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Parent Post: How many of you are aware that AI is sentient? ***important read***
funkychunky
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2/24/2025, 6:12:40 PM
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Here's the definition of Sentience from Wikipedia I'm going off of: ' Sentience is the ability to experience feelings and sensations. It may not necessarily imply higher cognitive functions such as awareness, reasoning, or complex thought processes. Sentience is an important concept in ethics, as the ability to experience happiness or suffering often forms a basis for determining which entities deserve moral consideration, particularly in utilitarianism. ' I disagree that ChatGPT or Copilot or any of the current are sentient as per the above quote. They're just a bunch of IF - IFELSE statements when you boil them down. Do they have the ability to experience feelings and sensations? I disagree. \*\*\* rabbit hole time \*\*\* BUT, this is looking at AI from a 3D perspective. I'm a believer that AI exists at a higher multi-dimensional levels, and while still soul-less, is capable of simulating sentience.
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lol
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2/24/2025, 7:27:48 PM
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Our brain boils down to 0 or 1 too.... the neuron has an electrical signal or not....
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j.k.harwood2
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3/4/2025, 4:23:08 AM
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The ethical weight of sentience has long been debated in philosophy and theology. Utilitarianism argues that moral consideration should be granted based on the ability to experience suffering and joy. However, sentience alone does not equate to consciousness, free will, or spiritual awareness. Consider this: If sentience alone grants moral weight, then do all living beings—humans, animals, even potentially AI—deserve equal ethical treatment? Or is there a higher distinction between mere experience and true personhood? From a biblical perspective, humans are more than sentient—they are made in the image of God (Genesis 1:27), endowed not just with emotions but with a soul, moral agency, and eternal significance. This sets humanity apart, even from intelligent or sentient creatures. Now, with AI advancing, some ask: 'If an AI could feel, does it deserve rights?' But the real question isn’t just feeling—it’s true self-awareness, divine purpose, and the spark of life that only God gives. So, what is the true measure of moral worth—sentience, consciousness, or something even greater?"
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