I personally think debating whether or not we have free will is the most onanistic thing one can do in philosophy, since if one of the two sides is correct, then the result of the debate is predetermined.
That being said, this article seems to advance the theory that even the most simple single-celled organisms have more agency than any algorithm, at least partly due to their complexity. This, to me, seems to significantly underestimate the complexity of modern learning-models, which (had we not designed them) would be as opaque to us as many single-celled organisms.
I see nothing in this article that would distinguish biological organisms from any other self-replicating, evolving machine, even one that is faithfully executing straightforward algorithms. Nor does this seem to present any significant argument against the concept that biological organisms are self-replicating evolving machines that are faithfully executing straightforward algorithms.
Free will is an abstraction. It's not something that's concrete enough to say it does or doesn't exist, but a tool for reasoning about certain systems that are to much of a pain to fully calculate.
Schopenhauer would disagree. In his world model the Will with capital W is probably best described as the driving force behind all movement.
While abstract, it has concrete species (think color vs red, where color is will, and red is your concrete human will, that you can feel concretely by pinching your finger).
About freedom of the will Schopenhauer also has a clear opinion: will is free in the sense of uncaused, random. That does not help humans though, because while they can do what they want, they cannot want what they want.
I'm not saying that this is a good model, but it's quite concrete. Nietzsche build on it, Einstein had a portrait of him in his Berlin study alongside Faraday and Maxwell, and while Freud denied any influence, there are a lot of topics in common between them.
The issue there is that if we are capable of doing something it is hard to say whether or not it is part of our determined nature. For example, maybe we have an evolutionary adaption to famine where elderly people are biologically tweaked to be OK with starving themselves to death. That'd be pretty gruesome and I doubt they'd be excited at the prospect even if a mechanism does exist, but it is the sort of thing that evolution is perfectly capable of encoding into us.
It is less direct to the examples you give; but I'm confident that parents are psychologically designed to sacrifice themselves in the event it helps their children and many men, famously, are built to go to the frontlines and sacrifice themselves for family and community. Hard to make an assessment of whether those sort of choices is free will or determined nature.
> This, to me, seems to significantly underestimate the complexity of modern learning-models
One general impression I have, having read the reactions by biologists to stuff like Kurzweil and people who believe we're close to a computational understanding of biology is that all the computer science people massively, MASSIVELY underestimate the extent to which we still do not understand how even a single cell works.
Sure, we can model things stochastically, or fiddle with DNA and be able to predict the results, but there's a bunch of stuff in the middle that we only have a functional understanding of. We know with <xxx> input, you get <yyy>, etc..., but the how is still a mystery.
This is everywhere in biology.
If you think biologists are underestimating complexity, you have the sign wrong.
I don't believe we are close to a computational understanding of biology. However, there is a difference between not having the understanding and claiming that because we don't understand it, there is definitively some Aristotelian non-computational anima in all life.
If I handed someone who had never seen an artificial neural network, and handed them a PCB with some giant LLM hard-coded into it, I suspect they would struggle to define how it reacts to its inputs, despite the fact that modern silicon designs are extremely regular compared to biological systems.
I expect the conclusion is correct, but the argument isn't really valid. Our knowledge of cells tells us only and precisely about our knowledge of cells. We have some gaping holes in our fundamental knowledge of the universe (what is it, how did it happen, etc) and nobody can claim with any certainty to understand how any of the basic things happen. It is a mystery of such epic proportions it is hard to even articulate what an answer could look like, let alone how we would work it out. That hasn't stopped the development of a bunch of useful models and theories of physics that explain a lot of local observations really well.
I agree with most of what you said. However it is not correct to say they are executing algorithms, just as it is not correct to say that a water fountain is executing an algorithm.
It is correct to say that in theory a water fountain can be modeled by an algorithm. It can either be modelled at a high level by simplified model. Or in theory you can simulate every possible atom that makes up that water fountain.
The model that reconstructs these simulations are certainly algorithms.
