Wayfarer
We seem to have a vastly different notion of what constitutes an ontological distinction. It seems you might find a stop sign ontologically distinct from a speed limit sign since they have different properties. — noAxioms
If a biological explanation turns out to be the correct one, I imagine it will also show that most of our rough-and-ready conceptions about subjectivity and consciousness are far too impoverished — J
noAxioms
Most choose to frame their guesses as assertions. That's what I push back on. I'm hessitant to label my opinions as 'beliefs', since the word connotes a conclusion born more of faith than of hard evidence (there's always evidence on both sides, but it being hard makes it border more on 'proof').Yes. And I'm in no position to claim that any view on consciousness is necessarily right or wrong. We're dealing with educated guesses, at best. — J
But we have explanations of things as simple as consciousness. What's complicated is say how something like human pain manifests itself to the process that detects it. A self-driving car could not do what it does if it wasn't conscious any more than an unconscious person could navigate through a forest without hitting the trees. But once that was shown, the goalposts got moved, and it is still considered a problem. Likewise, God designing all the creatures got nicely explained by evolution theory, so instead of conceding the lack of need for the god, they just moved the goal posts and suggest typically that we need an explanation for the otherwise appearance of the universe from nothing. They had to move that goalpost a lot further away than it used to be.There will always be those that wave away any explanation as correlation, not causation. — noAxioms
Hmm. I suppose so, but that wouldn't mean we hadn't learned the explanation.
You also need to answer the question I asked above, a kind of litmus test for those with your stance:Absolutely. If a biological explanation turns out to be the correct one, I imagine it will also show that most of our rough-and-ready conceptions about subjectivity and consciousness are far too impoverished.
If yes, is it also yes for bacteria?[Concerning] a Urbilaterian (a brainless ancestor of you, and also a starfish). Is it a being? Does it experience [pain say] and have intent? — noAxioms
They don't have even close to the mental abilities we have, which is why I'm comparing the cars to an Urbilaterian. .But what little they have is enough, and (the point I'm making) there is no evidence that our abilities of an Urbilaterian are ontologically distinct from those of the car.You are the one who suggested that solution, because you want cars to be seen as having the mental abilities we have. I'm fine with cars being seen as not having them. — Patterner
Those supposed secondary qualities can also be measured as much as the first list. It just takes something a bit more complicated than a tape measure.Galileo's point, which was foundational in modern science, was that the measurable attributes of bodies - mass, velocity, extension and so on - are primary, while how bodies appear to observers - their colour, scent, and so on - are secondary (and by implication derivative). — Wayfarer
Interesting, but kind of expected. Stimulation can evoke simple reflex actions (a twitch in the leg, whatever), but could not do something like make him walk, even involuntarily. A memory or sensation might be evoked by stimulation of a single area, but something complex like a decision is not a matter of a single point of stimulation. Similarly with the sensation, one can evoke a memory or smell, but not evoke a whole new fictional story or even a full experience of something in the past.... Canadian neuroscientist Wilder Penfield (1891-1976), who operated on many conscious patients during his very long career.
...
While electrical stimulation of the cortex could evoke experiences, sensations, or involuntary actions, it could never make the patient will to act or decide to recall something.
I talked about this early in the topic, maybe the OP. Suppose it was you that was simulated, after a scan taken without your awareness. Would the simulated you realize something had changed, that he was not the real one? If not, would you (the real you) write that off as a p-zombie? How could the simulated person do anything without the same subjective experience?A fully simulated brain might behave exactly like a conscious person, but whether there’s 'anything it’s like' to be that simulation is the very point at issue.
Perhaps I am, perhaps because they're inventing a distinction where there needn't be one.When you treat the first-person point of view as something that emerges from a “third-person-understandable substrate,” you are collapsing the distinction Chalmers and Nagel are pointing out.
But the ontological distinction between beings of any kind, and nonorganic objects, is that the former are distinguished by an active metabolism which seeks to preserve itself and to reproduce ~ Wayfarer
— Wayfarer
I don't find your list of traits to be in any way a difference in mode of being. Water evaporates. Rocks don't. That's a difference, but not a difference in mode of being any more than the difference between the rock and the amoeba. Perhaps I misunderstand 'mode', but I see 'being' simply as 'existing', which is probably not how you're using the term. To me, all these things share the same mode: they are members of this universe, different arrangements of the exact same fundamentals. My opinion on that might be wrong, but it hasn't been shown to be wrong.I’m not using “ontological” here to mean merely “a set of observable traits.” I’m using it in its proper philosophical sense — a distinction in the mode of being.
Our opinions on this obviously differ.This isn’t a mere property added to matter
I notice a predictable response to the Urbilaterian question: evasion. That question has direct bearing on this assertion.Life introduces an interiority
I acknowledge this.That method proved extraordinarily powerful, but it also defined its own limits: whatever is subjective was set aside from the outset. As noted above, this is not a matter of opinion.
To describe something in any terms at all still omits that. I said as much in the OP.To describe something in purely physical terms is by definition to omit 'what it feels like' to be that thing.
Vitalism?... Evan Thompson
Wayfarer
Perhaps I misunderstand 'mode', but I see 'being' simply as 'existing', which is probably not how you're using the term. To me, all these things share the same mode: they are members of this universe, different arrangements of the exact same fundamentals. — noAxioms
J
You also need to answer the question I asked above, a kind of litmus test for those with your stance:
[Concerning] a Urbilaterian (a brainless ancestor of you, and also a starfish). Is it a being? Does it experience [pain say] and have intent?
— noAxioms
If yes, is it also yes for bacteria?
The almost unilateral response to this question by non-physicalists is evasion. — noAxioms
Harry Hindu
In other words, the third person is really just a simulated first person view. — Harry Hindu
No, not at all. If a third person conveyance did that, I could know what it's like to be a bat. Not even a VR setup (a simulation of experience) can do that. — noAxioms
But you can only know what it is like to be a bat from within your first-person experience. It's no different than seeing your Desktop screen on your computer and starting up a virtual machine that shows another Desktop within the framework of your existing Desktop. — Harry Hindu
The last sentence is reiterating the point that I made that the third-person view still occurs within the framework of the first-person view.I cannot know what it's like to be a bat. period. A flight simulator doesn't do it. That just shows what it's like for a human (still being a human) to have a flying-around point of view. — noAxioms
Well, there's a lot going on in this thread and our memories are finite, so you might have to restate your definition from time to time, or at least reference your definition as stated.It's that people tend to insert their own definition of 'mind' when I use the word, and not use how I define it, despite being explicit about the definition. — noAxioms
This is self-defeating.I don't think we know anything as it is in itself — noAxioms
A more accurate way to frame this is through the concept of the central executive in working memory. This isn’t a tiny conscious agent controlling the mind, but a dynamic system that coordinates attention, updates representations, and integrates information from different cognitive subsystems. It doesn’t “watch” the mind; it organizes and manages the flow of processing in a way that allows higher-level reflection and planning.As for the homonculus, humans do seem to have a very developed one, which is a sort of consciousness separate from the subconscious (the map maker, and source of intuitions). The subconscious is older (evolutionary time) and is waaay more efficient, and does most of the work and decision making. It is in charge since it holds all the controls. It might hold different beliefs than the homonculus, the latter of which is a more rational tool, used more often to rationalize than to be rational. — noAxioms
Objects are the process of interacting smaller "objects". The problem is that the deeper you go, you never get at objects, but processes of ever smaller "objects" interacting. Therefore it is processes, or relations all the way down. Objects are mental representations of other processes and what your brain calls an object depends on how quickly those processes are changing vs. how quickly your brain can process those changes (relativity applies to perception). A fast-moving spark may appear as a blur, while slower-moving flames are perceived as discrete objects.No. Flame is an object. There's six flames burning in the candle rack. Combustion is a process (a process is still a noun, but not an object). Flame is often (but not always) where combustion takes place.
