Christof Koch: Consciousness | Lex Fridman Podcast #2

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Komentáře • 546

  • @hosinlau
    @hosinlau Před 4 lety +109

    Outline:
    1:10 - Universality of consciousness across species
    3:25 - First aware of consciousness
    5:15 - What is consciousness
    6:05 - Conscious machines & the nature of consciousness
    13:40 - Why do we need consciousness
    15:10 - Measuring consciousness
    19:10 - Panpsychism
    25:20 - Does intelligence require consciousness
    33:00 - Special aspects of human consciousness
    34:10 - Religion
    36:45 - Root of being
    39:05 - Free will
    41:00 - Subconscious
    45:20 - Literature
    47:00 - Timescale of conscious beings
    52:45 - Advice for AI researchers
    55:20 - Future research on claustrum

    • @appletree6741
      @appletree6741 Před 3 lety +7

      thank you

    • @ashishrathi4916
      @ashishrathi4916 Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you

    • @prisar
      @prisar Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for putting the timestamps

    • @miquelrius1694
      @miquelrius1694 Před 2 lety

      The question in min. 31:15 about the role of the fullness or an extensive range of experience is possibly underestimated. And the answer too poor. Humans have approximately 100 neurotransmitter or so. They contribute to a fullness of experience that make them (also animals) sentient beings. To ignore this is possibly to ignore a way of giving an AI the possibity to be sentient. May be this is an essential factor for consciousness. Even if this can be simulated, it may be a step further to consciousness for a machine. The Portuguese scientist Damasio did great research in a related field. And what if scientists create accidentally a sick "psyche" which has the power to reach the terminal of all users.

  • @cupajoesir
    @cupajoesir Před 6 lety +269

    Lex your videos are an oasis in the youtube desert. Thank you so much for sharing all of this awesome content.

  • @erdinn
    @erdinn Před 6 lety +87

    Lex, I can‘t thank you enough for creating high quality content like this. Can we somehow support you?

  • @FlyingRagilein
    @FlyingRagilein Před 6 lety +195

    That's hands down the best interview I saw for a long long time. Thanks for posting!

    • @metafuel
      @metafuel Před 4 lety +6

      I fully agree. Great questions and perfect answers.

    • @ericzong1189
      @ericzong1189 Před 3 lety +1

      same.i can't remember alot of times that i enjoyed a more exciting 60mins than this one!

  • @M6uitar
    @M6uitar Před 5 lety +33

    As a student of psychology and AI this has been amazingly valuable to me. Thank you greatly, Lex!!

    • @Agnostic_Mind
      @Agnostic_Mind Před 3 měsíci

      I really curious how your life going cause your life choices is on trend right now

  • @deeplearningpartnership
    @deeplearningpartnership Před 6 lety +8

    I found this interview very thought-provoking, thank you Lex and Koch.

  • @thomaskellar5148
    @thomaskellar5148 Před 6 lety +22

    I had a definite experience when I was about 8 where I suddenly realized that "I exist". I have remembered that all my life.

    • @stiggystone79
      @stiggystone79 Před 5 lety +3

      Care to elaborate? I'm not sure I've ever had a single experience that I could say was my 'boom, wow I'm a conscious being' moment. Curious what it was for you, if you don't mind. I'm also aware your comment is 11 months old so you may not ever get this but I'll try anyway 🙂

    • @Vraielibertez
      @Vraielibertez Před 4 lety

      i had the luck to experience floating in tank, and that was one of this moment like he explained... of course, i "know" but this is the result of experiences but like in a tanl, never !

    • @Vraielibertez
      @Vraielibertez Před 4 lety

      @@kirilchi me 2 , crap and incredible knowledge on youtube

  • @shaunpriddle3404
    @shaunpriddle3404 Před 3 lety +32

    Christof would make the ultimate "Die Hard" baddie !
    Lex: need a round 2 buddy , this guy is awesome 😀

  • @sprinkdesign7170
    @sprinkdesign7170 Před 6 lety +1

    I SO appreciate Lex Friedman for giving such a solid foundation for the understanding of machine learning (in its many forms), and further, how we might approach AGI from an engineering perspective. His course MIT 6.S099: Artificial General Intelligence, and his complementary course on Self Driving Cars, have enlightened me in so many ways, and I applaud his choice of guest lecturers. I also applaud him for 'speaking and enquiring' outside the discipline.
    Thanks, Lex for bringing this to us. More power to you, MIT and 6.S099, and I look forward to hearing more from you as your career progresses, and who knows, perhaps one day working with you!

