Mike Smith
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selfawarepatterns.bsky.social
Mike Smith
@selfawarepatterns.bsky.social
130 followers 130 following 290 posts
Programmer; aspiring fiction writer; interested in science, philosophy, history, science fiction, fantasy, skepticism blog at: selfawarepatterns.com
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Reposted by Mike Smith
How do you know what it's like to be you?
I agree machine consciousness will be different. And I often say that consciousness is in the eye of the beholder. When we call something "conscious" we're basically saying it's like us to one degree or another. There's no bright line between like-us and not like-us, just a broad blurry spectrum.
Might depend on what we mean by "ego." Modeling self in world, along with preferences about the states the models represent, is far from an easy engineering problem. But I don't see any barriers in principle to solving it.
To me, it seems like a system is whatever it is regardless of its lineage. The hip joint evolved yet we can replace it with a designed product. I do think it's reasonable to ask why we'd bother giving AI an ego with everything that comes with it. But I struggle to find any barrier to doing it.
I don't think there is any barrier in principle to an AI having those things. But I agree that an ego, not just self modeling, but also self concern, won't happen automatically. And I don't think we don't want to introduce it, since it could lead to much of what the AI doomers worry about.
Does consciousness require biology?

Ned Block has a new paper out, for which he shared a time limited link on Bluesky. He argues in the paper that the “meat neutral” computational functionalism inherent in many theories of consciousness neglect what he sees...
selfawarepatterns.com/2025/10/12/d...
Does consciousness require biology?
Ned Block has a new paper out, for which he shared a time limited link on Bluesky. He argues in the paper that the “meat neutral” computational functionalism inherent in many theories o…
selfawarepatterns.com
The Greatship

In the last post I said I'd get back to Robert Reed's Greatship series. This week I read the main story collection for that series: The Greatship. This is a collection of novellas and novelettes, which seems to be the format Reed really shines in. These are all separate stories, but…
The Greatship
In the last post I said I'd get back to Robert Reed's Greatship series. This week I read the main story collection for that series: The Greatship. This is a collection of novellas and novelettes, which seems to be the format Reed really shines in. These are all separate stories, but they take place in a shared setting, with repeat and crossover characters.
selfawarepatterns.com
Reposted by Mike Smith
Reminder that before I started writing novels I didn't study writing at university, attended no workshops/conferences, knew absolutely no one in science fiction publishing circles, and didn't start going to conventions until after I got a contract for my novel.

What I *did* do: Write. A lot.
Saw a post recently about what makes someone a "serious" writer. It included studying writing at university, partaking in multi-day workshops, attending conferences, attending awards ceremonies.

Sounds a lot like pay-to-play, to me.
Against the Fall of Night and its progeny

When I was young I read a lot of Arthur C. Clarke's books. With one of them, I remember having a strong sense of deja vu. It seemed like I knew the story already, sort of. It was very familiar, yet surprising in many details. I don't remember which one I…
Against the Fall of Night and its progeny
When I was young I read a lot of Arthur C. Clarke's books. With one of them, I remember having a strong sense of deja vu. It seemed like I knew the story already, sort of. It was very familiar, yet surprising in many details. I don't remember which one I read first, Against the Fall of Night or The City and the Stars…
selfawarepatterns.com
The Left Hand of Darkness

The other day I came across a video of Hank Green comparing Ursula Le Guin's Ekumen civilization to Iain Banks' Culture one. (I discussed the Culture a few weeks ago). It reminded me that I had never gotten around to reading Le Guin's classic Hugo Award winning book: The…
The Left Hand of Darkness
The other day I came across a video of Hank Green comparing Ursula Le Guin's Ekumen civilization to Iain Banks' Culture one. (I discussed the Culture a few weeks ago). It reminded me that I had never gotten around to reading Le Guin's classic Hugo Award winning book: The Left Hand of Darkness. I decided to rectify that this week.
selfawarepatterns.com
Thanks. Uncertain Eric is pretty long winded and tends to repeat himself. Maybe I should get an AI summary of his post. :-)