Can Computers overcome Humans? Consciousness interaction and its implications
This is an incremental philosophical discussion on AI consciousness and its implications for machine superiority, with no practical applications or empirical results.
The paper tackles the question of whether computers can surpass human capabilities by arguing that achieving this would require conscious machines, but consciousness introduces interference that limits processing, leading to a paradox where such machines either cannot fully overcome humans or cease to be considered computers.
Can computers overcome human capabilities? This is a paradoxical and controversial question, particularly because there are many hidden assumptions. This article focuses on that issue putting on evidence some misconception related with future generations of machines and the understanding of the brain. It will be discussed to what extent computers might reach human capabilities, and how it could be possible only if the computer is a conscious machine. However, it will be shown that if the computer is conscious, an interference process due to consciousness would affect the information processing of the system. Therefore, it might be possible to make conscious machines to overcome human capabilities, which will have limitations as well as humans. In other words, trying to overcome human capabilities with computers implies the paradoxical conclusion that a computer will never overcome human capabilities at all, or if the computer does, it should not be considered as a computer anymore.