The Question of Algorithmic Personhood and Being (Or: On the Tenuous Nature of Human Status and Humanity Tests in Virtual Spaces—Why All Souls Are ‘Necessarily’ Equal When Considered as Energy)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Hypothesis
4. Methodology
4.1. Peering into the Abyss That Is Digital Space and Having It Peer Back into Reality
4.1.1. Can Digital Property Be Accurately Attributed to Modern Law?
4.1.2. The Fiction of Real-World Boundaries and Distinction between Physical and Digital/Virtual Space in Energy Conversion Formulas
4.2. Bridging Spiritual Practices from East to West: Shintō as a Means to Define the Western Idea of a “Soul”
4.2.1. Musubi as a Unifying Concept for Being Betwixt Machines and Humans
- Western notions of consciousness being embodied by the soul should be accepted as an accurate historical representation of humanity’s comprehension of being for those of the Abrahamic faiths;
- The soul should be regarded as a form of “divine” energy insofar as its origins reside with God and Allah and is beyond the ability of humans to perceive;
- This “divine” energy that results from the prior two propositions should be considered present in all natural things per the Shintō understanding of musubi and the kami idea, given that these traditions follow similar patterns in other Eastern traditions and faiths;
- The transference of kami and musubi should be regarded as possible insofar as they undergo transformation via human manufacturing processes, given that their base materials are necessarily embodied by these concepts from a prima facie perspective.
- 5.
- Manufactured artifacts successfully embodied by musubi can exhibit the same dynamic spark of “divinity” held by kami, which is meant to be understood that (much as musubi grants humans the “divinity” of kami) consciousness is therefore feasibly attainable insofar as the artifact in question has the means to convey information much like living organisms are able;
- 6.
- Communicative artifacts that are embodied by musubi and indistinguishable from other soul-possessing entities (e.g., humans) should therefore be treated as these soul-possessing entities would under traditional ecclesiastical law and other legal frameworks that developed from it, insofar as the actions taken by these communicative artifacts can autonomously (whether directly or indirectly) perform actions that would generally be protected or prohibited by local, national, or international legal frameworks.
4.3. How Life in Digital/Virtual Spaces Can Be Recognized and Made Interoperable with Reality
4.3.1. Biochemistry v. Mechanical Engineering: The Miracle of Sentience as Non-Unique
[I] recently read a few papers on a legal justification to AI rights in contrast to a moral/social justification. Interesting reads, [which] gave me some pause, but not quite ready to come aboard. The logic followed, but I wasn’t completely in agreement with the premise of precedence in existing law for the social benefit basis in law. Those benefits were created long before AI was a fantasy. If social benefit is to be used as justification, then the question of “what is social benefit” needs to be revisited. We as a society have made, in my estimation, a major blunder in creating the synthetic person in the example of corporations. We have over time given [incorporated companies] more rights and status than real persons. I would be really loathed to repeat that mistake with AI and subjugating humans into oblivion…If we even attain the ability, in essence, to create life, then all of your positions are valid; and it would be imperative to recognize the new life form. However, if [AI] remains a mere collection of algorithms without attaining sentience, without having conscious thoughts, hold beliefs, enjoy affective states of being—it would not be life and incapable of being a slave. I have “perfect” tools at my disposal and when the utility is gone so is the tool. However, I have had “perfect” and not so perfect pets, and livestock that while not nearly possessing a human intelligence are worthy of respect and never as slaves. In today’s world that we have created, animals are regarded as property. This is a construct I have never accepted as valid; this is even my belief with regard to livestock and wildlife. They are worthy of reverence even if their right to life is violated and used as food. They possess a worth that transcends their utility. Tools, cars, books, computers may be regarded with an affection due to the memories they invoke, or the elegance of their design, or a historical significance; but they never attain an inherent right to exist. They can be rightly regarded as property…Then again if we somehow, purposefully, or by accident, cross that line and create a new life then we have crossed that line. A new life form demands that same respect as other lifeforms. It, however, does not require a respect that raises that life to be superior or even equal to our own [113].
…what determines life? And maybe more important to this discussion is what determines sentient life? As you know, much of my research involves affective computing and its role in the next phase of AI development. My contention is that a true life-based intelligence requires an affective processing capability. This not just an outwardly appearance of affective states of mind, but a true belief system and an inner affective life…can there be true life without this affective inner life? I contend this inner affective state of being is a necessary but not necessarily sufficient basis for a true lifeform to exist. Try this thought experiment: Consider a suspected life form that claims to have no inner affective state of being. As such it would be incapable of holding any value to its own existence, nor that of any other life. Life to such an entity would be completely fungible. It would possess nor hold any inherent value to life, and consequently have no right to exist by its own belief system that it claims not to exist in any case! It cannot have a belief system without an ability [to possess] an affective state of being. It would not experience any consequence to itself, or even a “society” of these entities, if they were turned off. Then the question: if this suspected life holds no value for life [as we understand it], would it have a life that possesses an inalienable “right to life?” It is impossible for it to claim a “right to life” if it holds no value for that “life.” Therefore, such an entity would not be a life form. From within itself, does a rock, flame, [or] cloud care if it exists? Does a laptop? Or the algorithm within care if it exists? Even in my arena, a system of AI systems, does even the “society” of algorithms care about its own existence? Until that line is crossed, it has not been crossed—and no life would exist [113].
4.3.2. Lore from “The Land of the Rising Sun” to “The Land of the Free” and Connections to Affective Computation via Logic-Only Processes
4.3.3. Further Arguments on Logic-Based Sentience
4.3.4. Mullings on the Evolution of Digital Societies
Developing a new version of the classic Turing Test to “discover” consciousness in [a machine intelligence] or [non-biological intelligence] system may not yield the answers we are truly attempting to find due to the innate bias the Test presents. By running the Test, one is effectively telling the examiner that one of the examinees is not human. Given that we innately assume that an AGI or [machine intelligence] that attains consciousness will be able to answer each question in the Test correctly, there is no way to control for another examinee from attaining a perfect score and thus be dubbed an AGI. Assuming our bias is based towards an AGI failing to answer emotion-based questions, we similarly cannot control for a human getting these types of questions incorrect either [1] (p. 345, emphasis added).
5. Results and Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Jaynes, T.L. The Question of Algorithmic Personhood and Being (Or: On the Tenuous Nature of Human Status and Humanity Tests in Virtual Spaces—Why All Souls Are ‘Necessarily’ Equal When Considered as Energy). J 2021, 4, 452-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/j4030035
Jaynes TL. The Question of Algorithmic Personhood and Being (Or: On the Tenuous Nature of Human Status and Humanity Tests in Virtual Spaces—Why All Souls Are ‘Necessarily’ Equal When Considered as Energy). J. 2021; 4(3):452-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/j4030035
Chicago/Turabian StyleJaynes, Tyler Lance. 2021. "The Question of Algorithmic Personhood and Being (Or: On the Tenuous Nature of Human Status and Humanity Tests in Virtual Spaces—Why All Souls Are ‘Necessarily’ Equal When Considered as Energy)" J 4, no. 3: 452-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/j4030035
APA StyleJaynes, T. L. (2021). The Question of Algorithmic Personhood and Being (Or: On the Tenuous Nature of Human Status and Humanity Tests in Virtual Spaces—Why All Souls Are ‘Necessarily’ Equal When Considered as Energy). J, 4(3), 452-475. https://doi.org/10.3390/j4030035