Chapter 1
... Epilepsy – split-brain operation Can detect olfactory stimuli on ipsilateral (same) side, but not on contralateral (opposite) side If split-brain patient is given olfactory stimulus (eg flower odor) to only right nostril, they will say they smell nothing (b/c right side cannot pass info onto left si ...
... Epilepsy – split-brain operation Can detect olfactory stimuli on ipsilateral (same) side, but not on contralateral (opposite) side If split-brain patient is given olfactory stimulus (eg flower odor) to only right nostril, they will say they smell nothing (b/c right side cannot pass info onto left si ...
Volunteerism
... consciousness as they were impacted by sensation. Direct objective form of an object is its shape, position, and intensity of light……(immediate experience)… …which is mediated by personal experience (subjective or mediate)……Psychology studies immediate experience and other science mediate informatio ...
... consciousness as they were impacted by sensation. Direct objective form of an object is its shape, position, and intensity of light……(immediate experience)… …which is mediated by personal experience (subjective or mediate)……Psychology studies immediate experience and other science mediate informatio ...
1994 Consciousness
... which is assured by nonconscious machinery. In spite of its widespread diffusion in cognitive science, this position is quite unreasonable, at least because of evolutionary concerns. Human beings have a first-person (conscious) understanding of their own behavior as being, at least in part, guided b ...
... which is assured by nonconscious machinery. In spite of its widespread diffusion in cognitive science, this position is quite unreasonable, at least because of evolutionary concerns. Human beings have a first-person (conscious) understanding of their own behavior as being, at least in part, guided b ...
Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Consciousness: Continuum or
... having its own intrinsic experiential point of view, and hence an intrinsic moral worth; • i.e. it would deserve consideration for its own sake; • this would be in contrast with purely cognitive systems, even ones with highly complex features – (No one ever suggested that we should care for the well ...
... having its own intrinsic experiential point of view, and hence an intrinsic moral worth; • i.e. it would deserve consideration for its own sake; • this would be in contrast with purely cognitive systems, even ones with highly complex features – (No one ever suggested that we should care for the well ...
Here`s a short piece on AI consciousness for the
... astrobiology, because it is for this reason that carbon, and not silicon, is said to be well-suited for the development of life throughout the universe. ...
... astrobiology, because it is for this reason that carbon, and not silicon, is said to be well-suited for the development of life throughout the universe. ...
Reductionism and the Irreducibility of Consciousness
... * Searle's Second Argument for the Irreducibility of Consciousness: ___ 1. Part of the point of the reduction in the case of heat was to distinguish between the subjective appearance on the one hand and the underlying physical reality on the other. Indeed, it is a general feature of such reductions ...
... * Searle's Second Argument for the Irreducibility of Consciousness: ___ 1. Part of the point of the reduction in the case of heat was to distinguish between the subjective appearance on the one hand and the underlying physical reality on the other. Indeed, it is a general feature of such reductions ...
paper-topics-phl-220 - Barbara Gail Montero
... 1. Does the paper have the basics: descriptive title (5), right length and font size (10), free from excessive careless errors (10)? 20 points 2. Has the student answered each part of the question? 15 points 3. Does the essay reveal an understanding of the topic? Does the essay indicate that the stu ...
... 1. Does the paper have the basics: descriptive title (5), right length and font size (10), free from excessive careless errors (10)? 20 points 2. Has the student answered each part of the question? 15 points 3. Does the essay reveal an understanding of the topic? Does the essay indicate that the stu ...
Print
... Awareness is the principle of the brain. Each and every brain cells has got this awareness in it at all the time till the death of the human beings. This principle can make the cell to be aware and can make it to be alive and alert through out our lifetime. The cells can die without consciousness on ...
... Awareness is the principle of the brain. Each and every brain cells has got this awareness in it at all the time till the death of the human beings. This principle can make the cell to be aware and can make it to be alive and alert through out our lifetime. The cells can die without consciousness on ...
A true science of consciousness explains
... Brain & Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Weesperplein 4, 1018 XA Amsterdam, The Netherlands Cognitive Science Center Amsterdam (CSCA), University of Amsterdam, Plantage Muidergracht 22-24, 1018 TV Amsterdam, The Netherlands ...
... Brain & Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Weesperplein 4, 1018 XA Amsterdam, The Netherlands Cognitive Science Center Amsterdam (CSCA), University of Amsterdam, Plantage Muidergracht 22-24, 1018 TV Amsterdam, The Netherlands ...
Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Consciousness
... having its own intrinsic experiential point of view, and hence an intrinsic moral worth; • i.e. it would deserve consideration for its own sake; • this would be in contrast with purely cognitive systems, even ones with highly complex features – (No one ever suggested that we should care for the well ...
... having its own intrinsic experiential point of view, and hence an intrinsic moral worth; • i.e. it would deserve consideration for its own sake; • this would be in contrast with purely cognitive systems, even ones with highly complex features – (No one ever suggested that we should care for the well ...
Personal Identity - U of L Class Index
... What changes certainly doesn’t stay qualitatively identical, that is, it doesn’t have the same properties at all times. But we also say that we remain one and the same person through our changes. This notion of personal identity (a form of numerical identity) is important to much of what we do. But ...
... What changes certainly doesn’t stay qualitatively identical, that is, it doesn’t have the same properties at all times. But we also say that we remain one and the same person through our changes. This notion of personal identity (a form of numerical identity) is important to much of what we do. But ...
Ch_02 - Computer Science
... In this view, mind and body are made up of the same stuff but have different properties. Like a golf ball and a tennis ball, they act differently (and have different characteristics). Not much gained here. How do atoms give rise to non-physical properties? ...
