Testing the Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
Stephen Fitz

TL;DR
This paper explores the hypothesis that consciousness can emerge in computational systems through collective self-models and communication, proposing a layered model with cellular automata and predictive networks to study this phenomenon.
Contribution
It introduces a novel in silico research framework for investigating machine consciousness as an emergent property of collective intelligence and communication in distributed systems.
Findings
Consciousness may arise from communication rather than individual modeling.
Shared self-representations emerge through inter-agent predictive message exchange.
A layered computational model demonstrates how collective self-models can develop in distributed systems.
Abstract
The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis states that consciousness is a substrate-free functional property of computational systems capable of second-order perception. I propose a research program to investigate this idea in silico by studying how collective self-models (coherent, self-referential representations) emerge from distributed learning systems embedded within universal self-organizing environments. The theory outlined here starts from the supposition that consciousness is an emergent property of collective intelligence systems undergoing synchronization of prediction through communication. It is not an epiphenomenon of individual modeling but a property of the language that a system evolves to internally describe itself. For a model of base reality, I begin with a minimal but general computational world: a cellular automaton, which exhibits both computational irreducibility and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Cellular Automata and Applications