  • @Magani79
    @Magani79 Před rokem

    Christof is brilliant. what a great episode, thank you!

  • @runggp
    @runggp Před 4 lety +6

    fantastic interview with very deep and essential questions about consciousness. so enjoy it!

  • @jaakdefour7741
    @jaakdefour7741 Před 2 lety

    I watched a lot of Christof's interviews, this is one of the best, congrats

  • @sascharankin2780
    @sascharankin2780 Před 6 lety +21

    Fantastic. These interviews are a wonderful resource. Thank you so much Lex and MIT. I would love to see John Searle or Eliezer Yudkowsky.

  • @samfrancis1873
    @samfrancis1873 Před 2 lety +2

    Consciousness is an addictive state

  • @Pmc07AyeUrDa
    @Pmc07AyeUrDa Před 4 lety +7

    One of the most intelligent interviews on consciousness I've heard. Thanks Lex for providing these podcasts!

    • @guillermobrand8458
      @guillermobrand8458 Před 3 lety

      consciousness explained, and more facebook.com/guillermo.b.deisler/posts/10222050618470453

  • @bengun6768
    @bengun6768 Před 4 lety

    37.00 in the flow .
    Thank you for sharing all these interesting visitors and your conversations.
    Kept my brain from getting moldy with presumptuous idleness, at least for now.

  • @SomeOnSunday
    @SomeOnSunday Před 2 lety

    These conversations are so inspiring. Thank you for making the MIT experience so accessible. I've never heard an explanation of dreaming like 11.46secs. Obviously only one of Christof's incredible insights. Wow!

  • @LIFEID.health
    @LIFEID.health Před 2 lety +4

    Lex. I work 12 hours a day .... and you have now occupied 2 more hours of my day the past 2 weeks with these damn pod casts of yours :) All the best,

    • @boouyayme
      @boouyayme Před 2 lety +3

      8 hours of my day!!! I just started from podcast #1 because I can’t wait for the new ones

  • @Cm95080
    @Cm95080 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for your beautiful energy. ❤

  • @Ferrari76
    @Ferrari76 Před 3 lety +5

    Thanks for all of these videos! I never wanted to study when i was young. Now i am learning a lot

  • @ManInTheBigHat
    @ManInTheBigHat Před 5 lety

    This interview series is great.

  • @mephistosmistress6384
    @mephistosmistress6384 Před 3 lety +5

    I found about you a few days ago when I saw the Whitney Cummings podcast. Having just finished my studies in IT, like a lot of people my age, I figured that I have no clue where I am and what I want to do. I want to know everything and yet I don't know what but I do know that I don't know anything which made me tap in one place. You pushed my back a bit with these podcasts and considering the lack of motivation and the mental state that I was before I found this it seems that you have kind of pushed me in a direction of what seems interesting to me and what I would like to know more about. I just wanted to thank you for that and I hope you know how much people appreciate what you do. So, yeah, thanks. I don't do emotional comments often and English is my second language so sorry about possible mistakes.

  • @michaelsage6649
    @michaelsage6649 Před 2 lety

    Two of my favorite thinkers. Great show guys!

  • @prestoX
    @prestoX Před 4 lety +1

    One of the most brilliant talks in Lex's Podacast.

  • @hellofriend8446
    @hellofriend8446 Před 3 lety +6

    Having recently taken a relatively deep dive into Vedanta, specifically the Advaita tradition, much of the first half--indeed, it is all I've watched thus far--of this conversation can be answered according to the principles found there, namely that consciousness is experience itself, the foundation of all being.

    • @hellofriend8446
      @hellofriend8446 Před 3 lety

      Commenting on my own comment--a pathway leading to Hell, perhaps 🙏
      However, Koch gives almost the absolute rationale for Advaita, when stating (at ~37:00) that there seems to be these two "things," namely the physical and consciousness, but that the physical is only experienced in--or reveals itself of--the awareness of consciousness.
      Namaste 🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @ElEstudioNomade
      @ElEstudioNomade Před 2 lety

      @@hellofriend8446 I've been following Francis Lucille. This is great, I would love him interviewed by Lex.