Yes, combustion is much simpler. It's why I often choose that example: Simple examples to help better understand similar but more complex examples. — noAxioms
This is not an accurate representation of what I said. All you are doing is moving the goal posts. If flame and combustion are distinct processes, then my definition is applies to being the flame, not the combustion and the flame would have direct access to itself as being the flame and indirect access to the process of combustion. The same goes for the map vs the homunculus - the homunculus would have direct access to itself, not the map - hence the Cartesian Theatre problem.As for your definition, does a flame have direct access to its process of combustion? — noAxioms
What does it mean to be a rock? Probably not that the rock has any direct access to some sort of rock process. — noAxioms
So, here I think we really need to iron out what we mean by, "access" and "being". Does a rock have an internal representation of itself, and does some other aspect of the rock have access to this representation? Does that even make sense? Can there be a sense of being for a rock? Does something need to have an internal representation with some other part "accessing" those representations for it to be, or have a sense of being? Is the sense of being something the same as being that something? Is access inherently indirect?You're making my argument for me. If the rock doesn't have any direct access to the rock process, then it logically follows that there is no access - just being.
— Harry Hindu
Here you suggest that the rock has 'being' (it is being a rock) without direct access to it's processes (or relative lack of them). This contradicts your suggestion otherwise that being a rock means direct access to, well, 'something', if not its processes.
"we have direct access to something, which is simply what it means to be that process." — noAxioms
True. I would say that while the theory of QM is not metaphysical, the various interpretations are.Quantum theory is not a metaphysical theory about what is, but rather a scientific theory about what one will expect to measure. In that sense, Copenhagen fits perfectly since it is about what we expect, and not about what is. — noAxioms
javra
[Concerning] a Urbilaterian (a brainless ancestor of you, and also a starfish). Is it a being? Does it experience [pain say] and have intent? — noAxioms
If yes, is it also yes for bacteria?
The almost unilateral response to this question by non-physicalists is evasion. What does that suggest about their confidence in their view? — noAxioms
Abstract
As has been stated, bacteria are able to sense a wide range of environmental stimuli through a variety of receptors and to integrate the different signals to produce a balanced response that maintains them or directs them to an optimum environment for growth. In addition, these simple, neuron-less organisms can adapt to the current concentration or strength of stimuli, i.e. they have a memory of the past. Although different species show responses to different chemicals or stimuli, depending on their niche, a consistent pattern is starting to emerge that links environmental sensing and transcriptional control to the chemosensing system, either directly, as in R. sphaeroides and the PTS system, or indirectly, as in the MCP-dependent system. This suggests a common evolutionary pathway from transcriptional activators to dedicated sensory systems. Currently the majority of detailed investigations into bacterial behavior have been carried out on single stimuli under laboratory conditions using well-fed cells. Only limited analysis, using a range of rhizosphere and pathogenic species, has been carried out on the role of behavioral responses in the wild. While laboratory studies are needed to provide the backbone for eventual in vivo investigations, we should remember the responses of whole cells to changes in their environment under laboratory conditions are essentially artificial compared to the natural environment of most species. Once the basic system is understood, it will be possible to investigate the role of these responses in vivo, under competitive, growth-limiting conditions with multiple gradients. — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1562188/
boundless
OK. I called it strong emergence since it isn't the property of the radio components alone. More is needed. Equivalently, substance dualism treats the brain as sort of a receiver tuned to amplify something not-brain. It's a harder sell with property dualism. — noAxioms
That's what a radio is: a receiver. It probably has no understanding of sound or what it is doing. — noAxioms
I would suggest that we actually do know enough to explain any of that, but still not a full explanation, and the goalposts necessarily get moved. — noAxioms
Not true. There are plenty of machines whose functioning is not at all understood. That I think is the distinction between real AI and just complex code. Admittedly, a self driving car is probably mostly complex code with little AI to it. It's a good example of consciousness (unconscious things cannot drive safely), but it's a crappy example of intelligence or creativity. — noAxioms
You can fix a broken machine. — noAxioms
Interestingly, a human maintains memory for about 3 minutes without energy input (refresh). A computer memory location lasts about 4 milliseconds and would be lost if not read and written back before then. Disk memory is far less volatile of course. — noAxioms
Quantum theory defines measurement as the application of a mathematical operator to a quantum state, yielding probabilistic outcomes governed by the Born rule. Best I could do. — noAxioms
javra
