1. The SNES is architecturally similar to a PC. Both run on microchips, have registers and assembly languages. It is not fundamentally mysterious how to translate programs from one language to the other.Torco wrote: ↑Mon Mar 13, 2023 8:35 am So it's not necessary for computers to emulate each and every function of the brain to have general AI, or even strong AI, whatever that means. you can run SNES games on a modern computer even if zsnes.exe doesn't reproduce *everything that happens inside of a super nintendo*: it just needs to reproduce what the programs need to some sufficient degree of fidelity, and that degree is not 100%. for example, when I was a kid I had to sometimes turn off layer 3 of the graphics because those were supposed to be transparent, but the emulator failed to make them transparent and, even though the text was on graphical level two, necessitating turning it on and off, I could play thos games anyway.
2. We don't understand the brain at a deep enough level to do this.
3. We don't even understand the brain at a deep enough level to know if it will work. For example, if brains use quantum effects, then neurons aren't fine-grained enough.
I agree that many different tools can do the same job, so I might be putting myself in the same position as chris_notts when I say that according to Robin Hanson, just like it's cheaper to run your machines on the cloud, it will be cheaper to run your entire workforce on the cloud. They will upload brains to create base images to run the simulations from, and then uploads will take over the entire economy. The existence of uploads will be pleasant, but entirely virtual. This economy will be wealthy beyond our wildest dreams, but also unequal beyond our wildest dreams. Flesh people will be priced out of the market. Don't remember what he thinks will happen to us. Maybe we'll end up in reservations?Torco wrote: ↑Mon Mar 13, 2023 8:35 am that being said, the notion of "AI that's exactly like a human mind" is weird: first, why do you need it?* we already have human minds. AI *that can do stuff human minds can do* is very useful, but a hammer and a nail gun both do the same thing <putting slivers of steel into wood> in different ways.
3D printed girlfriends?