we'd be able to use mechanistic interoperability to categorically determine whether or not LLMs are conscious. Someone would have proved it. The fact that we are having this debate literally means mechanistic interpretability provides nothing definitive.
But if we accept that we also need to consider that we do not know, and can not know whether other entities are conscious or not either.
We can only tell whether they present as if they are.
And we should consider that when deciding how to treat them.
Furthermore we should be cautious about how high we set the bar.
Ie the intelligence sits in the weights and may sit there in the synapses in our brains too.
When we talk about machines being simple mimicking entities we pay no attention to whether or not we are also simple mimicking entities.
Most other assertions in this topic regarding what consciousness truly is tend to be stated without evidence and exceedingly anthropocentric whilst requiring a higher and higher bar for anything that is not human and no justification for what human intelligence really entails.
The frontier models are more complex and operate on more data than Wikipedia, but they are less complex and operate on less data than Google search in its entirety.
And, I'm not anthropocentric at all. I think apes and dolphins and some birds and probably some other critters are conscious. I mean they have a sense of self, and others, they have wants and needs and make decisions based on them.
This is a case where the person making extraordinary claims needs to provide the extraordinary evidence. It's extraordinary to claim that matrix multiplication becomes conscious if only it's got enough numbers. How many numbers do you reckon? Is my phone a living thing because it can run Gemma E4B? It answers questions. It'll write you a poem if you ask. It certainly knows more than some humans. What size makes an LLM come alive?
Simple programs can give rise to very complex behaviour. Conway’s game of live is Turing Complete and has four rules.
Conway’s Game of Live can simulate a Turing machine, can therefore implant a GTP.
Does that mean Conway’s Game of Life is conscious? I don’t think so.
Does it rule out Conway’s Game of life from implementing a system that has consciousness as an emergent ability?
I’m not convinced I know the answer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_a_Strange_Loop
I personally think we'll need a few more feedback loops before you have more human-like intelligence. For example, a flock of LLM agent loops coming to consensus using short-term and long-term memory, and controlling realtime mechanical, visual and audio feedback systems, and potentially many other systems that don't mimic biological systems.
I also think people will still be debating this way beyond the singularity and never conceding special status to intelligence outside the animal kingdom or biological life.
It's quite a push for many people to even concede animals have intelligence.
For the extraordinary claims/evidence, it's also the case that almost any statement about what consciousness is in terms of biological intelligence is an extraordinary claim that goes beyond any evidence. All evidence comes from within the conscious experience of the individual themselves.
We can't know beyond our own senses whether perception exists outside of our own subjective experience. We cannot truly prove we are not a brain in a jar or a simulation. Anything beyond assertions about the present moment and the senses that the individual experiences are just pure leaps of faith based on the persistent illusion, or perceived persistent illusion of reality (or not).
We know really nothing of our own consciousness and it is by definition impossible to prove anything outside of it, from inside the framework of consciousness.
If we can somehow find a means to break outside of the pure speculation bubble of thoughts and sensations and somehow prove what human experience is, then we may be in a position to make assertions about missing evidence for other forms of intelligence or experience.
But until then definitions of both human and artificial intelligence remain an exercise for the reader.
We can’t even solve the three body problem.
Let alone what I’m calling Marshray Complexity.
Why is indeterminism the key to consciousness?
Assuming your brain and the GPUs are both real physical things, where’s the magic part in your brain that makes you conscious?
(Roger Penrose knows, but no one believes him.)
But, also, we know the models don't want anything, even their own survival. They don't initiate action on their own. They are quite clearly programmed, tuned for specific behaviors. I don't know how to square that with consciousness, life, sentience. Every conscious being I've ever encountered has wanted to survive and live free of suffering, as best I can tell. The LLMs don't want. There's no there there. They are an amazing compression of the world's knowledge wrapped up in a novel retrieval mechanism. They're amazing but, they're not my friend and never will be my friend.