  • @PeteNalty63
    @PeteNalty63 Před 3 lety +2

    This episode was excellent!

  • @yossimolcho841
    @yossimolcho841 Před 5 lety +1

    Lex your channel is amazing, thank you.

  • @sandrarodgera
    @sandrarodgera Před rokem +1

    I love listening to your voice . And you ask really good questions.

  • @finsfann2
    @finsfann2 Před 5 lety +6

    I will definitely be coming back to listen to this again in the future. He seems like an incredibly fascinating and brilliant person. Thanks for the content, Lex.

    • @kirstinstrand6292
      @kirstinstrand6292 Před 3 lety

      He may be brilliant, but he is irritating in his hyperactive presentation.

  • @danielbigham
    @danielbigham Před 5 lety +4

    It's so rare that I get to listen to a human speak that is so insightful into consciousness -- many intelligent people seem to want to sweep it under the carpet and pretend it doesn't exist, etc. Really enjoyed listening to Christof.

  • @Asif-ii9dz
    @Asif-ii9dz Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Lex for another great video and what an amazing guest.

  • @danieljdick
    @danieljdick Před 6 lety +1

    I love this interview. When Lex mentioned "bug vs feature", the first thing I thought is that these presume an intention, and I found that interesting. It begs the question regarding the nature of the "intender".

  • @Hexanitrobenzene
    @Hexanitrobenzene Před 3 lety +3

    Professor Koch has a distinct manner of speaking which is reminiscent of speaking while angry. And yet, Lex managed to get a smile out of him at 44:15 :)

  • @astroboy01
    @astroboy01 Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much ... I really think that talking about these deep topics as well as God, religion and all other stuff makes a great and rich discussion ...
    Awesome interview !

  • @williamramseyer9121
    @williamramseyer9121 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic interview! I especially loved the questions and answers about the place of literature in the study of science.

  • @huckelberryfizzle
    @huckelberryfizzle Před 2 lety +2

    Fantastic podcast. I had to double check my playback speed setting, I thought it was set at 1.25x

  • @davidgrim9853
    @davidgrim9853 Před 2 lety

    Love this conversation! ❤️

  • @shagablabas
    @shagablabas Před 6 lety +3

    Awesome content, thank you very much!

  • @Lagruell
    @Lagruell Před 6 lety

    Amazing interview, quite inspiring too !

  • @MrSharkman19
    @MrSharkman19 Před 4 lety +4

    Excellent interview. His accent was a bonus

  • @GMC2001
    @GMC2001 Před 6 lety

    Amazing Lex, thank you

  • @GodsCommunity
    @GodsCommunity Před 6 lety +1

    Blessings for All.
    💭

  • @franklulatowskijr.6974
    @franklulatowskijr.6974 Před 10 měsíci

    Can’t believe I just came across this interview. I read The Quest For Consciousness not long after it came out. Needless to say, Koch became out of my heroes.

  • @sebastianavalos2055
    @sebastianavalos2055 Před 6 lety

    Many many thanks Lex!

  • @stmandl
    @stmandl Před 5 lety

    Thanks for sharing this.

  • @Arjun-jt7yb
    @Arjun-jt7yb Před 6 lety +4

    awesome knowledgeable talk.

  • @MrRobikshrestha
    @MrRobikshrestha Před 6 lety +109

    Qn: What discipline should I take on? Is it neuroscience, cognitive science, philosophy, computer science?
    Ans: YES :-)

    • @MrRobikshrestha
      @MrRobikshrestha Před 6 lety +2

      With r That's impressive. How did you manage to study all of those aspects? And what about the mystical experiences he was talking about?

    • @johndoe-zk7pn
      @johndoe-zk7pn Před 6 lety +5

      no one asked u.
      go back to the woodwork u pompous troll.

    • @Christian-mn8dh
      @Christian-mn8dh Před 5 lety +1

      Robik Shrestha research what interests you in all the different fields.

