[net.philosophy] Elements of an Artificial Sentient Being

kort@hounx.UUCP (B.KORT) (12/12/85)

Given the rather lengthy discussion of the Chinese Room,
I would like to propose that we begin to construct the
elements (and maybe even the architecture) of an Artificial
Sentient Being.  Of course, it will be a System, comprised
of nested subsystems, and integrated to form a whole functioning
Sentient Being.

Following Jim Balter's suggestion, we will want to endow it
with "multiband" sensory I/O.  We will give it vision, and
image-generating output capabilities (i.e. a TV screen).
We will give it audio I/O.  We will give it a symbolic I/O
channel, after the Chinese Room.  And if we are really ambitious,
we will give it olfaction and tactile senses.  We will give it
mobility, and some sort of inertial guidance system so that it
can sense its motion and acceleration.

Now, we must give it some goals, including a raison d'etre.
The first goal will be to survive.  That means it must sense
danger, and take measures to prevent its own demise.  The
second goal will be to obtain as much sensory input as possible
on all channels, and use that data to build a picture or model
of the environment in which it is embedded.  The third goal will
be to discover everything there is to discover, including the
fact of its own existence, the mechanism of its own functioning,
and the answer to the three Questions, "What Am I?  Who Created Me
and Why? and "What Do I Do After I Have Answered the First Two
Questions?"

I suppose we will have to give it a mentor to help it get started.
Perhaps we can have a contest to select the mentor from among
the regular contributors to net.philosophy.

But before we get too far along, we should discuss how much
initial ability we shall endow our Artificial Sentient Being
with, and how much we shall expect it to acquire along its
life journey.  Oh, yes.  One other point.  Shall we endow it
with free will?

--Barry Kort