Not true. There are plenty of machines whose functioning is not at all understood. That I think is the distinction between real AI and just complex code. Admittedly, a self driving car is probably mostly complex code with little AI to it. It's a good example of consciousness (unconscious things cannot drive safely), but it's a crappy example of intelligence or creativity. — noAxioms
Ok, but in the case of the machines we can reasonably expect that all their actions can be explained by algorithms. And I'm not sure that a self-driving car is conscious, in the sense there is 'something like being a self-driving machine'. — boundless
boundless
As boundless points to, its “behaviors” all stem from human created algorithms that logically reduce to an “if A then B” type of efficient causation—even if these algorithms are exceedingly complex, evolve over time, and aren’t fully understood by us humans—and this devoid of both a) any intent(s) innate to its being upon which all of its “behaviors” pivot (and intents, innate or otherwise, can only be teleological rather than efficiently causal, with algorithms strictly being the latter) and, likewise, b) the affective valence which these same innate intents bring about. Example: a stationary self-driving car will not react if you open up the hood so as to dismantle the engine (much less fend for itself), nor will it feel any dolor if you do. Therefore, the self-driving car cannot be conscious. — javra
J
Patterner
That's a great way of putting it. If life wants to endure, it needs to know what is valuable.The enactive framework strongly supports a continuity of life and mind, showing that living systems are inherently value-constituting and purposive. — J
J
I would like to say: Therefore, something choosing valuable things in order to endure is living. But I don't think anyone would let me have that. I suspect people will say only biological things are living. I'd say maybe we should expand the definition of living, and divide it into Biological Life, Mechanical Life, and whatever else. — Patterner
Patterner
I know I'm alone here at TPF in my thinking that consciousness is fundamental. But, if I'm right, then there is consciousness in all such entities. And not just the individual particles that make up the entity, each experiencing only its own individual existence. The entity would be conscious as an entity. Value-seeking surely isn't accomplished without information processing, which is what I think accounts for collective consciousness. Of course, that doesn't imply mental abilities like ours. An archaea only experiences being a single-celled organism, not an entity with things like memories, abstract thoughts, and self-awareness.Can an entity, alive or not, do this value-seeking thing and not be conscious? I agree with him that we don't yet know. — J
Maybe. But the definition of life is famously unclear. The first thing Sara Imari Walker talks about in Life As No One Knows It is how definitions differ, and how any definition rules out some things you think are alive, and includes some things you think are not. So maybe the question isn't as much "Why?" as it is "Why not?".That could be true, but you'd have to say more about why. — J
J
Maybe the key is not what life is made of, but what it's doing. This can apply to anyone's definition. — Patterner
The first thing Sara Imari Walker talks about in Life As No One Knows It is how definitions differ, and how any definition rules out some things you think are alive, and includes some things you think are not. — Patterner
But the definition of life is famously unclear. — Patterner
The entity would be conscious as an entity. — Patterner
boundless
Life on this planet has always been of a certain type. That makes sense, because the laws of physics woked with what was available. Certain arrangements of matter. — Patterner
noAxioms
OK, from this I gather that your statement that you're asserting an ontological distinction, a distinction in the mode of being, you're merely expressing opinion, not evidence of any sort. You had phrased it more as the latter. We are (mostly) well aware of each other's opinions.Which is, in a word, physicalism - there is only one substance, and it is physical. From within that set of assumptions, Chalmer's and Nagel's types of arguments will always remain unintelligible. — Wayfarer
Better answer than most, but I would suggest that not even knowing if some random animal is a being or not seems to put one on poor footing to assert any kind of fundamental difference that prevents say a car from being conscious.[Concerning] a Urbilaterian (a brainless ancestor of you, and also a starfish). Is it a being? Does it experience [pain say] and have intent?
— noAxioms
I don't know. And that's not evasion, just honesty. — J
Any answer (right/wrong is irrelevant here) sheds light on what I'm after. Nagel seemed to avoid it, venturing no further from a human than a bat, a cousin so close that I have to check with the records to before committing to marry one. This is the sort of thing I'm after when asking that question.But I also don't think that the right answer to that question reveals much about the larger problem.
OK, but then the key that distinguishes conscious from otherwise is not 'is biological'. The key is something else, and the next question would be 'why can only something biological turn that key?'.I think consciousness will turn out to depend on biology, but that's not to say that everything alive is conscious.
It not being real is irrelevant. A simulation of a bat fails because it can at best be a simulation of a human doing batty things, not at all what it's like to be the bat having batty experiences.As I said, the virtual machine is a simulation, not the real thing. — Harry Hindu
As I said, that can be done. It just takes practice. No simulation needed.For instance, I might try to imagine what it might be to just experience the world through echo-location without all the other sensory experiences the bat might have.
If I use the word in my own context, I'm probably referencing mental processes. Not an object or a substance of any kind.Well, there's a lot going on in this thread and our memories are finite, so you might have to restate your definition from time to time, or at least reference your definition as stated.
When talking about things in the shared world, I'm probably talking about the pragmatic notion of the thing in question, never the thing in itself. On rare occasion, I perhaps attempt (on a forum say) a description of the thing closer to what it actually is, but that's rare, and I'm highly likely to not be getting it right. "It is stranger than we can think." -- Heisenburg [/quote]When talking about anything in the shared world you are (attempting to (your intent is to)) talking about the thing as it is in itself, or else what information are you trying to convey? — Harry Hindu
My version of mind is a pragmatic description of the way I see it. So is yours, despite seeing it differently. One of us may be closer to the way it actually is, but I doubt anybody has nailed that.Why should I believe anything you say if you can never talking about things as they are in themselves - like your version of mind?
You seem to be talking about both sides. For one, I never mentioned 'tiny'. What I call the homonculus seems to be (volume wise) about as large as the rest combined. Only in humans. That part 'watches' the model (the map) that the subconscious creates. All of it together is part of mental process, so it isn't watching the mind since it all is the mind. The tasks that you list above seem to be performed by both sides, each contributing what it does best. If speed/performance is a requisite, the subconscious probably does the work since it is so much faster. If time is available (such as for the high level reflection and planning you mention), that probably happens in the higher, less efficient levelsA more accurate way to frame this is through the concept of the central executive in working memory. This isn’t a tiny conscious agent controlling the mind, but a dynamic system that coordinates attention, updates representations, and integrates information from different cognitive subsystems. It doesn’t “watch” the mind; it organizes and manages the flow of processing in a way that allows higher-level reflection and planning.
In deed, it's quite the opposite. It's the boss, and what I call here this homonculus is a nice rational tool that it utilizes.The subconscious isn’t some subordinate system taking orders from the homunculus.
OK. I'm pretty on board with relational definitions of everything, so I suppose one could frame things this way. My example was more of the way language is used. It's OK to say 6 flames were lit, but it's syntactically wrong to say 6 combustions are lit. But 'combustion' can still be used as a noun in a sentence, as a reference to a process, not an object. Of course this draws a distinction between process and object. Your definition does not, and also clashes with the way the words are used in language,.Objects are the process of interacting smaller "objects". The problem is that the deeper you go, you never get at objects, but processes of ever smaller "objects" interacting. Therefore it is processes, or relations all the way down.
That's idealism now. I'm not talking about idealism.Objects are mental representations of other processes
Well how about a rock then (the typical object example). What causes rock? I'm not asking how it was formed, but what the process is that is the rock.Ok, so combustion → causes → flame. Both are processes, but not identical. Combustion is the reaction; flame is the visible process that results from it.
I never said that. I called the flame an object, not a process. I distinguish between process and object, even if the object happens to be a process, which is still 'process' vs. 'a process'.If flame and combustion are distinct processes
I think here you are confusing 'being a rock' with 'the rock having a sense of being'. They're not the same thing. The first is a trivial tautology. The second seems to be a form of introspection.Does something need to have an internal representation with some other part accessing those representations for it to be, or have a sense of being?
I agree, but non-living things can also do this. Thanks for the blurb. Interesting stuff.Can bacteria act and react in relation to novel stimuli so as to not only preserve but improve their homeostatic metabolism (loosely, their physiological life)?
The answer is a resounding yes. — javra
Excellent. From such subtle roots, it was already there, needing only to be honed. Do they know what exactly implements this valence? Is it a chemical difference? In a non-chemical machine, some other mechanism would be required.there then is no rational means of denying that at least a bacterium’s extreme negative valence will equate to the bacterium’s dolor and, hence, pain.
Instincts like that are likely encoded in the DNA, the product of countless 'generations' of natural selection. I put 'generations' in scare quotes since the term isn't really relevant to a non-eukaryote.Their responsiveness to stimuli likewise entails that they too are endowed with instinctive, else innate, intents—such as that of optimally maximizing the quality and longevity of their homeostatic metabolism.
Here your biases show through. Possession seems to be required for the cell to do this. The bacterium is possessed. The car is asserted not to be, despite some cars these days being endowed with an awareness that meaningfully responds to stimuli. I've always likened substance dualism with being demon possessed, yielding one's free will to that of the demon, apparently because the demon makes better choices?A bacterium is no doubt devoid of an unconscious mind—this while nevertheless being endowed with a very primitive awareness that yet meaningfully responds to stimuli. Cars aren’t (not unless they’re possessed by ghosts and named “Carrie” (a joke)). — javra
And toasters.As to an absolute proof of this, none can be provided as is summed up in the philosophical problem of other minds. But if one can justify via empirical information and rational discernment that one’s close friend has an awareness-pivoted mind, and can hopefully do the same for lesser-animals, then there is no reason to not so likewise do for bacteria.
Disagree. The chess program beats you despite nobody programming any chess algorithms into it at all. It doesn't even know about chess at first until the rules are explained to it. Only the rules, nothing more.Ok, but in the case of the machines we can reasonably expect that all their actions can be explained by algorithms. — boundless
I agree that not being rigorously defined, consciousness can be thus loosely applied to what is simple cause and effect. For that matter, what we do might just be that as well.In conjunction with what I’ve just expressed in my previous post, I’ll maintain that for something to be conscious, the following must minimally apply, or else everything from alarm clocks to individual rocks can be deemed to be conscious as well (e.g., “a rock experiences the hit of a sledgehammer as stimuli and reacts to it by breaking into pieces, all this in manners that are not yet perfectly understood"): — javra
This seems a biased definition. It would mean that even if I manufacture a human from non-living parts, it would not be conscious. Why does the intent need to be innate? Is a slave not conscious because his intent is that of his master?To be conscious, it must a) at minimum hold intents innate to its very being
Heck, even my car reacts to that, and it's not very smart. A self-driving car very much does react to that, but mostly only to document it. It has no preservation priorities that seek to avoid damage while parked. It could have, but not sure how much an owner would want a car that flees unexpectedly when it doesn't like what's going on.Example: a stationary self-driving car will not react if you open up the hood so as to dismantle the engine (much less fend for itself), nor will it feel any dolor if you do. Therefore, the self-driving car cannot be conscious.
Good. Most in the camp of 'no, because it's a machine' do actually.Please notice that I'm not in all this upholding the metaphysical impossibility of any AI program ever becoming conscious at any future point in time.
Surely the car (and a toaster) has this. It's doing what it's designed to do. That's a teleological process in operation.And, from everything I so far understand, teleological processes can only hold veritable presence within non-physicalist ontologies:
That opens a whole can of worms about identity. The same arguments apply to humans. Typically, the pragmatic answer is 'yes'. Identity seems to be a pragmatic idea, with no metaphysical basis behind it.When we fix a machine is the fixed machine the same entity as it was before, or not? — boundless
Both have pragmatic identity. Neither has metaphysical identity since it's pretty easy to find fault in any attempt to define it rigorously.We get a new problem here. Can machines be regarded as having an 'identity' as we have?
You need to expand on this. I don't know what you mean by it.Agreed I would add that It doesn't tell you in which cases the Born rule applies.
I agree. It is the goal of very few machines to endure or to be fit. That's not a fundamental difference with the typical life form, but it's still a massive difference. Machines need to be subjected to natural selection before that might change, and a machine that is a product of natural selection is a scary thing indeed.The enactive framework strongly supports a continuity of life and mind, showing that living systems are inherently value-constituting and purposive. — J
That's a great way of putting it. If life wants to endure, it needs to know what is valuable. — Patterner
This is a great point. It's simply hard to formalize what is meant by a word despite everybody knowing what the word means. It means more "what I think is alive" which differs from the rigorous definition that, as was mentioned, always includes something you think isn't, and excludes something you think is". But what the child does lacks this problem by definition. The child just knows when to use the word or not.But it's also the case that a child will be able to sort living from non-living things with great accuracy, given the currently accepted use of "living." The child doesn't know the definition -- arguably, no one does for sure -- but she knows how to use the word. — J
javra
Do they know what exactly implements this valence? Is it a chemical difference? — noAxioms
Here your biases show through. Possession seems to be required for the cell to do this. The bacterium is possessed. The car is asserted not to be, despite some cars these days being endowed with an awareness that meaningfully responds to stimuli. I've always likened substance dualism with being demon possessed, yielding one's free will to that of the demon, apparently because the demon makes better choices?
If a cell can be possessed, why not a toaster? What prevents that? — noAxioms
Side note: It's Christine, not Carrie. — noAxioms
I agree that not being rigorously defined, consciousness can be thus loosely applied to what is simple cause and effect. — noAxioms
This seems a biased definition. It would mean that even if I manufacture a human from non-living parts, it would not be conscious. Why does the intent need to be innate? Is a slave not conscious because his intent is that of his master? — noAxioms
And, from everything I so far understand, teleological processes can only hold veritable presence within non-physicalist ontologies: -- javra
Surely the car (and a toaster) has this. It's doing what it's designed to do. That's a teleological process in operation. — noAxioms
J
I would suggest that not even knowing if some random animal is a being or not seems to put one on poor footing to assert any kind of fundamental difference that prevents say a car from being conscious. — noAxioms
Patterner
I assumed you're familiar with one. If reproduction is part of the definition of life, then worker bees and mules are not alive. Neither is my mother, as she's is 83.The first thing Sara Imari Walker talks about in Life As No One Knows It is how definitions differ, and how any definition rules out some things you think are alive, and includes some things you think are not.
— Patterner
Interesting. Would it be easy for you to cite an example of each? Curious to know what she has in mind. — J
And I'll include this conversation between Data (an android, if you're not familiar) and Dr. Crusher, from Star Trek:The Next Generation.For many years a physiological definition of life was
popular. Life was defined as any system capable of
performing a number of such functions as eating,
metabolizing, excreting, breathing, moving, growing, reproducing, and being responsive to external stimuli. But many such properties are either present in machines that nobody is willing to call alive, or absent from organisms that everybody is willing to call alive. An automobile, for example, can be said to eat, metabolize, excrete, breathe, move, and be responsive to external stimuli. And a visitor from another planet, judging from the enormous numbers of automobiles on the Earth and the way in which cities and landscapes have been designed for the special benefit of motorcars, might wellbelieve that automobiles are not only alive but are the dominant life form on the planet. — Carl Sagan
Data: What is the definition of life?
Crusher: That is a BIG question. Why do you ask?
Data: I am searching for a definition that will allow me to test an hypotheses.
Crusher: Well, the broadest scientific definition might be that life is what enables plants and animals to consume food, derive energy from it, grow, adapt themselves to their surrounding, and reproduce.
Data: And you suggest that anything that exhibits these characteristics is considered alive.
Crusher: In general, yes.
Data: What about fire?
Crusher: Fire?
Data: Yes. It consumes fuel to produce energy. It grows. It creates offspring. By your definition, is it alive?
Crusher: Fire is a chemical reaction. You could use the same argument for growing crystals. But, obviously, we don't consider them alive.
Data: And what about me? I do not grow. I do not reprodue. Yet I am considered to be alive.
Crusher: That's true. But you are unique.
Data: Hm. I wonder if that is so.
Crusher: Data, if I may ask, what exactly are you getting at?
Data: I am curious as to what transpired between the moment when I was nothing more than an assemblage of parts in Dr. Sung's laboratory and the next moment, when I became alive. What is it that endowed me with life?
Crusher: I remember Wesley asking me a similar question when he was little. And I tried desperately to give him an answer. But everything I said sounded inadequate. Then I realized that scientists and philosophers have been grappling with that question for centuries without coming to any conclusion.
Data: Are you saying the question cannot be answered?
Crusher: No. I think I'm saying that we struggle all our lives to answer it. That it's the struggle that is important. That's what helps us to define our place in the universe.
I don't follow. I don't see significant difference between those options. It seems like just different wording.One question worth considering: Which way does the argument point? Is it, "Any entity that can do this value-seeking thing will now be defined as 'being conscious'"? Or is it, "We know (have learned/hypothesize) that being conscious means having the ability to do the value-seeking thing, so if it can do it, it's conscious"? — J
J
I think consciousness will turn out to depend on biology, but that's not to say that everything alive is conscious.
