by Dwight Furrow
The question of whether AI is capable of having conscious experiences is not an abstract philosophical debate. It has real consequences and getting the wrong answer is dangerous. If AI is conscious then we will experience substantial pressure to confer human and individual rights on AI entities, especially if they report experiencing pain or suffering. If AI is not conscious and thus cannot experience pain and suffering, that pressure will be relieved at least up to a point.
It strikes me as extraordinarily dangerous to give super-human intelligence the robust autonomy entailed by human rights. On the other hand, if we deny such rights to AI and it turns out to be conscious, we incur the substantial moral risk of treating a conscious being as a labor-saving device. A fully sentient, super-human intelligence poorly treated will not be happy.
I hear and read a good deal of discussion coming out of Silicon Valley about whether AI is at least potentially conscious. The problem is that—and I mean this quite literally—no one knows what they’re talking about. Because no one knows what consciousness is. This is an enormously complex question with a very long history of debate in philosophy and the sciences. And we are not close to resolving it. There are at least eight main theories of consciousness and countless others striving to get attention. We are unlikely to settle this question quickly so it’s important not to make unwarranted assumptions about such a consequential issue.
This is not the place to articulate all the nuances of that debate and its implications for AI, but I think there is a way of bringing some focus to the question by organizing these various theories as competing views on the status of subjective experience, or to use the more or less technical term, the status of “qualia.” Read more »




Jacob Lawrence. Migration Series (Panel 52).
We do not need philosophers to tell us that human beings matter. Various versions of that conviction is already at work everywhere we look. A sense that people are worthwhile shapes our law, which punishes cruelty and demands equal treatment. It animates our medicine, which labors to preserve lives that might seem, by some external measure, not worth the cost. It structures our families, where we care for the very young and the very old without calculating returns. It haunts our politics, where arguments about justice presuppose that citizens possess a standing that power must respect. But what does it mean to say human beings are worthwhile? And why might it be worthwhile to ask what me mean when we say we matter?
Not long ago I wrote for 3 Quarks Daily
Anyway, I’ve been following