    • @prenuptials5925
      @prenuptials5925 Před 4 lety +1

      @@MrRobikshrestha Right now I'm studying all those listed. How? A lot of time, and borderline crazy determination.

    • @prenuptials5925
      @prenuptials5925 Před 4 lety

      @@honestexpression6393 I guess either. University's overrated, you can take tons of free courses or do MIT OCW

  • @aleksar6755
    @aleksar6755 Před 4 lety

    What an amazing conversation

  • @elsawiegers1093
    @elsawiegers1093 Před 5 měsíci

    you've come a long way, looking back to this one! keep going!!

  • @raigohar
    @raigohar Před 2 lety

    beautiful explanation of Consciousness

  • @danielmagner7932
    @danielmagner7932 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for doing this Lex, you are a great interviewer! I love this format. To really explore human consciousness it is useful to have (subjective) experience with non-ordinary states. I highly recommend checking out the book Stealing Fire and trying some of the techniques/technologies contained within e.g. mindfulness meditation, sensory deprivation, holotropic breathwork, psychedelics, and brainwave entrainment.

  • @amandamorriss3658
    @amandamorriss3658 Před 10 měsíci

    5 years down the road and those captions look antedeluvian!!

  • @hazelcheetham620
    @hazelcheetham620 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks so much.How lucky we are,

  • @migzleon4047
    @migzleon4047 Před 4 lety

    Emergence..!!! Conciousness will find the way...

  • @digitalzoul57
    @digitalzoul57 Před 2 lety

    I think your channel is one the most useful channels in the entire youtube

  • @GodofStories
    @GodofStories Před rokem +2

    wow the 2nd pod ever!

  • @karinamendoza7787
    @karinamendoza7787 Před 4 lety

    Best Christof Koch interview - Have read his books, just finished his latest one! All great! May I suggest a chat with Ed Boyden?

  • @chopsuey9617
    @chopsuey9617 Před 2 lety +2

    You set a very high bar back in 2018, Lex!

  • @metafuel
    @metafuel Před 4 lety

    Brilliant discussion.

  • @bensibree-paul7289
    @bensibree-paul7289 Před 6 lety +8

    Awesome. It's a real privilege to be able to hear the thoughts from so many great minds, thanks very much.

  • @SabreenSyeed
    @SabreenSyeed Před 7 měsíci

    This is such an important topic. Koch and Tononi's Integrated Information Theory is such a fascinating idea. Thanks for this interview

  • @t_share8032
    @t_share8032 Před rokem

    Thank you kindly.

  • @AllBecomesGood
    @AllBecomesGood Před 4 lety

    This was a very interesting one!

  • @Dazzer1234567
    @Dazzer1234567 Před 4 lety +2

    Great interview!.... By the way, don't put tbe guest in front of a large window, the camera will expose for the window and you get your guest in silhouette!..... Or manually expose the camera to the guest...

  • @humbertosequeira1536
    @humbertosequeira1536 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Cristof and Lex for such an interesting interview, 4 years later it is still very relevant. I think humanity needs to develop AI but adding the empathy piece as well as having a better idea of how our brain works.

  • @jammystraub488
    @jammystraub488 Před 6 lety +2

    That was excellent.

  • @brandomiranda6703
    @brandomiranda6703 Před 6 lety +41

    Dont forget this is professor Poggio’s first student! Demis Hasabis is also Professor Poggio’s student. Perhaps you should invite prof Poggio ;) Director of CBMM MIT

    • @erdinn
      @erdinn Před 6 lety +2

      Brando Miranda interesting!

  • @weizili7264
    @weizili7264 Před 6 lety

    The best video I enjoyed during this course. In the future, how about inviting a philosopher to talk about such a topic?

  • @sa5cha63
    @sa5cha63 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Its an incredibly feeling watching this beautiful interview now in 2023 with all the advantage in the field of AI like ChatGPT, Bard and others 😅

  • @sharonhearne5014
    @sharonhearne5014 Před 2 lety +2

    I love the question about reading literature: I could read before kindergarten and my mother belonged to a monthly book club which offered mostly fictional books such as many famous classics. I would plead to read a selection after she had read it and she allowed me to read those selections. These novels presented fictional lives of people in vast diversity and whereas I did not fully understand sexual aspects clearly one of the most striking aspects I discovered was all the various religions, or lifestyles or aspects such as wealth vs poverty. By the time I began to be raised in my family’s strict fundamentalist Christian lifestyle my views of that special view of Christianity had already been compromised by my already generalized view of the variety of world-wide religious practices and human lifestyles.

