He's the GOAT in my opinion for "thinking about thinking".
My own thinking on this is that AI actually IS thinking - but its like the MVB of thinking (minimum viable brain)
I find thought experiments the best for this sort of thing:
- Imagine you had long term memory loss so couldn't remember back very long
You'd still be thinking right?
- Next, imagine you go to sleep and lose consciousness for long periods
You'd still be thinking right?
- Next, imagine that when you're awake, you're in a coma and can't move, but we can measure your brain waves still.
You'd still be thinking right?
- Next, imagine you can't hear or feel either.
You'd still be thinking right?
- Next, imagine you were a sociopath who had no emotion.
You'd still be thinking right?
We're just not used to consciousness without any of the other "baggage" involved.
There are many separate aspects of life and shades of grey when it comes to awareness and thinking, but when you take it down to its core, it becomes very hard to differentiate between what an LLM does and what we call "thinking". You need to do it by recognizing the depths and kinds of thoughts that occur. Is the thinking "rote", or is something "special" going on. This is the stuff that Hofstadter gets into(he makes a case for recursion and capability being the "secret" piece - something that LLMs certainly have plumbing in place for!)
BTW, I recommend "Surfaces and Essences" and "I am a strange loop" also by Hofstadter. Good reads!