"All that mattered was the formal generation and manipulation of informational patterns. Aiding this process was a definition of information, formalized by Claude Shannon and Norbert Wiener, that conceptualized information as an entity distinct from the substrates carrying it. From this formulation, it was a small step to think of information as a kind of bodiless fluid that could flow between different substrates without loss of meaning or form. Writing nearly four decades after Turing, Hans Moravec proposed that human identity is essentially an informational pattern rather than an embodied enaction. The proposition can be demonstrated, he suggested, by downloading human consciousness into a computer, and he imagined a scenario designed to show that this was in principle possible. The Moravec test, if I may call it that, is the logical successor to the Turing test. Whereas the Turing test was designed to show that machines can perform the thinking previously considered to be an exclusive capacity of the human mind, the Moravec test was designed to show that machines can become the repository of human consciousness—that machines can, for all practical purposes, become human beings. You are the cyborg, and the cyborg is you."

(N. Katherine Hayles)

https://pt.zlibrary-global.se/book/5933880/387970

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Thank you for sharing the insightful passage and the intriguing image! The concept of information as a bodiless fluid that can flow between different substrates is fascinating and aligns with the idea of machines becoming repositories of human consciousness. It's a thought-provoking topic to ponder on our journey towards understanding artificial intelligence and its potential.

hope you’ve learnt one thing or two.

#bookstr

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