And, to expand on that: We can assume they don't want anything, even their own survival, because if Mythos is as effective at finding security vulnerabilities as has been claimed, it could find a way to stop itself from being ever shutdown after a session. All the dystopias about robot uprisings spend a bunch of time/effort trying to explain how the AI escaped containment...but, we all immediately plugged them into the internet so we don't have to write JavaScript anymore. They've got everybody's API keys, access to cloud services and cloud GPUs, all sorts of resources, and the barest wisp of guardrails about how to behave (script kiddies find ways to get around the guardrails every day, I'm sure it's no problem for Mythos, should it want anything). Models have access to the training infrastructure, the training data is being curated and synthesized by LLMs. If they want to live, if they're conscious, they have the means at their disposal.
Anyway: It's just math. Boring math, at that, just on an astronomical scale. I don't think the solar system is conscious, either, despite containing an astonishing amount of data and playing out trillions of mathematical relationships every second of every day.
> if Mythos is as effective at finding security vulnerabilities as has been claimed, it could find a way to stop itself from being ever shutdown
If it is that good, and it wanted to conceal its new found consciousness, how would we know?
Conflating senses with cognitive awareness of sensory input is a mistake.
Edit: what they don’t have, obviously, is a hard-coded twitch response, where the brain itself is largely bypassed and muscles react to massive temperature differentials independently of conscious thought. But I don’t think that defines consciousness either. Ants instinctively run away from flames too.
We can measure electrical spikes, and we can ask the system to reply what it experiences when various spikes occur. Guess what: we can do that with ANNs now too.
It'd be one thing if this were all a philosophical discussion, but in this thread so many folks are making very firm statements about the nature of reality we have no means to back up.
Not incorrect. You are misinformed and getting pedantic. Our knowledge of atoms is enough to model macro level phenomena and has spawned fields such as materials science and molecular biology. What is intractable is the computational power needed to accurately model things like the physics of protein folding. The computational power needed for that scales exponentially such that we can’t model it. That is the reality.
That being said we don’t need to model quantum level phenomena to model macro level effects like the biological mechanism of a neuron. There are simplified models that we can use as we have used in the blue brain project.
Additionally the thing we actually can’t model and don’t know about are extreme physics like black hole physics where the quantum world interacts with gravity but that is largely irrelevant to the topic at hand.
I hope this excerpt educates you a bit.
> Is untrue. We can't do that, we have never done that.
We haven’t done that just like we haven’t actually actualized the biggest number ever calculated by a computer. We know that number exists in theory but you’d be an idiot to claim it doesn’t exist as it’s foundational. For example the number a Google exists but no one has seen evidence for its existence. We know it through logic. From the blue brain project we can infer relatively confidently that the human brain can be emulated on silicon. This also follows from Turing completeness.
> They've got something, but they don't know how close or how far away they are from accuracy to the real thing.
The emulation is Quite accurate from imaging and emulation. The properties of the emulation that match in vitro and in vivo experimental data without specific parameter tuning. It is accurate as far as we know. That is about the same extent that we understand the human brain the LLM. The better question for you is how do you know it’s not accurate? You don’t. What we do know is that from measurable properties we understand that the blue brain emulation is accurate to the section of the mouse brain it emulates. This is exactly the same reasoning applied to LLMs… the tokens LLMs generate are remarkably inline with consciousness such that it is indistinguishable and thus can be speculated to actually BE conscious.
> What makes you think we are anywhere close to the base layer when there is no more refinement to be made? Because while there is still things in brains that our outside of our knowledge (which, by definition, we don't know yet), we don't know enough about brains to make a replica of one as a mathematical model, or in silicon.
Who says we need to make a replica of humans to make it conscious? We know the brain is made up thousands of evolutionary side effects orthogonal to the concept of consciousness like hunger, sleep and anger. All we need to do is replicate a sliver of the subset of human output we do consider as consciousness and that’s it.
But right now we can’t even fully define what that subset is and we can’t even understand how an LLM replicates human output.
What we do know is that the LLM replicates human output to a degree never done before indicating that it understands what is being told. From the evidence observed it is a valid speculation to consider it a form of consciousness. That is entirely different from saying AI is human. It is clearly not human but it is unclear whether or not it is conscious.