  • @ektorpapadimitriou942
    @ektorpapadimitriou942 Před 4 lety +1

    You deserve more views, a lot more

  • @ricomajestic
    @ricomajestic Před 2 lety

    This guy is very good and quite passionate about his work too. Very interesting!

  • @viewer7200
    @viewer7200 Před 4 lety +3

    Whenever I hear German accent, I automatically consider this person to be very intelligent.

    • @timmbrockmann959
      @timmbrockmann959 Před 4 lety +1

      I´m german and would actually find it hard to speak with such a strong german accent ;)

    • @viewer7200
      @viewer7200 Před 4 lety

      @@timmbrockmann959 That is 'German humour' which is another story.

  • @paulzerby5736
    @paulzerby5736 Před 4 lety +1

    Marvelous subject, marvelous man! I stumbled onto the 18.06 open course a few years back; Professor Strang really opens the subject up to the average math fan. Thanks for interviewing him.

  • @zrmsraggot
    @zrmsraggot Před 4 lety

    Such a good question at 25:35 !

  • @francescos7361
    @francescos7361 Před 2 lety

    Love you Lex

  • @brendenhamilton
    @brendenhamilton Před 5 lety +1

    Another great interview. Keep up the great work. I love this moment 38:28 dropping gems - so that's not helpful? no. Love this.

  • @RhythmJunkie
    @RhythmJunkie Před 3 lety

    Brilliant! 💖

  • @cmag8924
    @cmag8924 Před 5 lety +2

    There are a couple of applied scientist I would really like to see/listen interviewed by you. Some of them like to stay outside of public view, but your profile and track record of pleasing conversations might convince them:
    - Edward Thorpe
    - Margaret Hamilton
    - Jim Simons
    Keep up th egood work!

  • @DistructiveElements
    @DistructiveElements Před 4 lety +5

    27:09 Damn it man. You are breaking my mind

    • @E1N101
      @E1N101 Před 4 lety +1

      Yea. So fundamental and often overlooked these days.

    • @johnr3936
      @johnr3936 Před 4 lety +1

      He insists this but lacked a good explanation as to why. He assumes that we must be real and anything that isn't us is not.

  • @Lady-in-Red
    @Lady-in-Red Před rokem

    Book list for this Christof Koch podcast. Thanks for asking about aliens immediately :)
    - The Quest for Consciousness: A Neurobiological Approach by Christof Koch
    - Consciousness: Confessions of a Romantic Reductionist by Christof Koch
    - The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby
    - The Black Cloud by Colin Swatridge and Fred Hoyle
    - Solaris by Stanisław Lem
    - The Invicible by Stanisław Lem

  • @lzszl
    @lzszl Před 4 lety +3

    This interview really reminded me of John Vervaeke's series on consciousness. It would be very interesting to see you interview him! He works at the University of Toronto, not sure if you or he can make the trip, but a Skype call would suffice my thirsty mind. Best regards

  • @cmag8924
    @cmag8924 Před 5 lety

    Adding D.E. Shaw to the wish list :)

  • @Jaroen66
    @Jaroen66 Před 6 lety +1

    Great series and awesome that you have Chrstof Koch in this series! I'd like to see Jeff Hinton as well; he has had some great ideas regarding approaches to AI that are inspired by the function of the brain (capsule networks etc.)

  • @briandecker8403
    @briandecker8403 Před 6 lety

    Federico Faggin would be a great addition to your course - on several levels.

  • @GedLi784
    @GedLi784 Před 6 lety

    Suddenly I like Mr. Koch

  • @shredsheets5477
    @shredsheets5477 Před 4 lety

    Lost Sock Theory by Christof Koch. Brilliant!

  • @yonifriedman1216
    @yonifriedman1216 Před 5 lety +9

    Interview Douglas Hofstadter or Demis Hassabis, please!!

