NANO-INTENTIONALITY

W. TECUMSEH FITCH

Professor of cognitive biology, University of Vienna; author, The Evolution of Language

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Despite vast increases in computing power, current computers don’t think the way we do (or a chimpanzee or a dog does). Silicon-based computers lack a crucial capacity of organic minds: the ability to change their detailed material form, and thus their future computations, in response to events in the world. Without this ability (which elsewhere I’ve dubbed nano-intentionality), information processing alone doesn’t amount to meaningful thought, because the symbols and values being computed lack any intrinsic causal connection to the real world. Silicon-based information processing requires interpretation by humans to become meaningful and will for the foreseeable future. We have little to fear from thinking machines and more to fear from the increasingly unthinking humans who use them.

What exactly is this property present in biological but not silicon computers? Fear not that I’m invoking some mystical élan vital: This is an observable, mechanistic property of living cells—a property that evolved via normal Darwinian processes. No mysticism or “invisible spirit” lurks in my argument. At its heart, nano-intentionality is the ability of cells to respond to changes in their environment by rearranging their molecules and thus changing their form. It’s present in an amoeba engulfing a bacterium, a muscle cell boosting myosin levels in response to jogging, or (most relevant) a neuron extending its dendrites in response to its local neurocomputational environment. Nano-intentionality is a basic, irreducible, undeniable feature of life on Earth, and is not present in the engraved, rigid silicon chips forming the hearts of modern computers. Because this physical difference between brains and computers is a simple brute fact, the issue open to debate is what significance this fact has for more abstract philosophical issues concerning “thought” and “meaning.” This is where the argument gets more complicated.

The philosophical debate starts with Kant’s observation that our minds are irrevocably separated from the typical objects of our thoughts—physical entities in the world. We gather evidence about these objects (via photons or air vibrations or molecules they release) but our minds/brains never make direct contact with them. Thus, the question of how our mental entities (thoughts, beliefs, desires) can be said to be “about” things in the real world is surprisingly problematic. Indeed, this problem of “aboutness” is a central problem in the philosophy of mind, at the heart of decades-long debates between philosophers like Dennett, Fodor, and Searle. Philosophers have rather unhelpfully dubbed this putative mental “aboutness” intentionality (not to be confused with the everyday English meaning, “doing something on purpose”). Issues of intentionality are closely tied with deep issues about phenomenal consciousness, often framed in terms of “qualia” and the “hard problem” of consciousness, but they address a more basic and fundamental question: How can a mental entity (a thought—a pattern of neural firing) be in any sense “connected” to its object (a thing you see or the person you’re thinking about)?

The skeptical, solipsistic answer is: There is no such connection; intentionality is an illusion. This conclusion is false in at least one crucial domain (highlighted by Schopenhauer 200 years ago): The one place where mental events (desires and intentions, as instantiated in neural firing) make contact with the “real world” is within our own bodies (e.g., at the neuromuscular junction). In general, the plasticity of living matter, and neurons in particular, means that a feedback loop directly connects our thoughts to our actions, percolating back through our perceptions to influence the structure of neurons themselves. This loop is closed every day in our brains. (Indeed, if you remember anything about this essay tomorrow, it’s because some neurons in your brain changed their form, weakening or strengthening synapses, extending or withdrawing connections.) This feedback loop cannot in principle be closed in a rigid silicon chip. This biological quality grants our mental activities (or a chimpanzee’s or dog’s) with a causal intrinsic intentionality lacking in contemporary silicon computing systems.

To the extent that this argument is correct (and both logic and intuition support it), machines “think,” “know,” or “understand” only insofar as their makers and programmers do, when meaning is added by an intentional, interpreting agent with a brain. Any “intelligence” of AIs is derived solely from their creators.

I thus have no fear of an AI uprising or AI rights movement (except perhaps for one led by deluded humans). Does this mean we’re in the clear until someone eventually designs a computer with nano-intentionality? Unfortunately not; there’s a different danger created by our strong anthropomorphic tendency to misattribute intentions and understanding to inanimate objects (“my car dislikes low-octane fuel”). When we apply this to computational artifacts (computers, smartphones, control systems), there’s a strong tendency to gradually cede our responsibilities—informed, competent understanding—to computers (and those who control them). Danger begins when we willingly and lazily cede this unique competence to myriad silicon systems (car navigators, smartphones, electronic voting systems, the global financial system) that neither know nor care what they’re computing about. The global financial crisis gave us a taste of what’s possible in a computer-interconnected world when responsibility and competence have unwisely been offloaded to machines.

I don’t fear the triumphal uprising of AIs but, rather, a catastrophic system failure caused by multiple minor bugs in over-empowered, interconnected silicon systems. We remain far from any Singularity in which computers outsmart us, but this is no insurance against a disastrous network collapse. The first step in avoiding such catastrophes is to stop granting computers responsibility for meaningful thought or understanding and accept a basic truth: Machines don’t think. And thinking they do becomes riskier every day.