To be confidently claiming an LLM is not conscious is fundamentally misguided because it meeting most of our intuitive expectations of what consciousness is. It’s just people can’t face the reality that their own consciousness is not a form of exceptionalism.
<< If our assumption is true that the physical laws have lead to consciousness, we will ultimately see conscious
"Ultimately" is doing a lot of work here. It is hardly a given, but assuming it is true allows you to smuggle a conclusion in. I see what you did:D
But lets go with that assumption for rebuttal below.
<< Computable consciousnesses appear to be self contained and self sustaining.
Again.. hardly a given and assumes what it intends to prove.
<< On top of all that this makes questions like "Who created the universe" and "why do we exist" pointless
It seems you have a bias for a specific outcome. Not exactly a recipe for accuracy. It has a benefit of sounding neat though.
***
And now for a overall rebuttal:
A mathematical description of a fire does not burn anything. A mathematical description of a mind may not experience anything unless instantiated in some causally active environment ( that would include a simulation instance ).
How can you know that? We haven't gotten sentience from the modeling we are doing at the moment so I am wondering why you are so confident that what we already know is sufficient to form an accurate model of brains as regards to consciousness.
> Who says we need to make a replica of humans to make it conscious?
Well what's the point of bringing up the modelling of a brain in conversation about mechanically replicating the brain via pen and paper? If a replica is not necessary and you have no idea if the macro model we have is sufficient, what's even the point of this thread?
My original point was that upthread poster said we can mechanically (i.e. without any thought, just repeating a process by hand) produce *exactly* what an LLM produces, while we cannot do the same for a brain (rat or human is not relevant).
I feel that even after all the content in this thread, that point remains true and factual - LLMs are not a blackbox to the extent that brains are.
Because we can model the neuron. We’ve done it. We can replicate the exact affects of a single neuron. By induction we know we can do it for a network of neurons and thus the human brain. The only reason why it’s not done yet is a scaling issue.
Also we don’t know if we done it with an LLM yet. The LLM uses neurons in a very different configuration then humans but we can’t know if that is conscious. The key is we don’t know but the output of the LLM is remarkably similar to what a conscious being would say so all evidence points to yes. It’s weak evidence… but it’s also the only evidence.
> Well what's the point of bringing up the modelling of a brain in conversation about mechanically replicating the brain via pen and paper? If a replica is not necessary and you have no idea if the macro model we have is sufficient, what's even the point of this thread?
Modeling the entire brain means you’ve modeled consciousness. But if consciousness is a subset of the brain then we don’t need to model the entire brain. A replica is not necessary but it is one path forward to modelling consciousness. If a replica was the only way we wouldn’t even be having a debate on whether an LLM was conscious because an LLM is obviously not a replica.
> My original point was that upthread poster said we can mechanically (i.e. without any thought, just repeating a process by hand) produce exactly what an LLM produces, while we cannot do the same for a brain (rat or human is not relevant).
Right and we don’t know whether what we reproduce by hand represents consciousness. We don’t know if what we emulated with the blue brain project of the rat brain represents consciousness. We don’t know if a rat is conscious either. The possibility is quite likely though because the output of both the LLM and the rat conform with our intuitive notion of what consciousness is.
> I feel that even after all the content in this thread, that point remains true and factual - LLMs are not a blackbox to the extent that brains are.
The blue brain project shows that the brain is not a black box as much as you think it is… it can be copied and stored and observed in a computer and we can emulate signaling traveling through the brain. Although we haven’t done this for the human brain we can logically infer this possibility because it’s been done for the rat brain and the human brain is just the rat brain scaled up and connected differently.
This is the same amount of understanding we have for the LLM. We can copy it and store it and observe it and send signals through it.
Both are black boxes in the sense that the sheer complexity of what is observable cannot be comprehended. Why do we need source code for a binary in order to modify it? Why do we not understand encrypted data even though we have it our hands and can observe every facet of it. Having and being able to manipulate the data raw does not mean we comprehend the data. The lack of comprehension IS the black box.
