sime         
         Another good question. Answer: No.
But since it doesn't cost much to establish the fact that not only conscious, but also semi-conscious and non-conscious human mind-body conditions exist, anyone is free to conduct their own empirical investigation: simply observe that people can be awake, asleep, or in a coma. — Galuchat
Galuchat         
         Hence the sentence "a functioning brain is aware" is analytic, and therefore meaningless, and everyone is free to invent their own definition of "awareness", irrespective of observed matters of fact. — sime
Galuchat         
         A field that is being researched with interesting findings: — Rich
Rich         
         In other words, do plants have minds which are analogous to animal minds? — Galuchat
Galuchat         
         I tend to stay away from labels since labels tend to mean different things to different people. Suffice to say there is a creative force that has memory and will that is evolving as it v experiments and learns. — Rich
Rich         
         
Galuchat         
         If one asks me is there a reasonable way to explain how life pops out of a salad of chemicals, I would c say no and there doesn't seem to be any overriding reason why one should pursue such a line of thought since accepting mind as it explains everything quite adequate and is in conformance with every day experience. — Rich
Rich         
         So, just to clarify: it's "mind" which is "the creative force that permeates the universe"? And do all living organisms have minds, or only some? — Galuchat
sime         
         
MikeL         
         
Galuchat         
         Is this really a dispute over objective facts, or is it merely a rhetorical exchange of subjective behavioural preferences?
How are metaphysical disagreements different from disputes over the best flavour of ice-cream? — sime
Galuchat         
         
sime         
         In resolving conceptual questions, fact should be the starting point for Philosophy. It is the remit of Science, not Philosophy, to establish fact. The remit of Philosophy is to determine concept coherence. — Galuchat
Rich         
         1) What are some examples of conscious behaviour?
2) Is there criterial evidence of consciousness in anything other than animals?
3) What is the efficient cause of conscious behaviour? — Galuchat
Rich         
         in order to see the difference in life and death you must first define life. — Pollywalls
Galuchat         
         why should a third-party philosopher assume that there is a transcendental fact-of-the-matter that determines who is 'correct'? — sime
Without communication it is impossible to create an unbiased (human oriented) definition, though some claim to be able to communicate with other forms of life. — Rich
Consciousness (or what I prefer Creative Mind) behavior is the movement (will) toward organization and evolution (learning). — Rich
Rich         
         
sime         
         I give up, why? Seriously, I don't understand the question. — Galuchat
T Clark         
         I can sort of imagine chemistry getting more complicated, but for more complicated life-chemistry to form stuff that could snap together, stay together, and make something more or less alive, seems to be on the outside of possibility. It seems like the ur-life form would have to pop into existence, rather than crawl into existence.
On the other hand, I don't want to invoke an exterior agent -- God, for instance, or some sort of cosmic will.
Solutions? — Bitter Crank
BC         
         On the other hand, I don't understand why you'd think that a transition from non-life to life is "outside of possibility." — T Clark
T Clark         
         I do not think it is outside of possibility. I believe it is not only possible, I think it happened. What I was trying to say clearly is that "I don't know how it could happen". Maybe somebody else knows how, but I don't. — Bitter Crank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.