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Conscious Intelligent Systems - Part 1 : I X I

U. Gayathree

arXiv Preprint Archive December 9, 2006 Peer reviewed via arXiv

Summary

What if our minds and self-awareness emerged from the same evolutionary path as life itself? A new perspective proposes that natural consciousness and intelligent systems co-evolved with biological evolution. By viewing intelligence through a learning system lens, considering natural environmental factors, this approach seamlessly explains the rise of the human mind, our sense of 'I,' and looping thoughts. It also sheds light on phenomena like sleep and reproduction, offering a compelling scenario for human evolution in the field of cs.AI.

Abstract

Did natural consciousness and intelligent systems arise out of a path that was co-evolutionary to evolution? Can we explain human self-consciousness as having risen out of such an evolutionary path? If so how could it have been? In this first part of a two-part paper (titled IXI), we take a learning system perspective to the problem of consciousness and intelligent systems, an approach that may look unseasonable in this age of fMRI's and high tech neuroscience. We posit conscious intelligent systems in natural environments and wonder how natural factors influence their design paths. Such a perspective allows us to explain seamlessly a variety of natural factors, factors ranging from the rise and presence of the human mind, man's sense of I, his self-consciousness and his looping thought processes to factors like reproduction, incubation, extinction, sleep, the richness of natural behavior, etc. It even allows us to speculate on a possible human evolution scenario and other natural phenomena.

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