My general definition of consciousness or sentience would be being in a semiotic modelling relation with the world.
Rocks don’t model anything.
Microbes are a first glimmer of world modelling, but we would hardly say they see a world. They have some chemotaxic reflexes, but not some kind of integrated picture of an environment that changes from moment to moment in some modelled fashion demanding variety of behaviour.
And so we can move on up the chain to organisms with those kinds of complex world models. But being in a modelling relation would be a suitable dividing line. — apokrisis
But then you can start filling back in the obvious degrees of mindfulness/world modelling represented by the distinctions between reflexive behaviour, automatic behaviour, attentive behaviour, self-aware behaviour. That's just the neurobiology of complexity. The modelling steadily becomes more sophisticated in terms of a relation between "a self" and "a world". — apokrisis
Thanks. I'm not claiming anything original. An embodied approach to cognition would be pretty mainstream these days. — apokrisis
To be sure, there is a difference between being non-conscious and being conscious. But between things that are conscious, what would make something "more" conscious than another thing?
As far as I can tell the only difference would be in amount of consciousness, that is to say, the size of the set of things that one is aware of. "Transcending to a higher degree of consciousness" can only mean a change in the contents of consciousness. — darthbarracuda
It's the private sense (the spotlight sense) that seems like it has to be something that's either on or off. — gurugeorge
Microbes are a first glimmer of world modelling, but we would hardly say they see a world. — apokrisis
Does your concept of consciousness, in the context of philosophy of mind, admit of degrees of consciousness? — bert1
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