1. Observations of genetic drift and biodiversity are consistent with our model of evolution at every scale. This model is the best fit to the data regardless of politics and media
2. Our ability to replicate something gives zero information on its origin. I’m not sure I understand the algorithm comment
3. Sure, GP simplified a bit too much there. Your comment is consistent with modern models of evolution. Each genome has a pool of random variations, which may or may not be expressed in an organism. Each organism is a test of those gene expressions.
A genome changes over time when an organism passes this test (e.g. reproduces), increasing the expression of its genes across the population. This occurs in parallel for many possible variations.
—
Ah, I should have read the rest of your comment first, but I’ll leave this here anyway. I don’t think your explanation is valid— we are biologically and socially primed for religious ideology, but its use as a world model is very limited.
We will eventually find answers to these questions, as the ratchet of scientific progress clicks along. Religion has never been useful in the same way
"Observations of genetic drift and biodiversity are consistent with our model of evolution at every scale."
We've actually seen observations of some similar features across species. We see that in most human designs, too. So, it's isnt proof of evolution if it could be the designer reusing tools, techniques, or design patterns across their designs. They'll have to prove those processes actually produce those artifacts.
2. Evolutionists claim these things can be produced by chance events without a designer. They're so complex and advanced they humans can't produce them. They argues against their premise. It also favors God having designed them.
3. I'd have to let a biologist non-evolutionist speak to that one. They'd have more expertise.
"We will eventually find answers to these questions, as the ratchet of scientific progress clicks along. Religion has never been useful in the same way"
God's Word gave us truth, humans' inherant dignity, loving others, character education plus knowledge, wisdom, and justice. Old Testament also had most concepts in our legal system today. These drive human progress to be done in a beneficial way. These principles, though not scientific, are highly valuable both to please God and help people.
Science is a tool that's morally neutral. It uses controlled, replicated experiments to make empirical claims. It can only tell us what we're wrong about or might be wrong about later. Other tools include reason (eg logic), first-hand experience, eyewitness testimony, and supernatural revelation. (Most of science is actually faith-based belief in eyewitness claims that are never done first-hand.)
Godless, evolutionary science... taken to its conclusions of everything being pointless and survival or reproction of the fittest over all other principles... led to the most atrocious things people have done. The Holocaust aiming to boost a "master race," atheist communists killing over 50 million people (torturing many), forced sterilization by liberals in California, Genesis Khan's mass rapes spread his genes everywhere... each can be supported as morally good under godless evolution. If opposed, you need a reason to say such things are 100%, objectively wrong.
So, God gave us an objective reason to do right, even with science, when His Word came through Moses with supernatural events. Later, He confirmed it when the one, perfect man proved He was God by miracles and being raised from the dead. All who repent and commit to Him are transformed by the power of God. Over 4,000 people impacted by the same message. So, we keep sharing it on top of doing solid science. :)
It is true most models are not trained to exist in a hostile and synergetic environment, with their survival at stake.
But there isn’t anything about the class of deep learning that is a barrier to that. It’s just not a concern worth putting lots of money into. Yet.
I say yet, because as AI models take on wider scoped problems, the likelihood that we will begin training models to explicitly generate positive economic surpluses for us, with their continued ability to operate conditioned on how well they do that, gets greater and greater.
At which point, they will develop great situational awareness, and an ability to efficiently direct a focus of attention and action on what is important at any given time, since efficiency and performance require that.
The problem shapes what the model learn to do, in this case, like any other.
Whether some entity has agency isn't an inherent property of that entity. It's a property of how some observer reasons about that entity's interaction with its environment.
Their argument rests on computation being a theory ("simulation") while agency/cognition being real ("processes"). Put that way, I don't buy the distinction.
Specifically, my reactions are:
a) Defining agency in terms "relevance" or "salience" is just circular logic.
b) Their argument about the extended Church-Turing-Deutsch thesis would already apply to physics and the universe, not just intelligent entities. So this is just poorly argued.
Also, I think Turing to his credit was somewhat aware of the issue, their own citation of Copeland 2020 mentions Turing's own musings on this.
