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      <valueString sesURI="http://purl.org/dc/terms/URI">http://cogprints.org/429/</valueString>
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      <valueString>Consciousness in Human and Robot Minds</valueString>
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    <statement propertyURI="http://purl.org/dc/terms/abstract">
      <valueString>The best reason for believing that robots might some day  become conscious is that we human beings are conscious, and we are a sort of robot ourselves. That is, we are extraordinarily  complex self-controlling, self-sustaining physical mechanisms, designed over the eons by natural selection, and operating  according to the same well-understood principles that govern  all the other physical processes in living things: digestive and metabolic processes, self-repair and reproductive processes, for instance. It may be wildly over-ambitious to suppose that human artificers can repeat Nature's triumph, with variations  in material, form, and design process, but this is not a deep objection. It is not as if a conscious machine contradicted any fundamental laws of nature, the way a perpetual motion  machine does. Still, many skeptics believe--or in any event want to believe--that it will never be done. I wouldn't wager against them, but my reasons for skepticism are mundane,  economic reasons, not theoretical reasons.</valueString>
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      <valueString>Dennett, Daniel C.</valueString>
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      <valueString>Applied Cognitive Psychology</valueString>
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      <valueString>Robotics</valueString>
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      <valueString>Daniel C.</valueString>
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