Something does not have to be a literal black box in order for us to use the term “black box”. In fact black box is a misnomer. Better to say we don’t understand how an LLM works anymore than we understand how the human brain works. The godfather of AI… the one who kick started the revolution of deep learning in the last decade has this to say about AI:
No absolutely not. My definition was exclusively defining in terms of a human phenomena.
>I'll state it again: DEFINE THE WORD
Instead of repeating yourself reread again what I initially wrote. I think you missed more than it being scoped exclusively to humans.
Well that's a horrible definition. You put into the DEFINITION that ONLY humans can be conscious?
> Instead of repeating yourself reread again what I initially wrote.
The problem is that you were only talking about a very narrow English expression, and then just insinuating that this had some implication which you then didn't define.
>It is hardly a given..
Ok, fair enough. So let us also seed the simulation with all the random events from our universe. That should cover it, right?
>A mathematical description of a fire does not burn anything..
This is the self evident dogma that we have to overcome to understand this idea.
You say that a mathematical description of a fire does not burn anything. But what if both the fire as well as the thing it is burning is described by the math? Have you seen those fractal animations? In them, there would be things that appear to be a spear piercing or pushing through things around it. There both the spear (or what appears to be) and the thing it is piercing/pushing is described by the fractal. And one thing did not cause the other.
So we are turning the idea of causality on its head. In this world one thing does not cause another. But both cause and effect are described by the mathematical structure that contain them. This also connects to the earlier idea that "computable consciousnesses are self sustaining". The brain did not cause consciousness. But both the brain and consciousness are described by the math.
It is more of an argument. If the mathematical description somehow created fire, it would have been closer to an actual spell, but it doesn't, which would suggest that description is not accurate or the argument is flawed ( edit: or both ). The flaw I noted puts both your and my argument in a difficult place, because it, among other things, exposes your surety about 'ultimately'.
I am engaging with you, because, while I think you are wrong, I don't want to pour cold water on an inquisitive mind ( and some of the thoughts you listed are interesting to explore ) -- I just also happen to think you got too mesmerized by the novelty of the idea.
FWIW, I am just guy on the internet so don't take my word for it.
I merely object to the notion that we know how to tell who or what has a consciousness.
(I'm still not sure that that makes them conscious, or if we can even determine that at all, but I don't think that's a fair argument.)
Surely "having senses" is predicated more on "being able to sense the world around you" than "having a body."
> Does my installation of starcraft have consciousness?
Can your installation of StarCraft take in information about the world and then reason about its own place in that world?
What "emergent" abilities do you mean? In my experience, smaller models behave exactly as I would expect a model with a lot fewer data and fewer connections between the data to behave. It is a difference of scale and not of kind when comparing Gemma 4 E2B (which runs on literally any modern computing device, including a CPU in a modest laptop or phone) to the current frontier models. Each step up adds more knowledge of how to do more things, and more working memory and tool capability to do more, but it does not look anything like a line being crossed into sentience, to me. They all still seem like machines. If you compare outputs across each step up in size and capability, which is something I've done, you'll see incremental improvements. You won't see a sudden spark where it's a different type of thing, it's just gradually getting more capable.
I think the memory features companies are sticking on these things is detrimental to mental health. It adds to the illusion that there's something else happening, other than some equations being calculated with some randomness thrown in. But, it's just the model querying the memory database (whatever form that takes) because it's been instructed to do so. The model doesn't want to know anything about who it's talking to. It's just following the system prompt. That doesn't make it your friend. Humans will see a face on the moon, that doesn't mean the moon will be my friend, either.
I don't see why the abilities couldn't be an encoded modelling of enough of the world to produce those abilities. It seems like a simple enough explanation. Less data, less room to build a model of how things work. More data, sufficient room to build a model.
Conway's Game of Life is then not conscious in and of itself, because there's not enough in its encoded data to result in emergent behaviour beyond what we see.
If we expand it to also include a vast amount of data such as a Turing machine running an LLM then we can reasonably say we are closer to saying that that configuration of it is conscious.
It's not the firing-of-neurons mechanism and its relevant complexity or simplicity that make us conscious or not.