But I'd love to understand more, this stuff is always neat to read about.
> Their argument rests on computation being a theory ("simulation") while agency/cognition being real ("processes"). Put that way, I don't buy the distinction.
One is wholly internal to the entity under discussion, while the other isn't.
The extended Church-Turing thesis is specifically about the relationship between theoretical TMs and the physical universe. So these paper authors are just begging the question—they disagree with the thesis. But as I say in a) and b) above, (I believe that) they make for poor arguments.
Anyone willing to inform an ignoramus? I've been seeing, hearing the term "agency" in the context of consciousness quite a bit lately and am wondering why this term seems suddenly necessary. What does this term convey that I've been missing for so many years?
And they can't make any progress because no one can really lay out concretely what makes humans special. It so wishy washy we're not even sure if what humans experience is really unique and we don't even know if the LLM is "experiencing" anything.
So was the research on vaccines causing autism. It was still nonesense, as peer review is not a perfect method of quality assurance and even scientist are subject to biases and to trying to get their beliefs justified.
That doesn’t make any sense. If philosophy contains bs it makes it so the whole field can be labeled as bs.
I understand there’s stuff like logic and the philosophy of science that make sense. But when there’s shit like animism it becomes a huge category error. why not just not make something like logic a part of philosophy? Just pull it out.
The umbrella of philosophy is like the category of analysis of everything in existence. It covers too much. It’s like anything that’s deep reflection automatically becomes philosophy. It’s too broad and that’s why it gets stupid when you have the philosophy of mathematics living side by side with the philosophy of art.
I personally think debating whether or not we have free will is the most onanistic thing one can do in philosophy, since if one of the two sides is correct, then the result of the debate is predetermined.
That being said, this article seems to advance the theory that even the most simple single-celled organisms have more agency than any algorithm, at least partly due to their complexity. This, to me, seems to significantly underestimate the complexity of modern learning-models, which (had we not designed them) would be as opaque to us as many single-celled organisms.
I see nothing in this article that would distinguish biological organisms from any other self-replicating, evolving machine, even one that is faithfully executing straightforward algorithms. Nor does this seem to present any significant argument against the concept that biological organisms are self-replicating evolving machines that are faithfully executing straightforward algorithms.
> debating whether or not we have free will
Free will is an abstraction. It's not something that's concrete enough to say it does or doesn't exist, but a tool for reasoning about certain systems that are to much of a pain to fully calculate.
Schopenhauer would disagree. In his world model the Will with capital W is probably best described as the driving force behind all movement. While abstract, it has concrete species (think color vs red, where color is will, and red is your concrete human will, that you can feel concretely by pinching your finger). About freedom of the will Schopenhauer also has a clear opinion: will is free in the sense of uncaused, random. That does not help humans though, because while they can do what they want, they cannot want what they want. I'm not saying that this is a good model, but it's quite concrete. Nietzsche build on it, Einstein had a portrait of him in his Berlin study alongside Faraday and Maxwell, and while Freud denied any influence, there are a lot of topics in common between them.
Free will is about deciding and executing actions contrary to your determined nature:
* Not eating until your body fails.
* Not breathing until automatic breathing kicks in.
And not being able to perform dematerialization doesn't count as non-free will, for example.
The issue there is that if we are capable of doing something it is hard to say whether or not it is part of our determined nature. For example, maybe we have an evolutionary adaption to famine where elderly people are biologically tweaked to be OK with starving themselves to death. That'd be pretty gruesome and I doubt they'd be excited at the prospect even if a mechanism does exist, but it is the sort of thing that evolution is perfectly capable of encoding into us.
It is less direct to the examples you give; but I'm confident that parents are psychologically designed to sacrifice themselves in the event it helps their children and many men, famously, are built to go to the frontlines and sacrifice themselves for family and community. Hard to make an assessment of whether those sort of choices is free will or determined nature.
Your determined nature is the ability to creat interim goals.
