Could Machines Become Conscious?

Authors

  • Ulil S. Zulpratita Widyatama University Author

Keywords:

Artificial intelligence, artificial consciousness, conscious machine, cognitive computing

Abstract

Artificial Intelligence is inescapable today. Across all parts of innovation, AI is progressively having an impact. However, seemingly, most AI is basically refined mechanization as opposed to true intelligence. Consciousness is simply imperceptibly pertinent to AI, on the grounds that to most specialists in the field different issues appear to be really squeezing. Consciousness is definitely not a vital side-effect of our cognitive. The equivalent is probably valid for AIs. In numerous sci-fi stories, machines foster an internal mental life naturally, essentially by prudence of their refinement, however it is likelier that consciousness should be explicitly planned into them. The motivation behind consciousness, according to a transformative viewpoint, is frequently held to have something to do with the distribution and association of scant cognitive assets. This article clarifies a framework's conduct by conjuring such purposeful classifications as convictions and objectives. The contribution of AI to consciousness studies has been slim up until this point, on the grounds that nearly everybody in the field would prefer to chip away at better characterized, less questionable issues.

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References

McDermott, D., Artificial intelligence and consciousness. The Cambridge handbook of consciousness, 2007: p. 117-150.DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511816789.007.

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Goertzel, B. and P. Wang, A foundational architecture for artificial general intelligence. Advances in artificial general intelligence: Concepts, architectures and algorithms, 2007. 6: p. 36.

d'Aquili, E.G., The Myth‐Ritual Complex: A Biogenetic Structural Analysis. Zygon®, 1983. 18(3): p. 247-269.DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9744.1983.tb00513.x.

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Published

2022-01-30

How to Cite

Zulpratita, U. S. (2022). Could Machines Become Conscious?. CENTRAL ASIA AND THE CAUCASUS, 23(1), 1139-1146. https://ca-c.org/CAC/index.php/cac/article/view/148

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