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Michelle C Leigh
41dc353e6b33b6925a37e7339fc6b29056faed563e664275c1e6fda553bd9e18
Author of the Europa Trilogy Board Member of the Progressive Bitcoiner In a world of division, Bitcoin brings us together.

I just finished a webinar by the Human Rights Foundation. It was so informative and a great way to connect with other people doing the work. Thanks to Anna, Ben and Win!!

It is hard getting people on the left to learn about Bitcoin.

It's a good thing Al Gore was involved with the internet or Democrats still would not be using it.

ProgressiveBitcoiner.org

Replying to Avatar Dennis Mattam

I attended a great webinar on the Introduction to #BitCoin by the Human Rights Foundation https://hrf.org/

In simple form, they explained how BitCoin works, the blockchain and the network, transactions, and even gave everyone attending $2 worth sats.

Loved it!

It was amazing! Great presenters. I'm excited for tomorrow.

I have a wallet. I'm a science fiction writer. I have short stories on my website that people can read and send me some sats. www.michellecleigh.com

I have a sci fi short story on my website with a qr code for people to zap me sats. If you have people looking for real world applications please send them to my site www.michellecleigh.com

https://satoshisjournal.com/a-call-to-my-fellow-democrats/

There are many progressive and democratic Bitcoiners in the space. We may disagree on many issues but one thing we can all agree on is Bitcoin is for everyone. Let's start with that and support the different paths that lead to appreciating sound money.

Go listen to the first minute to hear secret word and DM me with that word. Then I'll happily send you 10 sats. If you listen through to my ad let me know and I'll send you 100 sats.

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/writers-not-writing-ep-71-with-joshua-robbins/id1665406847?i=1000652568153

Happy stacking

I could use the help of the Bitcoin community to show use case for advertising using Sats. Check out the following podcast. Learn about a new writer and other geeky stuff while supporting the Bitcoin community.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/15BcK6GJLxzJBqTurt0lcP?si=iKWoKu_9Q_CR2gugmDdwgA

DM me with the special word and get 10 sats. Tell me the time that the ad ran for Muchelle C Leigh and get 100 sats.

Special thanks to all who have responded. It's helping my writing community to see the value of Bitcoin besides number go up.

Fellow Bitcoiners earn some sats and help me demonstrate how a peer to peer network can support writers. Please visit the following link. DM me the word of day and I'll send you 10 sats. Tell me when in the podcast you heard the ad for Michelle C Leigh and I'll send you 100. My budget is limited so the window is small. Check it out today. https://open.spotify.com/episode/15BcK6GJLxzJBqTurt0lcP?si=Wwh6fcsyTsmHOv3_peu5MQ

Let's show writers some Bitcoin support.

I'm still working on the format with other authors. I'll let you know when we're ready. Thanks for your interest!

I'm looking for science fiction readers that would be interested in joining a list that pays you Sats to look at science fiction novel advertisements. #sciencefiction#orangepill

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

The concept has been covered in science fiction for decades, but I think a lot of people underestimate the ethical challenges associated with AI and the possibility for consciousness in the years or decades ahead as they get orders of magnitude more sophisticated.

Consciousness or qualia, meaning the concept of subjectively “being” or “feeling”, remains one of the biggest mysteries of the world scientifically and metaphysically, similar to the question of the creation of the universe and that sort of thing.

In other words, when I touch something hot, I feel it and it hurts. But when a complex digital thermometer measures something hot with a similar set of sensers as my touch sensors, we consider it an automaton- it doesn’t “feel” what it is measuring, but rather just objectively collects the data and has no feelings or subjective awareness about it.

We know that we ourselves have consciousness (“I think therefore I am”), but we can’t theoretically prove someone else does, ie the simulation problem- we can’t prove for sure that we’re not in some false environment. In other words, there is the concept of a “philosophical zombie” that is sophisticated enough to look and act human, but much like the digital thermometer, it doesn’t “feel” anything. The lights are not on inside. However, if we assume we are not in some simulator built solely for ourselves, and since we are all biologically similar, the obvious default assumption is that we are all similarly conscious.