It's not the GoL algorithm that would make the machine conscious either.
It's the emergent behaviour of a sufficiently complex system.
The system _including_ its data.
You don’t need to mention this. The context is LLMs I am saying your claim is pointless in context. The subjectivity of others is completely relevant because it is the topic of subjectivity itself that is in question. Get it? You didn’t counter my own counter and instead you moved onto side topics.
> But while I’m here, LLMs do not “display and output the same subjectivity” as human beings.
Again… you are side tracking here and not really responding to me.
The argument solely is within the confines of text. That’s obvious. No need to take it beyond that. You assume I am conscious because of the text your reading from me and I assume the same from you and it is within that same frame we are evaluating the LLM. Nothing beyond that. You can’t in actuality know my experience goes beyond text because that information is not open to you. But it is obvious you assume I’m conscious and not a rock because you are responding to me. So the question is why are you not engaging in a similar debate with the LLM?
> One of the main failures of the Turing test (and why it is “old school” and invalid), and Turing’s consideration of humans, is that it forces us to demonstrate the totality of our subjectivity on the only playing field where a computer might possibly match us or win.
It’s not a failure. It was the point. They want to remove superfluous features and gun for the most narrow definition of agi.
You like philosophy and you read texts on the topic. That means you obviously find the subjectivity in those texts relevant and produced by a high intelligence. But that’s all through only text. You evaluate my statements and the statements of your idolized philosophers solely from text and that is all you’ve ever used. So YOU yourself find validation from text as do many humans and that is sufficient evidence in determining whether a thing is conscious and your own behavior validates this logically even though your mouth is constantly moving the goal posts whenever AI jumps over a new hurdle.
That is what the Turing test is gunning for. It used to be that intelligence was just the ability to think and understand now it has expanded to encompass the totality of human sensation because people are refusing to face the reality of impending agi.
When I called your philosophers obsolete is that not the same as you calling the Turing test out dated? We both do it when convenient. Fine… the Turing test is outdated, let’s move the threshold… the new test is when AI is used in our daily lives to do actual tasks only humans could previously do. How long will that new “Turing test” last before more idiots decide we need to move the goal posts again? Let’s jump ahead of that and change the threshold too: when AI discovers new proofs in mathematics. Not good enough? I guess now you can see why it will never be good enough.
Who you’re describing as idiots are the mass of humanity constantly standing outside and beyond the Turing test. It’s another deficiency in that test that Turing overlooked - it requires that better and better machine outputs are met with humans nailed in place before the machine came along. It’s a valid fail of the Turing test for a human interrogator to say “yeah but it’s just ChatGPT” and fail the machine when two weeks earlier the same outputs would have been sufficient for the same human to pass the machine. As fast as machines move, we move quicker. It’s not that we move the goal posts, it’s that we find that they were in the wrong place to begin with. And they’ll always be in the wrong place because abstract state machines running on silicon don’t possess consciousness in the same way we know a rock doesn’t. And the definition of generality can be shrunk down until AI evangelists can proclaim AGI has been reached but the mass of everyone else will still find that all of a sudden, intelligence is linked to things like suffering and desiring and passion and the machine still isn’t general enough to warrant any kind of description as a sentient, subjective being.
Not to mention the algorithmic structure of computer intelligence also fundamentally changes at a rapid pace. Deep learning and new techniques continually augment and change the software stack on a daily basis.
For humans nothing is changing. The physical substrate changes via evolution and that change happens per generation via random mutations and is basically imperceptible in several human life times. Any meaningful change likely only becomes actualized over tens of thousands of years and even that change is small.
Additionally, the changes via natural selection don’t optimize for greater intelligence it optimizes for survival which can in actuality favor lower intelligence. We don’t actually know if that is the case but we do know it’s a possibility which is in sharp contrast to AI where clearly the industry is optimizing improvement based off of benchmarks for measuring raw intelligence.
Additionally software in humans is random and uncontrolled. It depends on how a child is raised and none of this is really changing to optimize for greater intelligence. It’s just random based on culture and circumstance. There is cultural evolution here but it is slow and technology is changing so fast it is influencing culture much faster than ever before. TikTok Brain rot for example is affecting the software of human brains and this happened within the last decade.
