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Consciousness and the Computer: A Reply to Henley
Resource type
Journal Article
Author/contributor
- Shanon, Benny (Author)
Title
Consciousness and the Computer: A Reply to Henley
Abstract
This paper is a response to Henley who criticizes a previous paper of mine arguing against my claim that computers are devoid of consciousness. While the claim regarding computers and consciousness was not the main theme of my original paper, I do, indeed, subscribe to it. Here, I review the main characteristics of human consciousness presented in the earlier paper and argue that computers cannot exhibit them. Any ascription of these characteristics to computers is superficial and misleading in that it fails to capture essential, intrinsic features of human cognition. More generally, psychological theory couched in terms of semantic representations and the computational operations associated with them is bound to be inadequate. The phenomenology of consciousness is a specific case marking this inadequacy.
Publication
The Journal of Mind and Behavior
Volume
12
Issue
3
Pages
371-375
Date
1991
ISSN
0271-0137
Short Title
Consciousness and the Computer
Accessed
3/17/25, 10:20 AM
Library Catalog
JSTOR
Extra
Publisher: Institute of Mind and Behavior, Inc.
Citation
Shanon, B. (1991). Consciousness and the Computer: A Reply to Henley. The Journal of Mind and Behavior, 12(3), 371–375. https://www.jstor.org/stable/43854129
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