We are constantly fed a version of AI that looks, sounds and acts suspiciously like us. It speaks in polished sentences, mimics emotions, expresses curiosity, claims to feel compassion, even dabbles in what it calls creativity.

But what we call AI today is nothing more than a statistical machine: a digital parrot regurgitating patterns mined from oceans of human data (the situation hasn’t changed much since it was discussed here five years ago). When it writes an answer to a question, it literally just guesses which letter and word will come next in a sequence – based on the data it’s been trained on.

This means AI has no understanding. No consciousness. No knowledge in any real, human sense. Just pure probability-driven, engineered brilliance — nothing more, and nothing less.

So why is a real “thinking” AI likely impossible? Because it’s bodiless. It has no senses, no flesh, no nerves, no pain, no pleasure. It doesn’t hunger, desire or fear. And because there is no cognition — not a shred — there’s a fundamental gap between the data it consumes (data born out of human feelings and experience) and what it can do with them.

Philosopher David Chalmers calls the mysterious mechanism underlying the relationship between our physical body and consciousness the “hard problem of consciousness”. Eminent scientists have recently hypothesised that consciousness actually emerges from the integration of internal, mental states with sensory representations (such as changes in heart rate, sweating and much more).

Given the paramount importance of the human senses and emotion for consciousness to “happen”, there is a profound and probably irreconcilable disconnect between general AI, the machine, and consciousness, a human phenomenon.

https://archive.ph/Fapar

  • PurpleCat@lemmy.ml
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    13 hours ago

    I don’t really understand what the author is afraid of.

    People sharing personal data they shouldn’t? How is that an AI issue, we leave personal info all over the web. People asking emotional questions of a non thinking machine? Should we toss out our magic eight balls too? Obviously there should be safeguards around the kind of issues a chatbot can answer, but that seems unrelated to the belief/perception of lmm intelligence.

    They talk about fictional harms if this technology were to progress, yet there no example of harm present with today?

    They say the true fear should be of the corporation or government, what exactly should we be afraid of, and how would stripping the chatbot of it’s affect safeguard us?