this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2024
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Worm's brain mapped and replicated digitally to control obstacle-avoiding robot.

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[–] fishos@lemmy.world 0 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Ok, so what is the exact process that creates consciousness? Cus that's what I'm saying is debated but you apparently have that answer. So what EXACTLY, down to the atomic level, is consciousness? What processes and how do they emerge into consciousness?

I'll be waiting for your exact, undebated answer.

[–] Warl0k3@lemmy.world 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Can't, but I suspect not for the reason you're hoping. The consensus, at least among computational neurologists (the field that, among other things, studies how brains work mathematically), is that "consciousness" as a concrete thing isn't really... real. It's just a term humans created to loosely describe a phenomenon that arises from any sufficiently complex well-ordered network. If you want to know what it really looks like, you can run your own OpenWorm robot! The human 'mind' looks just like that, only around a dozen orders of magnitude more complex.

The problem is that you're asking mostly meaningless questions. Even the loose definitions of consciousness aren't definable to the 'atomic level' - a mind is a mathematical construct. It's like asking where the files on your computer live; I can point to the sectors of the harddrive where a program is encoded, or even hand you a really really massive stack of punched tape, but neither of those actually are the computer program. What we call the program is the interaction of a grammar consisting of logical rules and constants running within the linguistic and computational context of an automata. It's the same as with a mind - it's the abstract state of an unfathomably complex machine.

i thought they explained it quite nicely as a system arising from other systems...

but the fundemental truth that a 'mind' is a holographic pattern arising from said network is quite a settled topic