So, while DNA most likely evolved via Random processes, any meaning encoded in the chemistry is a product of Selection, which implements Intention.
There is speculation about this, but no one yet knows how DNA came about. Those who brush aside this problem and its larger question are bending truth.
First, I am surprised that anything exists at all. Second, I am surprised that what exists experiences itself as existing and wonders what it is. To me, this is astonishing.
Very interesting! May I refer you to my thread, "The significance of meaning" which asks if DNA could be the result of random events?
Yes, I'm trying to clarify what your objection is.
The reason for separation are new emergent entities, properties, and meanings. So we can talk about things like wetness and acidity, or letters and words, or ball and wheel, or osmosis and chirality... Subjective, perhaps, so what? Decision is not arbitrary.I'm talking about objective existence, the 'context' in which we determine existence is subjective, it's a decision we make, there's no reason why we should determine objects on any given level of heirachy.
I don't see how that question relates to what I said. What problem you are talking about - who has that problem, when, why?We're we justifiably uncertain of our existence prior to having a model of molecules, cells etc?
In that case it wouldn't.How would our alien, who only senses weak nuclear forces, have any concept of a boundary at a cellular level?
Individual organisms are distinguished from the environment by connections and relations between entities that make up that organism, like shared circulatory system, synchronized motion of all the parts, shape constraints that make up the body...OK, so describe to me where 'you' end, and why there. Maybe some more detail will help me see where you're coming from.
Autonomy & independence, like you can climb a mountain and raindrop can not. Is there some point to all these questions?I'm asking what features of 'my' actions allow you to distinguish them from actions caused by 'the forces of nature'.
Every atom, occupies a different location in space from every other, so that alone doesn't provide any grounds, nit to mention the fact that 3d space seems to be a model which itself is open to question.
Which are 'the forces of nature' and which are my movements, prior to identifying me as an entity?
Give me an reason why they would still recognise you as one thing and me as another. Or even you as one thing and the chair you're sitting on as another.
Phenomenology isn't directly concerned with empirical sciences or the naturalistic attitude.
We cannot measure subjectivity by objective means.
And the definition of consciousness is: "act of self-observation".
- Zelebg
FWIW, I think feedback loops and self-reference are necessary, but not sufficient, to produce consciousness. Again Koch's book gets into the details of how that works
For me that is a contradiction of terms because 'thought' necessarily requires 'feeling'/'emotions'.
As far as I'm concerned you need to 'feel' to be conscious, and you need a body to 'feel'. Ergo you cannot have a 'computed consciousness' and compare it to human consciousness.
Consciousness itself is a relatively ambiguous term so if you start extending it to items like oranges, rocks, trees or cats, then we're going to start to disagree about the technical use of 'consciousness' very quickly.
Zelebg In my view analogies help bring together sets of ideas. Here you don't really have any ideas and have just used an analogy to make the loose idea appear more substantial - you've not succeeded with me.
Some have postulated that the brain works like an antenna to receive transmissions from out in the ether.
The same thing you missed when I said in another thread: "any experience is necesarilly subjective experience", and you disagreed without given explanation or example. You are missing the 'subjectiveness' of the experience. It is that "I" in "I think, therefore I am", and the only concept directly implied and necessary real.
I do not see what's so perplexing aside from it perplexes me to see people keep talking like that...
What did I miss?
That's just behaviour. Where do you see the difference then between a human and robot awareness?By taking account of our own thought and belief and it's effect/affects upon ourselves including our subsequent attitudes and behaviour.
What do you mean?"Why ought" is not the right question at all.
Perhaps taking careful consideration of both the physical and the non physical aspects of all experience would be helpful?
How is that the brain generates the private subjective world of the self and then for what purpose?
That's about as broad and accurate a definition as there can be. The main issue is how we then unpack what this means and what use it is to us to say so.
Consciousness - on my view - is the ability to draw correlations between different things. It begins simply and accrues in it's complexity according to the content of the correlations.
Our difference seems to be regarding what counts as warrant for concluding that the animal has a sense of fairness.
Yes, but the existence of phenomenal consciousness is a trivialism within the worldview (that I have) that of course pigs and cows and rats experience pain and of course machines can be conscious, if they have the right functionality to do so (which pigs and cows and rats and humans clearly do).
Not on my view...
But if there is a thought without "self" isn't that just the same as philosophical zombie or a computer?Being conscious is having/forming thought and belief.
I'm failing to find sense in experience happening to someone who is not aware the experience is their own. I'd say 'to experience' is the same thing as being conscious, and I also fail to see how consciousness makes sense without self-awareness.Some. Not all.
consciousness = awareness
color, sound, feeling = qualia
consciousness and qualia are two sides of the same coin
I'm insisting you know what a conviction is.
We have a couple of good ideas about how life came about, though we cannot decide on a specific one with certainty. We aren't clueless about it.
It only sounds like the work of an intelligent agent if we apply the Copernican principle. If we apply the anthropic principle, the mystery entirely disappears. The universe is made for us because we live in it, not the other way round.