On the independence between phenomenal consciousness and computational intelligence

Consciousness and intelligence are properties commonly understood as dependent by folk psychology and society in general. The term artificial intelligence and the kind of problems that it managed to solve in the recent years has been shown as an argument to establish that machines experience some sort of consciousness. Following the analogy of Russell, if a machine is able to do what a conscious human being does, the likelihood that the machine is conscious increases. However, the social implications of this analogy are catastrophic. Concretely, if rights are given to entities that can solve the kind of problems that a neurotypical person can, does the machine have potentially more rights that a person that has a disability? For example, the autistic syndrome disorder spectrum can make a person unable to solve the kind of problems that a machine solves. We believe that the obvious answer is no, as problem solving does not imply consciousness. Consequently, we will argue in this paper how phenomenal consciousness and, at least, computational intelligence are independent and why machines do not possess phenomenal consciousness, although they can potentially develop a higher computational intelligence that human beings. In order to do so, we try to formulate an objective measure of computational intelligence and study how it presents in human beings, animals and machines. Analogously, we study phenomenal consciousness as a dichotomous variable and how it is distributed in humans, animals and machines. As phenomenal consciousness and computational intelligence are independent, this fact has critical implications for society that we also analyze in this work.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
02/21/2016

Computational Narrative Intelligence: A Human-Centered Goal for Artificial Intelligence

Narrative intelligence is the ability to craft, tell, understand, and re...
research
09/29/2020

Understanding Human Intelligence through Human Limitations

Recent progress in artificial intelligence provides the opportunity to a...
research
01/18/2021

Dissonance Between Human and Machine Understanding

Complex machine learning models are deployed in several critical domains...
research
03/14/2020

Ethics in the digital era

Ethics are an ancient matter for human kind, from the origin of civiliza...
research
09/01/2009

A theory of intelligence: networked problem solving in animal societies

A society's single emergent, increasing intelligence arises partly from ...
research
11/13/2017

Gerrymandering and Computational Redistricting

Partisan gerrymandering poses a threat to democracy. Moreover, the compl...
research
09/21/2022

The Objective Function: Science and Society in the Age of Machine Intelligence

Machine intelligence, or the use of complex computational and statistica...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset