can response to stimulus be an indicator of consciousness
However, if panpsychists want to insist that virus are conscious then it is up to them to demonstrate their claim. This they haven't done. — Txastopher
If that is the case, then even electrical appliances which operate when they pick up electron flow, shoud be considered conscious in some sense. — StarsFromMemory
... so the picture that is painted in their minds... — Peter Russell
We really only understand one kind of consciousness - our own. — Echarmion
Can consciousness really go all the way down to the level of bacteria and virus? — StarsFromMemory
No, because consciousness implies “mental content”, an infrastructure that can internally model or represent itself vs. everything else. There needs to be a virtual reality simulator built on top of the reactive system, but whether such a system can fit in an insect brain or a single cell is still a question. — Zelebg
Beyond that understanding, the term is meaningless. Yes you can muse about whether a computer, or even a specific program within is "in some sense conscious", but the phrase contains no information, it's empty. You have no idea how such a consciousness would feel like internally, or what it entails for your treatment of the device. — Echarmion
So then we have to consider whether there are two kinds of bodies in the world, conscious and non-conscious, or just one, conscious. If all other things are equal, it seems to me that the default position is that there is one kind of body. — bert1
So then we have to consider whether there are two kinds of bodies in the world, conscious and non-conscious, or just one, conscious. If all other things are equal, it seems to me that the default position is that there is one kind of body. — bert1
I think even the most rudimentary forms of consciousness are only in organisms that possess a nervous system — StarsFromMemory
Phenomenal consciousness is nothing more than the having of a first-person perspective, and applies to everything. — Pfhorrest
And they do have traits and abilities that differentiate them. But consciousness may not be a trait in this sense, it may merely be a facet of what gets called matter. Since we can't detect consciousness, but we can detect behavior, and because we have a bias in granting consciousness to things like us, we tend to grant it to organisms and those like us, and always with great reluctance. Not long ago in science animals, even, were considered machines without consciousness or scientsts at least had to remain agnostic about it.I disagree. All organisms are similar in the sense that all of them are subject to the same physical laws of nature. However, when subjected to those physical processes, they may come to posses certain traits and abilities that differentiates them from each other. — StarsFromMemory
Actually nothing in what you wrote implies that consciousness is the result of evolution. Because certain things can be the result of evolution does not mean all things are.That would imply that consciousness is a result of evolution and can be explained by neuroscience. That is what I have come to believe. — StarsFromMemory
Yes, this is what you think. And I can see the appeal of it and it might be true. Or it might not.I don't think consciousness is a some fundamental property of all creation. I think even the most rudimentary forms of consciousness are only in organisms that posses a nervous system and as the complexity of the system increases, it becomes more and more aware. — StarsFromMemory
The complexity of the nervous system may allow for more cognitive functions, but this may not be coupled at all to being conscious. For all we know a mussel has just as intense experiences as we do, but it does not have anything like our range of cognitive functions. And scientists, after long bias, are beginning to consider that plants are conscious, despite the lack of nervous systems. They have memory, react to pain, communicate, even across plant species, make choices (albeit much slower than we do in general, but not always), and have across whole plant reactions that look very much like nervous system reactions despite not having one. There is absolutely no reason to assume they are not conscious. Note my wording.(What it becomes more and more aware of depends on the part of the nervous system that has become more sophiscated) — StarsFromMemory
Everything that exists — Pfhorrest
Everything that exists
Would the same apply to viruses and DNA? — StarsFromMemory
More scouts return to the swarm and do their own dances. Gradually, some of the scouts become convinced by others, and switch their choreography to match. Once every scout agrees, the swarm flies off to its new home. — New York Times, 3/2/2020
The cognitive functions need not persist. This likes memory, or that this particular batch of atoms, all together, is conscious as a unit, end, but this need not mean that consciousness ends.If that were the case and consciousness were a property of matter rather than a large, functioning nervous system, then consciousness would persist post-mortem. — Txastopher
Matter is interconnected in life forms, and perhaps other batches of matter. A body functions as a unity. Of course perhaps on another level it is connected to other or all matter, but Cognitive functions arise from the complexity of the interconnection inside the organism and also the sense organs. But this does not mean that consciousness is limited to such organizations. Functions are not the same thing as consciousness.What’s the purpose of the brain and sensory organs then? Leaf, branch, tree, forest… what is conscious there, and what makes the boundary between my consciousness and that of the chair I’m sitting at, or the house I’m in, for example? — Zelebg
That’s all about access consciousness. Functionality. Phenomenal consciousness is something much less interesting. — Pfhorrest
But consciousness may not be a trait in this sense, it may merely be a facet of what gets called matter. — Coben
there's never a hard line where something suddenly becomes / ceases to be "consciousness" — Pfhorrest
If that were the case and consciousness were a property of matter rather than a large, functioning nervous system, then consciousness would persist post-mortem. — Txastopher
Also, what is the point of a claim that can not be confirmed in principle and has no explanatory power? — Zelebg
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