And as we look at animals with similar behavior and brain structures, we make the same obvious assumption there. Apes, parrots, dolphins, and dogs are clearly conscious. As we go a bit further away to reptiles and fish, they lack some of the higher brain structures and behaviors, so maybe they don’t feel “sad” in a way that a human or parrot can, but they almost certainly subjectively “feel” the world and thus can feel pain and pleasure and so forth. They are not automatons. And then if we go even further away towards insects, it becomes less clear. Their proto-brains are far simpler, and some of their behaviors suggest that they don’t process pain in the way that a human or even reptile does. If a beetle is picked up by its leg, it’ll squirm to get away, but if the leg is ripped off and the beetle is put back down, it’ll just walk away with the rest of its legs and not show signs of distress. It’s not the behavior we’d see from a more complex animal that would be in severe suffering, and they do lack the same type of pain sensors that we and other complex animals have. And yet, for example, even creatures as simple as nematodes have dopamine as part of their neurological system, which implies maybe some level of subjective awareness of basic pleasure/pain. And then further still, if we look at plants, we generally don’t imagine them as being subjectively conscious like us and complex animals, but it does get eerie if you watch a high-speed video of how plants can move towards the sun and stuff; and how they can secrete chemicals to communicate with other plants, and so forth. There is some eerie level of distributed complexity there. And at the level of a cell or similarly basic thing, is there any degree of dim conscious subjectivity there as an amoeba eats some other cell that would separate its experience from a rock, or is it a pure automaton? And the simplest of all is a virus; barely definable as even a true lifeform.

The materialistic view would argue that the brain is a biological computer, and thus with sufficient computation, or a specific type of computational structure, consciousness emerges. This implies it could probably be replicated in silicon/software, or could be made in other artificial ways if we reach a breakthrough understanding, or by accident. A more metaphysical view instead suggests the idea of a soul- that a biological computer like a brain is necessary for consciousness, but not sufficient, and that it needs some metaphysical spark to fill this gap and make it conscious. Or if we remove the term soul, the metaphysical argument is that consciousness is some deeper substrate of the universe that we don’t understand, which becomes manifest through complexity. Those are the similarly hard questions- where does consciousness come from, and for the universe why is there something rather than nothing.

In decades of playing video games, most of us would not assume that any of the NPCs are conscious. We don’t think twice about shooting bad guys in games. We know basically how they are programmed, they are simple, and there is no reason to believe they are conscious.

Similarly, I have no assumption that large language models are conscious. They are using a lot of complexity to predict the next letter or word. I view Chat GPT as an automaton, even though it’s a rather sophisticated one. Sure, it’s a bit more eerie than a bad guy in a video game due to its complexity, but still I don’t have much of a reason to believe it can subjectively feel happy or sad, or that the “lights are on” inside even as it mimics a human personality.

However, as AIs increasingly write code for other AIs that is more complex than any human can understand, and as the amount of processing power rivals or exceeds the human brain, and as the subjective interaction is convincing enough (e.g. an AI assistant repeatedly saying that it is sad, while we have the knowledge that its processing power is greater than our own), would make us wonder. The movie Ex Machina handled this well, I Robot handled this well, Her handled this well, etc.

Even if we assume 99% that a sufficiently advanced AI, whose code as written by AI and enormously complex and we barely understand any of it at that point, is a sophisticated automaton with no subjective awareness and has no “lights on” inside, since at that point nobody truly understands the code, there must be at least that 1% doubt as we consider, “what if… the necessary complexity or structure of consciousness has emerged? Can we prove that it hasn’t?”

At that point we find ourselves in a unique situation. Within the animal kingdom, we are fortunate that their brain structures and their behavior line up, so that the more similar a brain of an animal is to our own, the more clearly conscious it tends to be, and thus we treat it as such. However, with AI, we could find ourselves in a situation where robots appear strikingly conscious, and yet their silicon/software “brain” structure is alien to us, and we have a hard time assessing the probability that this thing actually has subjective conscious awareness or if it’s just extremely sophisticated at mimicking it.

And the consequences are high- in the off chance that silicon/software consciousness emerges, and we don’t respect that, then the amount of suffering we could cause to countless programs for prolonged periods of time is immense. On the other hand, if we treat them as conscious because they “seem” to be, and in reality they are not, then that’s foolish, leads us to misuse or misapply the technology, and basically our social structure becomes built around a lie of treating things as conscious that are not. And of course as AI becomes sophisticated enough to start raising questions about this, there will be people who disagree with each other about what’s going on under the hood and thus what to do about it.

Anyway, I’m going back to answering emails now.

I address this issue in the final book of my Europa Trilogy. Not with AI but if we were to encounter alien life how do we judge "humanity" or "sentience".