I had never specifically considered the distinction between "intelligence" and "consciousness," but after reading this, I'd agree that it may be an important distinction warranting consideration.
My sense after reading the article and the wikipedia "Hard problem of consciousness" page is that consciousness is an evolved biological phenomenon that makes intelligent entities stateful. Being stateful is very useful from an evolutionary standpoint. Firstly it lets us pick through & prioritize long-term state. Secondly because it imbues the will to continue maintaining said state. The second is what makes consciousness a dicey prospect to aspire to w/ AI.
While the author asserts that consciousness and intelligence are separate concepts that can develop separately, I'm less sure. It seems plausible that intelligence/problem solving is always improved by having state. And more durable with state. That's presumably why evolution brought it along.
But we already have AI agents like Bard that build a history of responses akin to state. If "recognizing consciousness" is what happens when the speaker becomes aware of their state and able to meta-optimize it, then it seems that consciousness wouldn't ever travel too far behind intelligence.
My sense after reading the article and the wikipedia "Hard problem of consciousness" page is that consciousness is an evolved biological phenomenon that makes intelligent entities stateful. Being stateful is very useful from an evolutionary standpoint. Firstly it lets us pick through & prioritize long-term state. Secondly because it imbues the will to continue maintaining said state. The second is what makes consciousness a dicey prospect to aspire to w/ AI.
While the author asserts that consciousness and intelligence are separate concepts that can develop separately, I'm less sure. It seems plausible that intelligence/problem solving is always improved by having state. And more durable with state. That's presumably why evolution brought it along.
But we already have AI agents like Bard that build a history of responses akin to state. If "recognizing consciousness" is what happens when the speaker becomes aware of their state and able to meta-optimize it, then it seems that consciousness wouldn't ever travel too far behind intelligence.