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TheMind

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views

TheMind

New book

Uploaded by

nextbolt4
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The Mind

BY NILS J. NILSSON

[This essay was published in The Stanford Magazine, pp. 62-63, Winter, 1986 as
part of a feature called “What is the Question?”]

Is the mind a machine? If it is and if we could build one, then we would have man-
made objects that could think like people do. Their joining us as sentient beings
would pose profound societal and philosophical questions. “Is the mind a machine?”
is therefore a very special kind of question.
Scientists and philosophers have wrestled with the nature of the mind from the time
people first suspected they had one. Now a new generation of scientists, those trying
to build devices that can perceive, reason, and act autonomously, are helping to pose
the question in sharper terms. They suppose that the answer is “Yes, the mind is a
physical machine,” partly because of their enlarged understanding of what a machine
can be and partly because they find it difficult to imagine what it would be like for
the mind not to be a machine. The word machine, of course, no longer brings to mind
stolid assemblies of clanking gears and wheels. Our new views of protein-building
RNA and ribosomal machinery, the machinery of neural circuits in living animals,
and complex hardware/software combinations in digital computing machines make
the phrase mere machine an anachronism.
For those of us who accept that the mind is, after all, mechanical, there are
numerous other questions that divide us. We ask, “Can we ever build a mind?” Some
think that the mind, although physical, will never be understood so thoroughly that
engineers will be able to build one. The mind, these people say, is like the
weather—physical, yes, but never completely explainable or predictable. Whatever
processes may go on inside the human brain to produce thinking, feeling, creative
expression, love, and so on, these processes are just too complicated for us ever to
understand or to build into machines. Others of us who are more optimistic (some
might say pessimistic) think that people will someday be able to understand the mind
well enough to engineer mind-like mechanisms. For us, a more specific question
arises: Can we understand the functions of the mind completely in terms of the
operations that occur in digital computers, namely, abstract operations on symbols?
Viewed from the perspective of computer science, computers do nothing more than
rearrange complex assemblages of symbols—numerals, alphabetic characters, and
such—according to well-specified rules. Is the mind a “symbol processor”?
People who think the answer to these questions is yes accept what is called the
physical symbol-system hypothesis. This is a very important scientific hypoth-
esis—just as were those of Copernicus and Darwin. Although these latter theories
have now been largely confirmed, the symbol-system hypothesis is still really just a
question—not yet an answer.
In fact, some scientists and philosophers think that other physical processes like
holography, which is only approximately achievable by symbol-processing opera-
tions, are necessary for mind-like qualities. Others think that as-yet-undiscovered
biological properties of protein might somehow be necessary to the functioning of the
mind.
One important consequence of accepting the symbol-system hypothesis is that it
wouldn’t matter what material a mind is made of. All that matters is that symbols be
processed by a machine made of some material; whether it is protein or silicon or
something else is completely irrelevant. Therefore, if the symbol-system hypothesis
is true, the question “How does a neuron work?” is no more important for
understanding the mind than the question “How does a transistor work?” is for
understanding a computer-based airline reservation system.
Let’s assume for a moment that the symbol-system hypothesis is true. There are
still further questions, such as, “How is knowledge represented in the mind?” and
“How should it be represented in computers?” Many psychologists believe that
humans and perhaps some other animals have two different kinds of knowledge: a
kind that can be expressed in declarative sentences (e.g., males do not get pregnant)
and a kind represented by automatic procedures (e.g., duck when a rock whizzes by
your head).
Researchers in artificial intelligence (AI) use declarative sentences in special
computer languages to give facts to “expert systems” programs that are able to solve
reasoning problems in medical diagnosis, financial management, chemical analysis,
and the like. One powerful advantage of declarative knowledge over the procedural
kind is that declarative knowledge can be used in many ways—ways perhaps not
envisioned by the machine’s original designer. Humans seem to use both kinds of
knowledge, and so will intelligent machines, but AI researchers still argue about the
relative merits and the roles of each.
Another question is, “Can we use what psychologists already know about how the
brain works to help us build smarter machines?” Many AI researchers (perhaps
immodestly) think a better question is, “Will we be better able to understand how the
brain works using the concepts invented by AI scientists?”
A yes answer to this latter question assumes that it is not the lack of additional
experiments by the psychologists and neurophysiologists that keeps us in the dark
about the mind. What we lack are the concepts that will form the building blocks of
understanding. It is important to note that concepts are invented, not discovered.
(Edison invented the light bulb; Columbus discovered America.) The challenge of
building intelligent machines is likely to stimulate the invention of these necessary
concepts.
Curiosity about the mind, and our recent attempts to build primitive mind-like
mechanisms, have provoked some of the most compelling and deep questions
humans have ever asked. I suspect we will have to ask many more before answers
start coming in.

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