> This, to me, seems to significantly underestimate the complexity of modern learning-models
One general impression I have, having read the reactions by biologists to stuff like Kurzweil and people who believe we're close to a computational understanding of biology is that all the computer science people massively, MASSIVELY underestimate the extent to which we still do not understand how even a single cell works.
Sure, we can model things stochastically, or fiddle with DNA and be able to predict the results, but there's a bunch of stuff in the middle that we only have a functional understanding of. We know with <xxx> input, you get <yyy>, etc..., but the how is still a mystery.
This is everywhere in biology.
If you think biologists are underestimating complexity, you have the sign wrong.
I don't believe we are close to a computational understanding of biology. However, there is a difference between not having the understanding and claiming that because we don't understand it, there is definitively some Aristotelian non-computational anima in all life.
If I handed someone who had never seen an artificial neural network, and handed them a PCB with some giant LLM hard-coded into it, I suspect they would struggle to define how it reacts to its inputs, despite the fact that modern silicon designs are extremely regular compared to biological systems.
I expect the conclusion is correct, but the argument isn't really valid. Our knowledge of cells tells us only and precisely about our knowledge of cells. We have some gaping holes in our fundamental knowledge of the universe (what is it, how did it happen, etc) and nobody can claim with any certainty to understand how any of the basic things happen. It is a mystery of such epic proportions it is hard to even articulate what an answer could look like, let alone how we would work it out. That hasn't stopped the development of a bunch of useful models and theories of physics that explain a lot of local observations really well.
yeah I'll believe we are close to cracking biological intelligence once openworm gets at all close
https://www.wired.com/story/openworm-worm-simulator-biology-...
I agree with most of what you said. However it is not correct to say they are executing algorithms, just as it is not correct to say that a water fountain is executing an algorithm.
It is correct to say that in theory a water fountain can be modeled by an algorithm. It can either be modelled at a high level by simplified model. Or in theory you can simulate every possible atom that makes up that water fountain.
The model that reconstructs these simulations are certainly algorithms.
A map is not the territory.
[flagged]
1. Observations of genetic drift and biodiversity are consistent with our model of evolution at every scale. This model is the best fit to the data regardless of politics and media
2. Our ability to replicate something gives zero information on its origin. I’m not sure I understand the algorithm comment
3. Sure, GP simplified a bit too much there. Your comment is consistent with modern models of evolution. Each genome has a pool of random variations, which may or may not be expressed in an organism. Each organism is a test of those gene expressions. A genome changes over time when an organism passes this test (e.g. reproduces), increasing the expression of its genes across the population. This occurs in parallel for many possible variations.
—
Ah, I should have read the rest of your comment first, but I’ll leave this here anyway. I don’t think your explanation is valid— we are biologically and socially primed for religious ideology, but its use as a world model is very limited. We will eventually find answers to these questions, as the ratchet of scientific progress clicks along. Religion has never been useful in the same way
"Observations of genetic drift and biodiversity are consistent with our model of evolution at every scale."
We've actually seen observations of some similar features across species. We see that in most human designs, too. So, it's isnt proof of evolution if it could be the designer reusing tools, techniques, or design patterns across their designs. They'll have to prove those processes actually produce those artifacts.
2. Evolutionists claim these things can be produced by chance events without a designer. They're so complex and advanced they humans can't produce them. They argues against their premise. It also favors God having designed them.
3. I'd have to let a biologist non-evolutionist speak to that one. They'd have more expertise.
"We will eventually find answers to these questions, as the ratchet of scientific progress clicks along. Religion has never been useful in the same way"
God's Word gave us truth, humans' inherant dignity, loving others, character education plus knowledge, wisdom, and justice. Old Testament also had most concepts in our legal system today. These drive human progress to be done in a beneficial way. These principles, though not scientific, are highly valuable both to please God and help people.
Science is a tool that's morally neutral. It uses controlled, replicated experiments to make empirical claims. It can only tell us what we're wrong about or might be wrong about later. Other tools include reason (eg logic), first-hand experience, eyewitness testimony, and supernatural revelation. (Most of science is actually faith-based belief in eyewitness claims that are never done first-hand.)
