David Eagleman: Can a Computer Simulate Consciousness?
Yes, conceivably. And if/when we achieve the levels of technology necessary for simulation, the universe will become our playground. Eagleman's latest book ...
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Yes, conceivably. And if/when we achieve the levels of technology necessary for simulation, the universe will become our playground. Eagleman's latest book is "The Brain: The Story of You" (http://goo.gl/2IgDRb).
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/david-eagleman-can-a-computer-simulate-consciousness
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Transcript - The big picture in modern neuroscience is that you are the sum total of all the pieces and parts of your brain. Itās a vastly complicated network of neurons, almost 100 billion neurons, each of which has 10,000 connections to its neighbors. So weāre talking a thousand trillion neurons. Itās a system of such complexity that it bankrupts our language. But, fundamentally itās only three pounds and weāve got it cornered and itās right there and itās a physical system.
The computational hypothesis of brain function suggests that the physical wetware isnāt the stuff that matters. Itās what are the algorithms that are running on top of the wetware. In other words: What is the brain actually doing? Whatās it implementing software-wise that matters? Hypothetically we should be able to take the physical stuff of the brain and reproduce what itās doing. In other words, reproduce its software on other substrates. So we could take your brain and reproduce it out of beer cans and tennis balls and it would still run just fine. And if we said hey, "How are you feeling in there?" This beer can/tennis ball machine would say "Oh, Iām feeling fine. Itās a little cold, whatever."
Itās also hypothetically a possibility that we could copy your brain and reproduce it in silica, which means on a computer at zeroes and ones, actually run the simulation of your brain. The challenges of reproducing a brain canāt be underestimated. It would take something like a zettabyte of computational capacity to run a simulation of a human brain. And that is the entire computational capacity of our planet right now.
Thereās a lot of debate about whether weāll get to a simulation of the human brain in 50 years or 500 years, but those would probably be the bounds. Itās going to happen somewhere in there. It opens up the whole universe for us because, you know, these meat puppets that we come to the table with arenāt any good for interstellar travel. But if we could, you know, put you on a flash drive or whatever the equivalent of that is a century from now and launch you into outer space and your consciousness could be there, that could get us to other solar systems and other galaxies. We will really be entering an era of post-humanism or trans-humanism at that point.
Now because it seems like a possibility that we could download and simulate ā not in our lifetimes, but soon ā that has opened up a question from many people, which is how would we know if weāre already living in a simulation? Maybe we are the products of a civilization that came a billion years before us and weāre already living in The Matrix. And this is a position that philosophers are taking seriously.
In fact, Rene Descartes, the French philosopher, had a version of this when he asked how would I know if Iām just a brain in a vat and Iām being stimulated by scientists to make me think that Iām hearing, and seeing, and feeling and so on. And his conclusion, like others that have followed him, is that you actually canāt know. Really it would be almost impossible to know because all of this feels real to you. And so Descartesā solution to this was to say you know, I might not ever be able to really know, but thereās somebody whoās asking the question and therefore I exist. Thereās some "I" at the center of all this thatās thinking about this. And so that was a solution for him but it doesnāt solve the bigger question of how would we know if weāre already in the simulation and we may well be.
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/david-eagleman-can-a-computer-simulate-consciousness
Follow Big Think here:
YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom
Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink
Transcript - The big picture in modern neuroscience is that you are the sum total of all the pieces and parts of your brain. Itās a vastly complicated network of neurons, almost 100 billion neurons, each of which has 10,000 connections to its neighbors. So weāre talking a thousand trillion neurons. Itās a system of such complexity that it bankrupts our language. But, fundamentally itās only three pounds and weāve got it cornered and itās right there and itās a physical system.
The computational hypothesis of brain function suggests that the physical wetware isnāt the stuff that matters. Itās what are the algorithms that are running on top of the wetware. In other words: What is the brain actually doing? Whatās it implementing software-wise that matters? Hypothetically we should be able to take the physical stuff of the brain and reproduce what itās doing. In other words, reproduce its software on other substrates. So we could take your brain and reproduce it out of beer cans and tennis balls and it would still run just fine. And if we said hey, "How are you feeling in there?" This beer can/tennis ball machine would say "Oh, Iām feeling fine. Itās a little cold, whatever."
Itās also hypothetically a possibility that we could copy your brain and reproduce it in silica, which means on a computer at zeroes and ones, actually run the simulation of your brain. The challenges of reproducing a brain canāt be underestimated. It would take something like a zettabyte of computational capacity to run a simulation of a human brain. And that is the entire computational capacity of our planet right now.
Thereās a lot of debate about whether weāll get to a simulation of the human brain in 50 years or 500 years, but those would probably be the bounds. Itās going to happen somewhere in there. It opens up the whole universe for us because, you know, these meat puppets that we come to the table with arenāt any good for interstellar travel. But if we could, you know, put you on a flash drive or whatever the equivalent of that is a century from now and launch you into outer space and your consciousness could be there, that could get us to other solar systems and other galaxies. We will really be entering an era of post-humanism or trans-humanism at that point.
Now because it seems like a possibility that we could download and simulate ā not in our lifetimes, but soon ā that has opened up a question from many people, which is how would we know if weāre already living in a simulation? Maybe we are the products of a civilization that came a billion years before us and weāre already living in The Matrix. And this is a position that philosophers are taking seriously.
In fact, Rene Descartes, the French philosopher, had a version of this when he asked how would I know if Iām just a brain in a vat and Iām being stimulated by scientists to make me think that Iām hearing, and seeing, and feeling and so on. And his conclusion, like others that have followed him, is that you actually canāt know. Really it would be almost impossible to know because all of this feels real to you. And so Descartesā solution to this was to say you know, I might not ever be able to really know, but thereās somebody whoās asking the question and therefore I exist. Thereās some "I" at the center of all this thatās thinking about this. And so that was a solution for him but it doesnāt solve the bigger question of how would we know if weāre already in the simulation and we may well be.
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Jun 6, 2018
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