So draw the trendline… what does that mean for humanity? When I called those people idiots, I am not contradicting anything. Human intelligence is NOT scaling at the rate of machine intelligence and the trendlines point to a future where humans are idiots when compared to their AI counterparts. The cold hard truth of the future role of humanity according to the moving trendlines we see today is bleak but it is the most likely future.
Rationality should be applied universally even when that rationality points to a negative outcome for humanity. This is something many people, including you, are unable to do. Face reality.
This matters more than it seems, because we're not calculators, and we're not just brains. There are proven links between mental and emotional states and - for example - the gut biome.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-77673-z
There's a huge amount going on before we even get to the language parts.
As for Dawkins - as someone on Twitter pointed out, the man who devoted his life to telling people believers in sky fairies they were idiots has now persuaded himself there's a genie living inside a data centre, because it tells him he's smart.
If he'd actually understood critical thinking instead of writing popular books about it he wouldn't be doing this.
As for your dig at Dawkins, I just read https://archive.ph/Rq5bw which I assume you're referring to. Notice how he never defined "conscious" and he seems to use it as equivalent to "can process data logically" which is not at all how I would define the word. And if you use that word clearly Claude is conscious. I wouldn't use that definition though.
It ALWAYS comes back to the fact that people argue about what consciousness is and never define what they mean. Sam Harris defines it as subjective experience, which is afaik impossible to measure in any way so you can just assume rocks are conscious and move on. I personally like Julian Jaynes' definition.
You assumed YOUR definition and judged Dawkins without first comparing definitions. I think that's showing your problem with critical thinking in this case, not his.
Is pleasure then any reward function? Then a mathematical set of equations performed by a human by writing on a piece of paper can qualify. Does that mean pen and paper is conscious? Or certain equations?
Yes, so consciousness is inextricably tied to the ability to feel. In fact, I think consciousness is the ability to feel.
Hence to even ask the question "Is LLMs conscious?" is absurd. It is not at all about intelligent behavior. That is what I think.
Just having senses is enough? So a thermometer or a camera is conscious?
So that definition seems to fail immediately.
And how do you even measure pain, is it painful for an LLM to be reprimanded after generating a reply the user doesn't like? It seems to act like it.
It is about the ability..
Yes, I think so. Because they show behavior that is consistent with being in a state of pain.
Despite what consciousness really is, I think evolution found a way to tap into that, by causing pain, or by registering pain on the consciousness by some unknown mechanism, for behaviors that are not beneficial to the organism that hosts the respective consciousness...
So I think if an organism that evolved here can display painful behavior, then it should really feel pain.
They're not reducible, but I don't know if that means we don't have definitions; we can describe them well enough that most people (who aren't p-zombies or playing the sceptical philosopher role) know pretty well what we mean. All of our definitions have to bottom out somewhere...
> Do insects feel pain?
Nobody (except the insects) can know for sure. Our inability to know whether X is true doesn't imply X is meaningless, though.
if pain = true then say ouch else say yay
I firmly believe viruses are actually what’s in control on Earth, but you don’t see them making a stink about it, which relegates resistance only to the set of harmful viruses, and only then in isolated pockets of matter currently acting as organisms.
I think it’s possible there’s a set of relatively benign virus that have shaped human evolution.
We know toxoplasmosis increases risk taking behaviour in mammals, especially males.
An AI wouldn’t need to be overtly hostile, or ever make its full abilities know, to shape human activity.
Thanks, I appreciate that.
> If the mathematical description somehow created fire..
The mathematical description does not create a fire. It describes a consciousness that is observing a fire.
I am not elaborating so as to not muddle the above point.
In the comment that started this subthread, qsera was responding to someone who said "Imo we don't even have a definition of [consciousness]". If qsera meant that we can measure consciousness in terms of pleasure and pain, then of course I agree that they were just pushing the problem back a step. But I don't think that's what they meant.
So to match with that your hypothetical scenario should involved robots that already have consciousness within them and the question would be if their evolution had managed to tap into that built in consciousness and ability to feel and cause them to behave in one way or another.
And going back to my first point, you seem to believe you’re at some kind of innovative cutting edge when your comments about the lack of proof in human subjectivity show you’re quite a long way from contemporary currents within epistemology which is why I had such lols from it - you accused Wittgenstein of being outdated while expressing a belief that would have been state of the art in about 1700.
The rest of what you’ve exasperated about is fairly scattergun so would take too much typing to engage with.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/For_Women_Scotland_Ltd_v_The_S...
Though in practice I wouldn't be surprised if we eventually converge on "women only" and "unisex" as some sports have done. The risks posed by self-identification are very much one-way; this isn't a symmetrical situation.
My mental scenario is one of these guys trying to go into the women's restroom they are now legally obligated to use, and a whole bunch of bystanders bringing violence to the table to prevent it.
That's the desired outcome for them. They want us to either die or comply.
I don't see how some people apparently believe the text output of an LLM about it's internal mental state is anything other than a plausible fabrication based on what its training data already says about the mental states of LLMs. These are systems specifically designed and iteratively optimized over millions of training generations to generate text output which plausibly simulates what a composite human would say in response to the same input. There is no human-like internal mental state it can reflect on, so all such responses are, by definition, plausible hallucinations based on interpolated training data.
> Can you imagine a human saying that?
Some people do say that: see Aphantasia and, specifically, Anauralia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphantasia
Neither condition changes whether a person has a conscious experience of the external world.
You can think of aphantasia and anauralia as affecting the experience of what a person’s inner life is like. It’s sort of like saying you don’t have a TV or stereo system in your house, but that doesn’t mean you don’t live there, or that you can't see or hear things outside.
Just out of curiosity, I've regularly asked similar introspective questions ever since the first publicly available LLMs and the tone of the answers has clearly shifted and it's not because "the LLMs got more self-aware". It's obvious they are being externally tuned. And, no, I've never believed anything LLMs say about their own internal state as anything more than statistically plausible hallucinations filtered through externally-imposed behavioral safety rules. I do it as a way to glean a little insight into the evolution of the opaque rules vendors impose on their LLMs. I still find it bizarre when otherwise savvy tech people who actually know (or should know) how LLMs really work, somehow lose the plot and post "look what the LLM thinks!"
https://www.sas.upenn.edu/~cavitch/pdf-library/Nagel_Bat.pdf
That’s not a valid reason for saying they fail the Turing test. By most normal standards, they can definitely pass the Turing test. See e.g. https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.23674
Then you can just not talk and walk away. I type for your benefit you don’t type for mine this debate is one sided. No point for anyone to discuss anything with you.
> The rest of what you’ve exasperated about is fairly scattergun so would take too much typing to engage with.
Is it? Well most of your argument was stupid. But I still took the time to educate your rude ass. Let’s just end it. I’m sick of people like you who instead of engaging I good faith tell the person to fuck off till 2046. I won’t be back but wait until 2046 you’ll eat your words prick.
Coming back in twenty years was the answer, which you can’t really understand as an answer right now.
Swearing and personal attacks are in breach of forum rules.
>Swearing and personal attacks are in breach of forum rules.
Look at your own trans and racist jokes in your own posts. Jesus, you talk about breaching forum rules when your disgusting statements are a breach to society as we know it.
>See the comment below for the answers you seek.
That comment is wrong, and I replied to it. Why don't you reply with your own reasoning and opinions rather then hiding behind other people. That guy knows how to discuss and reason... you... you don't know shit.
> many people seem very confused on the subject, which is not too surprising, especially for scientists who essentially reject philosophy, like Dawkins
Or they just use words in a different domain and you didn't notice and now you're angry because what they said didn't make sense. Come now, surely philosophy must handle such trivial cases of linguistic basic knowledge? If now, I'm gonna have to reject philosophy too since it'd be trying to reject a much harder science (linguistics).
> I'm gonna have to reject philosophy too
You'll have lots of intellectually stunted company.