But you said everything is concious. Jack's assertion wouldn't make any sense under that definition. — Isaac
Jack's assertion would only make any sense if there were some measurable difference between being concious and not, but you're saying that everything is concious, therefore there's no way one could exist, but not be concious. — Isaac
I can't think of any use for such a term. What's more, we're definitely still going to want to differentiate between the level of awareness humans etc demonstrate and that demonstrated by rocks. So we're just going to need a new word to do exactly the job 'conciousness' does presently, whilst at the same time the original word becomes entirely useless. Why not just use the word as it already is? — Isaac
This is really interesting. Ask me if I am conscious and I will say, "yes". Ask a zombie if he is conscious and he will either say "no", or not respond. — Wheatley
In all other potential cases it is impossible to distinguish concious from unconscious - indeed, everything is concious you say. — Isaac
So what's the use of the word? — Isaac
How on Earth does this constitute an "objection"? The fact that black lives don't matter to some people is the whole point and the entire reason BLM exists. This is like saying that the fact that some people commit murder is an "objection" to the moral principle that you shouldn't murder anyone. — Enai De A Lukal
What possible use could it be to define conciousness as some property which is completely undetectable? — Isaac
It wouldn't count as 'evidence' of anything. You just redefined the term to include it. — Isaac
How do you tell when a rock is sleeping?
And if you do not see this question as somewhat absurd, then perhaps that's an end to our discussion. — Banno
I'm not seeing the difference. The reason we call a knocked-out person 'unconscious' is because they don't appear to have those properties. When they 'come to' again, we mark that they have done so by the apparent return of those properties. If those properties collectively, define consciousness it sounds almost exactly like the medical definition. — Isaac
If you are going to argue that rocks are conscious, you are also going to have to acknowledge and explain your novel use of the word "conscious" — Banno
The point was why on earth would anyone consider giving up just because the positions don't seem right to RogueAI? — Isaac
Too complicated for me :)) — Eugen
It's a wonder the professional cognitive scientists, neuroscientists, philosophers and psychologists who've been diligently investigating conciousness for the past few decades, don't just hang up their coats right now after such a damning counter-argument. — Isaac
I think they should be treated as part of a reductio ad absurdum. Hence, Panpsychism fails. — Banno
But to be honest, I don't know if ''more consciouss'' even makes sense. — Eugen
Something could be "conscious of more" than we are. — jorndoe
So we can discuss endlessly.
I am a materialist. — Vladimir Krymchakov
First of all, we don't know whether other animals have a conscience or not. We're talking about human consciousness and more especially our own. — David Mo
It is good evidence to think that a living human brain is a necessary and sufficient condition to have a human consciousness. — David Mo
What is consciousness then? If you introspect into your consciousness you will find experiences and emotions. Nothing more. Remove the experiences and emotions and your consciousness will be empty. — David Mo
I think you would find our consciousness very much can be changed by altering our brain. Taking psychedelics -ie adding chemicals to the composition of the brain, being inflicted with brain damage, meditating, sleeping. All of these actions dramatically influence our state of consciousness — Benj96
Only such a complex system as the brain can produce consciousness. — Vladimir Krymchakov
For the existence of consciousness requires complex organic matter. — Vladimir Krymchakov
Consciousness without an active brain does not exist. — Vladimir Krymchakov
Most physicalist theories of mind say that the mind is supervenient on matter, i.e., matter is what is real, and the mind is dependent on it. — Wayfarer
I pity the poor, innocent chunk of dead flesh lying in the morgue, conscious, but not aware of itself. — jgill
Switch off brain, and there goes consciousness. — jgill
My vote, FWIW... where human infants acquire competence in pointing symbols (including samples) at things, so that a red thing is perceived as an example of red things. — bongo fury
Physicalism is not identical to eliminativism.
— Pfhorrest
No, but it is usually implied by it. — bongo fury
What panpsychism is about is when people ask "Okay that accounts for the behavior of people and their brains but where in any of this emergence of complex behaviors did phenomenal experience start happening and why?" — Pfhorrest
To repeat. My MAIN qualm is with people naively suggesting atoms are ‘conscious’ with the poor defense of ‘just a different kind of conscious’ - which is nonsensical. — I like sushi
↪Pfhorrest Eliminativism & emergentism are non-exclusionary — 180 Proof
