I definitely think the computational complexity approach is worth looking into, though I think computational complexity behaves kind of weirdly at low complexities.
I like the view that waterfalls are at least a bit conscious! Definitely goes against my own intuition.
I’m a bit worried that whether or not there is a low description complexity and low computational complexity algorithm that decodes a human from a waterfall might depend heavily on how we encode the waterfall as a mathematical object and that although it would be clear for “natural” encodings that it was unlike a human we might need a theory to tell us which encodings are natural and which are not.
Thanks a lot for the link. I’ll put it in the reading list (if you don’t mind).
I would be interested to hear what you think about the more technical version of the problem. Do you also think that that can have no good solution, or do you think that a solution just won’t have the nice philosophical consequences?
Also, I’m excited to know a smart waterfall apologist and if you’re up for it I would really like to talk more with you about the argument in your thesis when I have thought about it a bit more.