Godless, evolutionary science... taken to its conclusions of everything being pointless and survival or reproction of the fittest over all other principles... led to the most atrocious things people have done. The Holocaust aiming to boost a "master race," atheist communists killing over 50 million people (torturing many), forced sterilization by liberals in California, Genesis Khan's mass rapes spread his genes everywhere... each can be supported as morally good under godless evolution. If opposed, you need a reason to say such things are 100%, objectively wrong.
So, God gave us an objective reason to do right, even with science, when His Word came through Moses with supernatural events. Later, He confirmed it when the one, perfect man proved He was God by miracles and being raised from the dead. All who repent and commit to Him are transformed by the power of God. Over 4,000 people impacted by the same message. So, we keep sharing it on top of doing solid science. :)
It is true most models are not trained to exist in a hostile and synergetic environment, with their survival at stake.
But there isn’t anything about the class of deep learning that is a barrier to that. It’s just not a concern worth putting lots of money into. Yet.
I say yet, because as AI models take on wider scoped problems, the likelihood that we will begin training models to explicitly generate positive economic surpluses for us, with their continued ability to operate conditioned on how well they do that, gets greater and greater.
At which point, they will develop great situational awareness, and an ability to efficiently direct a focus of attention and action on what is important at any given time, since efficiency and performance require that.
The problem shapes what the model learn to do, in this case, like any other.
Whether some entity has agency isn't an inherent property of that entity. It's a property of how some observer reasons about that entity's interaction with its environment.
Their argument rests on computation being a theory ("simulation") while agency/cognition being real ("processes"). Put that way, I don't buy the distinction.
Specifically, my reactions are:
a) Defining agency in terms "relevance" or "salience" is just circular logic.
b) Their argument about the extended Church-Turing-Deutsch thesis would already apply to physics and the universe, not just intelligent entities. So this is just poorly argued.
Also, I think Turing to his credit was somewhat aware of the issue, their own citation of Copeland 2020 mentions Turing's own musings on this.
But I'd love to understand more, this stuff is always neat to read about.
> Their argument rests on computation being a theory ("simulation") while agency/cognition being real ("processes"). Put that way, I don't buy the distinction.
One is wholly internal to the entity under discussion, while the other isn't.
The extended Church-Turing thesis is specifically about the relationship between theoretical TMs and the physical universe. So these paper authors are just begging the question—they disagree with the thesis. But as I say in a) and b) above, (I believe that) they make for poor arguments.
Anyone willing to inform an ignoramus? I've been seeing, hearing the term "agency" in the context of consciousness quite a bit lately and am wondering why this term seems suddenly necessary. What does this term convey that I've been missing for so many years?
People are misestimating current AI, and trying to work out a new explanation for what makes humans special.
And they can't make any progress because no one can really lay out concretely what makes humans special. It so wishy washy we're not even sure if what humans experience is really unique and we don't even know if the LLM is "experiencing" anything.
This is… nonsense…
It's a proper scientific paper with a DOI and thirteen citations.
And also an excellent example of how properly done science publishing can still be nonsense.
So was the research on vaccines causing autism. It was still nonesense, as peer review is not a perfect method of quality assurance and even scientist are subject to biases and to trying to get their beliefs justified.
It's philosophy. The most bullshit field ever where people use big words and speculate about things at a very very high level.
More progress has been done answering the question of "what is cognition" by Machine Learning programmers then has ever been done by a philosopher.
Philosophy is not bs, but there is a lot of bs philosophy and this paper is a great example of it.
That doesn’t make any sense. If philosophy contains bs it makes it so the whole field can be labeled as bs.
I understand there’s stuff like logic and the philosophy of science that make sense. But when there’s shit like animism it becomes a huge category error. why not just not make something like logic a part of philosophy? Just pull it out.
The umbrella of philosophy is like the category of analysis of everything in existence. It covers too much. It’s like anything that’s deep reflection automatically becomes philosophy. It’s too broad and that’s why it gets stupid when you have the philosophy of mathematics living side by side with the philosophy of art.