Relations (1)

related 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts

The relationship is established through philosophical inquiries into consciousness, where [1] contrasts AI architecture with human brains regarding qualia, [2] suggests qualia's ineffability stems from our limited access to processes within human brains, and [3] explores the persistence of qualia during the hypothetical replacement of neurons in a human brain.

Facts (3)

Sources
Moving Forward on the Problem of Consciousness - David Chalmers consc.net Journal of Consciousness Studies 1 fact
claimDavid Chalmers asserts that if neurons in a human brain were replaced with identically-functioning silicon chips, the subject would report that their qualia (conscious experience) remained unchanged.
What is hard about the “hard problem of consciousness”? philosophy.stackexchange.com Philosophy Stack Exchange 1 fact
perspectiveThe author argues that the apparently ineffable nature of qualia may simply be a consequence of human inability to examine and modify the processes occurring in human brains at the neuron and synapse level of detail.
The Functionalist Case for Machine Consciousness: Evidence from ... lesswrong.com LessWrong 1 fact
perspectiveSusan Schneider proposes that sophisticated reasoning about consciousness and qualia should be sufficient evidence for consciousness in an artificial intelligence system, even if the system's architecture differs dramatically from human brains.