Consciousness defined: requirements for biological and artificial general intelligence
Craig I. McKenzie

TL;DR
This paper proposes an objective, first-principles-based definition of consciousness, identifying core requirements such as perception, memory, imagination, and self-awareness, applicable to both biological and artificial systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, scientifically grounded definition of consciousness based on fundamental components necessary for conscious thought.
Findings
Consciousness requires perception, memory, imagination, and a sense of self.
Loss of any core component eliminates conscious thought.
The definition applies to both biological and artificial agents.
Abstract
Consciousness is notoriously hard to define with objective terms. An objective definition of consciousness is critically needed so that we might accurately understand how consciousness and resultant choice behaviour may arise in biological or artificial systems. Many theories have integrated neurobiological and psychological research to explain how consciousness might arise, but few, if any, outline what is fundamentally required to generate consciousness. To identify such requirements, I examine current theories of consciousness and corresponding scientific research to generate a new definition of consciousness from first principles. Critically, consciousness is the apparatus that provides the ability to make decisions, but it is not defined by the decision itself. As such, a definition of consciousness does not require choice behaviour or an explicit awareness of temporality despite…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations
