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Comment Re:Seriously (Score 1) 186

Well, you are just digging yourself deeper. Ok, lets go one step further in your self-disgracement: 1. There are no synapses in AI 2. Reverse PN is not a standard operating mode for transistors and only applies to bipolar transistors in the first place. 3. Computers are using MOS-FETs. 4. Computers are optimized for digital, entirely deterministic computations, nobody wants avalances in there. If they happen, the computer crashes.

Holy fuckballs, lol.
1) You can't be stupid enough to make this assertion- particularly in a discussion about about devices that use quantum quasiparticles.
2) So? Do you know what a hole is?
3) Do you think field effect transistors lack PN junctions?
4) And brains are optimized for deterministic operation. If they weren't, you wouldn't have observably classical neurons within them operating at a high temperature.

FETs follow Fermi-Dirac statistics. That is- they are inherently quantum mechanical, and the uncertainty involved in the interaction between their quasiparticles (P, N) is only deterministic statistically- same as a neuron in which would have "quantum mechanical effects in its synapses". I am getting the impression that you can't see just how thoroughly your position is shown to be false, here.
If "quantum mechanical effects at the synapses" equates to consciousness (I'd still love to hear you explain that, lol) then transistors fit the bill as well.
You can't argue this. You'll need to find a new gap to squeeze your god into.

But I bet all of that flies right over your head, because you are obviously completely clueless.

You throw around terms like they're spaghetti at a wall.
Keep waving your hands trying to invoke your mysticism. You convince no one who isn't already desperate to believe there's something magical operating in their brain.

Comment Re:Needs to be a constitutional amendment (Score 1) 186

You really need to get over yourself.

Why?

Rational arguments are arguments others can follow and verify.

Beyond that being a logically false statement.... lol, sure.
To disprove it, all you need to do is produce one single person who can't understand a rational argument. Do better.

Your self-aggrandizements do not count as such...

self-aggrandizement? Noting a particular history of disenfranchisement laws is aggrandizement?

Sometimes you seem like a pretty smart guy. Sometimes, I really feel like you might be going senile.

Comment Re:Isn't this a faith statement? (Score 1) 186

You did not even try to look, did you? The quantum effects in the synapses are specifically random ones.

So is quantum tunneling in a transistor.
That quantum mechanical processes mediate classical interactions is not new.

But I see you are not actually interested in a discussion. You just want to state your beliefs as facts and then get approval.

Sigh.
I'll repeat myself, and you cannot show otherwise: There is no evidence of non-determinism in the human brain. None.
Not even various papers on noted QM effects make the absurd claim that the brain is not governed by classical physics.

I've made it very clear- you can't have it both ways.
If "Quantum Mechanical" effects give rise (by magic, since I'd live to hear your dissertation on how an RNG produces consciousness or free will) to consciousness, then transistors have it too.
Like it or not, computers and brains are in the same boat here.

Unless you can provide evidence of quantum mechanical effects at a macroscopic scale for neurons (remember, neurons are fucking *huge* compared to transistors on modern CPUs) then you must accept that all current evidence suggests that the brain is classical.

Comment Re:If all of AI went away today (Score 1) 135

Easy for you, a technical person familiar with LLMs and WebAssembly

I'm not talking about how to develop LLM inference servers. You don't have to understand WebAssembly in order to run a WebAssembly program in your browser any more than you have to understand Javascript to run Javascript in your browser. It's *less* technological knowledge than using the Play store. And installing Ollama is no more difficult than installing any other app.

Your difficulty conceptions are simply wrong.

Comment Re: If all of AI went away today (Score 1) 135

I don't understand your response. Was "life breathed into" the ancient Chinese robotic orchestras and singers, or the Islamic robotic orchestra and mechanical peacocks?

And re: myths, the aforementioned myths literally involved *humans* making the automatons. Ajatasatru for example, the maker of the robots to guard the artifacts of the Buddha, was also famous for using a mechanical war chariot of great complexity with whirling spiked maces, and later one with spinning scythes - not the sort of things you would describe as having "life breathed life into", and actually quite similar to Leonardo Da Vinci's chariot (in some versions he made it/them, in other versions it was a gift from the Indras). As for the robots guarding the Buddha, in one version they're literally powered by water wheels. In another version, Greco-Romans had a caste of robot makers, and to steal the technology, a young Indian man was reincarnated as a Greco-Roman, marries the daughter of a robot-maker, and sews the plans for robots into his thigh, so that when he's murdered by killbots as he tries to flee with the plans, they still make it back to India with his body. Yes, ancient Indian legends literally involved robot assassins.

And as for the robots in the Naravahandatta, they were literally made by a carpenter, and are specifically described as "lifeless wooden beings that mimic life".

Even with Hephestos, a literal god, they're very much not described as merely having life breathed into them - they're literally described as having been crafted (the Greeks were very much into machinery and described it in similar terms), and they behave as if something that were programmed (the Kourai Khryseai are perhaps the most humanlike of Hephaestus's creations, but even they aren't described like you would describe biological beings, they're described for being remarkable for how lifelike they were). Of course it wasn't for-loops and subroutines, people had no conception of such a thing, but his creations behaved in a "programmed" way, not as things with free will.

I don't know why some people are so insistent on imagining that "sci-fi" things have to be recent. They're not. There were literally space operas being written in Roman times. Not scientifically accurate, of course, but sci fi things - including automated things that mimic intelligence - simply is not new.

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