OK, but then the key that distinguishes conscious from otherwise is not 'is biological'. The key is something else, and the next question would be 'why can only something biological turn that key?'. — noAxioms
javra
For something that's included that we think is booty living, she cites Carl Sagan' Definitions of Life:
For many years a physiological definition of life was
popular. Life was defined as any system capable of
performing a number of such functions as eating,
metabolizing, excreting, breathing, moving, growing, reproducing, and being responsive to external stimuli. But many such properties are either present in machines that nobody is willing to call alive, or absent from organisms that everybody is willing to call alive. An automobile, for example, can be said to eat, metabolize, excrete, breathe, move, and be responsive to external stimuli. And a visitor from another planet, judging from the enormous numbers of automobiles on the Earth and the way in which cities and landscapes have been designed for the special benefit of motorcars, might wellbelieve that automobiles are not only alive but are the dominant life form on the planet. — Carl Sagan — Patterner
Patterner
J
One question worth considering: Which way does the argument point? Is it, "Any entity that can do this value-seeking thing will now be defined as 'being conscious'"? Or is it, "We know (have learned/hypothesize) that being conscious means having the ability to do the value-seeking thing, so if it can do it, it's conscious"?
— J
I don't follow. I don't see significant difference between those options. It seems like just different wording. — Patterner
javra
And not all life uses cellular respiration. — Patterner
My overriding question is:. Can there be life without chemical reactions? — Patterner
Patterner
I have to assume we could make a program that duplicates itself, but does so imperfectly. Since they operate so fast, they could doubtless go through a million generations in a fairly short time.I agree. It is the goal of very few machines to endure or to be fit. That's not a fundamental difference with the typical life form, but it's still a massive difference. Machines need to be subjected to natural selection before that might change, and a machine that is a product of natural selection is a scary thing indeed. — noAxioms
Patterner
I swear I'm not trying to be difficult, but I don't get it. How can you learn how to use the word correctly other than by being taught those qualities? And how can you categorize the shapes without recognizing them?Compare a geometrical shape such as a trapezoid. One might learn how to use the word correctly, and thus recognize trapezoids, without being able to say exactly what are the qualities that make the shape a trapezoid. Or, one might be taught those qualities, along with the word "trapezoid," and then categorize the shapes one encounters. — J
I thought we were talking about life. As for consciousness, yes, I already know what the word means, and nothing you bring up applies. :grin: :lol: Anyway, my thought is that everything is conscious. More precisely, subjective experience is a property of all particles. They all experience their own being. Which, in the case of a particle, isn't much. There are no mechanisms for sensory input, storage of information from previous sensory input, feedback loops, or any other mental activity.Which approach should we adopt in the case of consciousness? Do we already know what the word means, so that it's only a matter of finding the entities to which it applies? Or do we already know what's conscious and what isn't, without being able to define consciousness, and hence it's a matter of figuring out what conscious things have in common, and thus perfecting a definition? — J
J
I swear I'm not trying to be difficult, but I don't get it. — Patterner
How can you learn how to use the word correctly other than by being taught those qualities? — Patterner
And how can you categorize the shapes without recognizing them? — Patterner
Patterner
I don't know. It seems to me life is processes, not properties. Our planet has various amounts of various elements, so that's what the laws of physics had to work with. But can't there be life on other planets that have different mixtures of different elements? I imagine there can be. I think different elements, different processes, different systems, can accomplish the work of life.While this can be viewed as a tautology (the laws of physics allow life because there is life...), I also think that this is a very interesting point. To me this suggests that we perhaps do not know enough of the 'inanimate' and this is the reason why the properties associated with life seem so different from the properties associated with 'what isn't life', i.e. life is, so to speak, latent in 'what isn't life'. — boundless
Patterner
Mmmm... No. I asked google, and it said yes. I should have looked into it.A bold statement. Can you please reference any known lifeform that can live in the complete absence of both aerobic or anaerobic respiration? — javra
What I mean is this... For a very long time, a writer took a feather, dipped it in ink, and wrote. A writer writes, eh? Pencils and pens came along at different times, but people still wrote with them.You more specifically mean certain reactions of organic chemicals, namely those which result in metabolism - or at least I so assume. — javra
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