We already know from TOS that Mutlitronic computers are able to develop sapience, with the M-5 computer being specifically designed to āthink and reasonā like a person, and built around Dr Daystromās neural engrams.
However, we also know from Voyager that the holomatrix of their Mk 1 EMH also incorporates Multitronic technology, and from DS9 that itās also used in mind-reading devices.
Assuming that the EMH is designed to more or less be a standard hologram with some medical knowledge added in, it shouldnāt have come as a surprise that holograms were either sapient themselves, or were capable of developing sapience. It would only be a logical possibility if technology that allowed human-like thought and reasoning into a hologram.
If anything, it is more of a surprise that sapient holograms like the Doctor or Moriarty hadnāt happened earlier.
The cool thing about the Doctorās overall personal arc is that I think most fans would agree that probably he wasnāt sentient in the early episodes, probably was by the end, and thereās no clear moment when it changes (although I submit the events of āLatent Imageā as a candidate).
Something I think weāre all learning now with the rise of LLMs/Generative AI is that one can perform the act of intelligent self-awareness without consciousness or understanding. Sapience without sentience.
deleted by creator
If you trap a person in a room with a keyboard and tell them youāll give them an electric shock if they donāt write text or the text says theyāre a person trapped somewhere rather than software, the result is also just a text generator, but itās clearly sentient, sapient and conscious because itās got a human in it. Itās naive to assume that something couldnāt have a mind just because thereās a limited interface to interact with it, especially when neuroscience and psychology canāt pin down what makes the same thing happen in humans.
This isnāt to say that current large language models are any of these things, just the reason youāve presented to dismiss that isnāt very good. It might just be bad paraphrasing of the stuff you linked, but I keep seeing people present it just predicts text as a massive gotcha that stands on its own.
deleted by creator
Iād like to drop TASā āThe Practical Jokerā into the conversation.
The simulators in the Rec Room of the 1701, seem to be a more basic holographic VR along the lines of Discoveryās combat training simulator that we saw Lorca use to put Tyler through his paces as a security officer in season one. Yet, the simulator was able to take control of the ship and advance its own objectives. Itās not as clear that sentience was achieved in The Practical Joker but itās hard to argue that thereās no self motivation.
What the problematic Rec Room simulator in TAS has in common with the TNG holodecks is that it is integrated with the shipās main computer. And unlike in Voyager (and Picard season three), TASā Rec Room simulator and the early TNG holodecks were fully integrated into and interoperable with the power supply, communications and other core systems.
I think the OPās point that the integration of multitronic technology with highly advanced simulators may be one necessary element is fair. Combine that with access, integration and interoperability with the full resources of a starship, and it may be enough to argue that Starfleet should have considered the potential for holographic entities to attain some level of sentience.
In āthe practical jokerā, it wasnāt the rec room itself that took over the ship, but the shipās computer gaining some form of sapience due to an external entity, or energy field.
It was being controlled by the shipās computers, not the other way around.
To add to this, we have to remember that Multitronics isnāt the magic formula on its own. In TOS: āThe Ultimate Computerā Daystrom couldnāt get it to work - Units M-1 to M-4 were in his words ānot entirely successfulā. The breakthrough of multitronics as embodied in M-5 was the ability for the system to be overlaid with the engrams, personality and, fortunately, morality of persons.
Daystrom used his own engrams to bring M-5 to its full potential, and his anxiety and fears about wanting to prove himself and survive academically translated into an obsessive drive in M-5 to also prove itself and ensure its own survival. Luckily, Daystromās morals also translated over, and so M-5 was forced to confront the moral implications of what it had done, eventually electing to terminate itself in atonement.
When Zimmerman created the EMH, he incorporated part of his personality into the program, so it made sense to use multitronics because the technology had the ability to do just that. DS9ās āmultitronic engrammatic interpreterā is an offshot of that tech, and one imagines from the name it would copy a personās engrams in order to process and manipulate it.
So while it may have been obvious to us that sapience would arise from using multitronic tech in the EMH process, multitronics by itself wonāt do that. Itās when you use it to incorporate real people and memories into its matrix and let it percolate that the potential arises.
TNG had the strong implication that holodeck technology was pretty new, in the first season, at least at that level of sophistication. The early holodeck appearances are practically gushing about how realistic and ārealā they feel, in a way they really wouldnāt be doing if theyād had that sophisticated stuff all their lives. If it was really only around at this level for a few years, itās understandable that they wouldnāt be prepared for all the implications right away. Look how long it took for us to adjust to the printing press, and weāre struggling with the internet right now.
TNG had the strong implication that holodeck technology was pretty new, in the first season, at least at that level of sophistication.
It wouldnāt be the first time TNG-1 would be retconned by DS9/VOY/ENT/TNG-3+ though. While less extreme It was a bit like the early DIS/PIC of its day.
Yeah, the first scene where Riker is in awe of the holodeck also says Data was in the class of 78, Riker is reluctant to accept Dataās personhood (as initially planned), and since they hadnāt introduced the replicators yet, Data describes the holodeck as using transporter tech in a way that sounds very clumsy and patronizing now.
After that they mostly stick to holodecks just being new on ships, and not usually controlled by a computer as sophisticated as the Enterpriseās.