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Robots With Internal Models A Route to Machine Consciousness?

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Robots With Internal Models A Route to Machine Consciousness?
Abstract
We are engineers, and our view of consciousness is shaped by an engineering ambition: we would like to build a conscious machine. We begin by acknowledging that we may be a little disadvantaged, in that consciousness studies do not form part of the engineering curriculum, and so we may be starting from a position of considerable ignorance as regards the study of consciousness itself. In practice, however, this may not set us back very far; almost a decade ago, Crick wrote: 'Everyone has a rough idea of what is meant by consciousness. It is better to avoid a precise definition of consciousness because of the dangers of premature definition. Until the problem is understood much better, any attempt at a formal definition is likely to be either misleading or overly restrictive, or both' (Crick, 1994). This seems to be as true now as it was then, although the identification of different aspects of consciousness (P-consciousness, A-consciousness, self consciousness, and monitoring consciousness) by Block (1995) has certainly brought a degree of clarification. On the other hand, there is little doubt that consciousness does seem to be something to do with the operation of a sophisticated control system (the human brain), and we can claim more familiarity with control systems than can most philosophers, so perhaps we can make up some ground there.
Publication
Journal of Consciousness Studies
Volume
10
Pages
77-109
Date
2003-01-01
Journal Abbr
Journal of Consciousness Studies
Library Catalog
ResearchGate
Citation
Holland, O., & Goodman, R. (2003). Robots With Internal Models A Route to Machine Consciousness? Journal of Consciousness Studies, 10, 77–109.