... In this view, mind and body are made up of the same stuff but have different properties. Like a golf ball and a tennis ball, they act differently (and have different characteristics). Not much gained here. How do atoms give rise to non-physical properties? ...
Artificial intelligence is to be considered a major facet in the frontier
... Artificial intelligence is to be considered a major facet in the frontier of technological innovation. Also and more commonly refereed as AI, artificial intelligence as defined by John McCarthy, a pioneer in the field is “the science and engineering of creating intelligent machines and software syst ...
... Artificial intelligence is to be considered a major facet in the frontier of technological innovation. Also and more commonly refereed as AI, artificial intelligence as defined by John McCarthy, a pioneer in the field is “the science and engineering of creating intelligent machines and software syst ...
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... Gain an understanding of the philosophical problems raised by phenomenal consciousness and the search for its neural correlates Appreciate the force of various responses to the hard problem of consciousness ...
... Gain an understanding of the philosophical problems raised by phenomenal consciousness and the search for its neural correlates Appreciate the force of various responses to the hard problem of consciousness ...
what is a mind? university of cape town
... looking, for example, to what it's connected to, we can ask deeper questions about the mind. We can ask, for example, what is consciousness for? Why do we have consciousness at all? This is a really basic question about, ultimately, what the mind is for, because I'm arguing that consciousness is one ...
... looking, for example, to what it's connected to, we can ask deeper questions about the mind. We can ask, for example, what is consciousness for? Why do we have consciousness at all? This is a really basic question about, ultimately, what the mind is for, because I'm arguing that consciousness is one ...
Altered States of Consciousness
... • Altered States of Consciousness – A mental state that differs noticeably from normal waking consciousness ...
... • Altered States of Consciousness – A mental state that differs noticeably from normal waking consciousness ...
Facing the Hard Question
... subjective feeling of being conscious does not depend on novelty of stimuli but rather on arousal, i.e. processes of attention mediated by the RAS system. Zen monks practicing concentration for many hours a day report a strong feeling of being conscious although they have no novel stimuli that could ...
... subjective feeling of being conscious does not depend on novelty of stimuli but rather on arousal, i.e. processes of attention mediated by the RAS system. Zen monks practicing concentration for many hours a day report a strong feeling of being conscious although they have no novel stimuli that could ...
Folie 1
... other human beings. Our "selves" cannot be understood without taking into account our multiple relationships to others. Even what we call "reality" is principally the result of human communication: the minimum consensus we agree on, while exchanging our experiences with "the outer world". ...
... other human beings. Our "selves" cannot be understood without taking into account our multiple relationships to others. Even what we call "reality" is principally the result of human communication: the minimum consensus we agree on, while exchanging our experiences with "the outer world". ...
Consciousness: The Hard Problem
... matter, could be the seat of human consciousness, the source or ground of our rich and varied phenomenological lives. How could that ‘lump’ be conscious – or, conversely, how could I, as conscious being, be that lump?” (Akins 1993 ...
... matter, could be the seat of human consciousness, the source or ground of our rich and varied phenomenological lives. How could that ‘lump’ be conscious – or, conversely, how could I, as conscious being, be that lump?” (Akins 1993 ...
Response to George Johnson`s Review of The Universe in a Single
... introspectively monitoring their own states of consciousness. This evidence proves that certain neural processes are necessary for producing specific mental events in humans, but not that they are sufficient causes of consciousness, nor does this indicate that consciousness itself is a physical phen ...
... introspectively monitoring their own states of consciousness. This evidence proves that certain neural processes are necessary for producing specific mental events in humans, but not that they are sufficient causes of consciousness, nor does this indicate that consciousness itself is a physical phen ...
1st International Krakow Conference in Cognitive Science, 27
... Volition will focus on the current state of consciousness research, with particular reference to connections with issues pertaining to volitional acts. Principal topics will include: mental acts of volition, perception, memory, qualia, emotions, as well as the neurophysiological and physical foundat ...
... Volition will focus on the current state of consciousness research, with particular reference to connections with issues pertaining to volitional acts. Principal topics will include: mental acts of volition, perception, memory, qualia, emotions, as well as the neurophysiological and physical foundat ...
Philosophy of AI: David Chalmers and the Hard
... choice. After all, if you believe that consciousness is made from something other than physical stuff, it doesn’t make much sense for you to try and create consciousness on a computer—something definitely known to be made only of physical stuff! However, Chalmers is a philosopher who firmly claims t ...
... choice. After all, if you believe that consciousness is made from something other than physical stuff, it doesn’t make much sense for you to try and create consciousness on a computer—something definitely known to be made only of physical stuff! However, Chalmers is a philosopher who firmly claims t ...
Human consciousness is an outcome of a runaway process o
... Bratislava, Slovakia. e-mail: [email protected] Key words: emotional selection, pleasure perception, runaway A theory of the emotional origin of human consciousness is substantiated by the following arguments: (1) Natural life, in contrast to models of artificial life, is chemical. The brain is no ...
... Bratislava, Slovakia. e-mail: [email protected] Key words: emotional selection, pleasure perception, runaway A theory of the emotional origin of human consciousness is substantiated by the following arguments: (1) Natural life, in contrast to models of artificial life, is chemical. The brain is no ...
Consciousness and Awareness
... • Z Torey: Constructing a virtual world of vision, more real, more intense • S Tenberken: Creating an artistic/novelistic world of vision, via synesthesia ...
... • Z Torey: Constructing a virtual world of vision, more real, more intense • S Tenberken: Creating an artistic/novelistic world of vision, via synesthesia ...