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Todd Moody's Zombies

McCarthy, John (1995) Todd Moody's Zombies. [Preprint]

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Abstract

From the AI point of view, consciousness must be regarded as a collection of interacting processes rather than the unitary object of much philosophical speculation. We ask what kinds of propositions and other entities need to be designed for consciousness to be useful to an animal or a machine. We thereby assert that human consciousness is useful to human functioning and not just and epiphenomenon. Zombies in the sense of Todd Moody's article are merely the victims of Moody's prejudices. To behave like humans, zombies will need what Moody might call pseudo-consciousness, but useful pseudo-consciousness will share all the observable qualities of human consciousness including what the zombie will be able to report. Robots will require a pseudo-consciousness with many of the intellectual qualities of human consciousness but will function successfully with few if any human emotional conscious qualities if that is how we choose to build them.

Item Type:Preprint
Subjects:Computer Science > Artificial Intelligence
Philosophy > Philosophy of Mind
ID Code:426
Deposited By: McCarthy, John
Deposited On:27 Feb 1998
Last Modified:11 Mar 2011 08:53

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