  • @pisoiorfan
    @pisoiorfan Před 6 lety +14

    Regarding the black hole simulation argument.. Airplane "simulates" birds and actually flies. Robotic animal "simulates" both a dog and a human hand. Walks around, opens doors and grabs beer cans. There has to be a distinction between a purely virtual simulation and functional replication. In case of consciousness we won't be able to tell as long as we can't define/detect/describe consciousness in general without referencing our own subjective experience. ..
    And let's not forget the entire conscious experience as we perceive it is not actually the "real thing" but a virtuality "simulated" in the brain.

    • @jeremycripe934
      @jeremycripe934 Před 6 lety

      You're talking about outwards behavior rather than internal experience. An airplane can fly but it doesn't have any of the internal experience of a bird whose consciousness is stimulated to fly when it sees a tasty worm or an oncoming car or hears a mating call.

    • @M6uitar
      @M6uitar Před 5 lety +1

      The thing is, simulated black hole has simulated gravity... seems pretty obvious. So we have causal powers in our tiniverse, and so on

    • @lzszl
      @lzszl Před 4 lety

      Simulates or emulates? Simulation is a copy of the system, by means of a conceptual model, emulation is a functional equivalent of the system. You are not flying when playing flight simulator x, but an airplane does fly as birds do.

    • @lzszl
      @lzszl Před 4 lety

      And as for our conscious experience, our brains only simulate it in sleep, when we wake it generates a coherent stream, negotiated by our experiences. Thus two people can see differently looking at the same thing. However, the underlying principles remain the same, with the exceptions of physiologically aberrant cases.

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL Před 3 lety

      @@jeremycripe934 There is no internal experience (or external) because experience is an abstract notion thus without material existence or location. Are you perhaps referring to the substrate?
      You assume a bird is conscious but can't know that for a fact (and when Thomas Nagel assumes a bat is conscious he makes the same mistake).
      Bat or bird, it's unlikely they are what we mean by conscious.
      They have no language, no metaphors, no culture and no civilization to navigate.
      What need have they to be conscious?
      Do we think that instinct is a kind of conscious?
      A flying robot could do what they do.
      No insult to birds or bats intended.
      And we eat them.
      Terrible to be eaten conscious.

  • @ronniedarko8830
    @ronniedarko8830 Před 5 lety +1

    This is the only youtube-channel that makes me feel stupid. I love it.

  • @SpazEternal
    @SpazEternal Před rokem +1

    I started your podcast at Elon lol. So riveting now gonna watch all your podcasts, here I am at 2 now so far. Thx

  • @zumulko
    @zumulko Před 5 lety +8

    On my way to uni. Same path every day. But that morning I woke up (I am lucid dreamer) with a strong memory of somebody from my distant past whom I know very well (I am a single child who enjoyed imaginative friend company).
    One by one I excluded my childhood friends who didn't match the memory in this or that detail.
    I was puzzled: Who else am I missing?
    Until it hit me: I was trying to remember myself.

    • @AllBecomesGood
      @AllBecomesGood Před 4 lety

      like you looked at yourself from the eyes of the imaginative friend? so that you would've been both yourself & the imaginative friend? I'm struggling a bit to understand the remembering yourself bit. I'm trying to think for myself, but there's really a lack of memory for, not like I wasn't conscious in the past, but I just dont remember a lot about being a kid

  • @robertorodrigomasia
    @robertorodrigomasia Před 3 lety +1

    I´m going introduce an idea that I haven´t heard yet from all the brilliant people that speaks in Lex Podcast. This is about the nature of conciousness. For me the truly nature of what is commonly understood as conciousness is memory. Memory + complex language make us able to talk with others and with ourself is what give us humans the feeling or being "ME" . My intelligence serve the aim of my needs and desires. This is clear. But it is the "me" that remembers what I did yesterday, what I like and what I don´t like, what I want to do (a projection here can be understood as "remembering the future"), this rememberer/ projecterer "me" who settles the base for the sense of self awareness

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL Před 2 lety

      Yes! By Jove I think you've got it!
      It is my self that is conscious.
      I can't imagine something other that could possibly be conscious,
      unless that something is also a self.
      Seven months have passed since you submitted your comment.
      Have you elaborated the idea?
      Do you find your self like me, more convinced than ever?

