The Engineering Thesis in Machine Consciousness
Resource type
Journal Article
Author/contributor
- Boltuc, Piotr (Author)
Title
The Engineering Thesis in Machine Consciousness
Abstract
I argue here that consciousness can be engineered. The claim that functional consciousness can be engineered has been persuasively put forth in regards to first-person functional consciousness; robots, for instance, can recognize colors, though there is still much debate about details of this sort of consciousness. Such consciousness has now become one of the meanings of the term phenomenal consciousness (e.g., as used by Franklin and Baars). Yet, we extend the argument beyond the tradition of behaviorist or functional reductive views on consciousness that still predominate within cognitive science. If Nagel-Chalmers-Block-style non-reductive naturalism about first-person consciousness (h-consciousness) holds true, then, eventually we should be able to understand how such consciousness operates and how it gets produced (this is not the same as bridging the explanatory gap or solving Chalmers’s hard problem of consciousness). If so, the consciousness it involves can in principle be engineered.
Publication
Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology
Volume
16
Issue
2
Pages
187-207
Date
2012
ISSN
2691-5928
Accessed
3/7/25, 9:19 AM
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Boltuc, P. (2012). The Engineering Thesis in Machine Consciousness. Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology, 16(2), 187–207. https://doi.org/10.5840/techne201216214
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