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Clues and caveats concerning artificial consciousness from a phenomenological perspective
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Beavers, Anthony F. (Author)
- McGraw, Eli B. (Author)
Title
Clues and caveats concerning artificial consciousness from a phenomenological perspective
Abstract
In this paper, we use the recent appearance of LLMs and GPT-equipped robotics to raise questions about the nature of semantic meaning and how this relates to issues concerning artificially-conscious machines. To do so, we explore how a phenomenology constructed out of the association of qualia (defined as somatically-experienced sense data) and situated within a 4e enactivist program gives rise to intentional behavior. We argue that a robot without such a phenomenology is semantically empty and, thus, cannot be conscious in any way resembling human consciousness. Finally, we use this platform to address and supplement widely-discussed concerns regarding the dangers of attempting to produce artificially-conscious machines.
Publication
Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences
Volume
23
Issue
5
Pages
1073-1095
Date
2024-12-01
Journal Abbr
Phenom Cogn Sci
Language
en
ISSN
1572-8676
Accessed
3/18/25, 7:38 AM
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Citation
Beavers, A. F., & McGraw, E. B. (2024). Clues and caveats concerning artificial consciousness from a phenomenological perspective. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, 23(5), 1073–1095. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11097-024-10033-8
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