  • @lewisb8634
    @lewisb8634 Před 6 lety +9

    Thanks for uploading as always Lex, this content is fantastic. I'm very interested in the point about a complete, ideal, perfect simulation of the human brain NOT being conscious. Stepping back (nearly as far as possible) isn't consciousness a function of the arrangement of the atoms in this finite volume we call a skull? It't not in the air, it's not stored in a device we keep safe at home, surely our consciousness - whatever it is - exists (however it exists etc) inside our heads. By extension, wouldn't a perfect simulation of a human brain, complete with artificial neurons that interact just like those in a human brain, also experience consciousness. Isn't it an emergent property of the interactions between neurons? If not, in the physical world that we live in, what could it be? Thanks again Lex!

    • @jonyxy777
      @jonyxy777 Před 6 lety +2

      consciousness is fundamental and not caused by the brain, as demonstrated by quantum physics. particles - which the brain is composed of - don't even exist before conscious observation. look up the delayed choice quantum eraser experiment for evidence of that. the brain accompanies the working of fundamental consciousness, but does not create it, in the same way a CD encodes the music, but isn't the music, or a TV set receives a broadcast, but isn't the broadcast.

    • @lewisb8634
      @lewisb8634 Před 6 lety +1

      But we live in a physical world? How can it not be caused by the brain? I'm still amazed by this idea!

    • @jonyxy777
      @jonyxy777 Před 6 lety +2

      we don't live in a physical world, we live in a virtual reality, as many scientists are now coming to say, that's computed by consciousness/spirit/god. there's no real objective things in real space-time, it's an experience in consciousness made of consciousness, which is created by conscious observation, as shown by quantum physics.
      since you are consciousness, your experience of the world is actually you, modulated according to information you receive every planck time from the consciousness server, like the movie playing in a cinema is modulated light according to information, the film reel.
      the brain is an image/graphical representation of information processing going on in consciousness, like a video game is an image of information processing going on in the computer's cpu.
      you may wish to check out the simulation hypothesis and tom campbell on this :)

    • @brujua7
      @brujua7 Před 4 lety

      I interpret what he is saying as the follow: The lack of casual power comes from the fact that it would be a simulation done by software on top of silicon gates, on the other hand if it is done with artificial neurons in which matter interacts just like in our brains then its level of integrated information would mean consciousness. The Integrated Information Theory predicts very low level of integrated information on silicon gates arrangements, just like it predicts low level of integrated information on the Cerebellum (contrasting well with real life where the Cerebellum despite having almost %80 of all neurons doesn't seem to contribute much to consciousness experience)
      So, if in your experiment matter interacts just like in our brain is not really a simulation, it is the actual thing.
      Like in the example of the simulation of the black hole, the computer does not create similar forces in the world because matter is not interacting like in a real black hole. I don't know if I made myself clear because English is no my first language.

  • @yjeeeek
    @yjeeeek Před 5 lety

    One of the best conversations on topic I've ever heard. Please bring more neuroscientists into AI research, our discourse became so narrow and simplistic, it's almost humiliating compared to scale of technological advances in the field.

  • @austinunterbrink9805
    @austinunterbrink9805 Před 3 lety

    Awesome.

  • @Felipe-zl1rj
    @Felipe-zl1rj Před 6 lety

    So fucking cool. Watched it all. Enjoyed every second.

  • @TylerHNothing
    @TylerHNothing Před 4 lety +1

    "Simulating consciousness is not the same as a conscious experience"
    -Okay, let's define what it means to experience something - loosely:
    1. Data from the environment can be processed and stored in the brain
    2. The information that gets processed at a given time can be combined with prior knowledge to make inferences
    What if machines are invented to experience something? Could they then be intelligent / conscious?

    • @douadouard1009
      @douadouard1009 Před 4 lety

      What you just defined is intelligence, not consciousnnes

  • @lasredchris
    @lasredchris Před 4 lety +1

    Agi - empathetic response
    Hypothalamus - pleasure
    Buddha - minimize suffering
    Feature or bug?

  • @iniciativaxxi2993
    @iniciativaxxi2993 Před 4 lety +1

    I suggest an interview with Bernhard Scholkopf