The “hard” (non-)problem of phenomenal consciousness is whatever’s left after that: if we built perfect functional simulation of a human, would it have a first-person experience like we do? If no, why not, what’s different about it, besides the functionality that we’ve already stipulated is the same? If yes, then what is it besides the functionality, which we’ve already bracketed, that gives it that first person experience? My answer is “nothing” — Pfhorrest
There, that explains everything. — Zelebg
You mean if we take all the bees that compose an emergent whole, so that their "collective consciousness" is parallel to brain consciousness? — Zelebg
Panpsychism, which assumes that every particle in the cosmos is Conscious, does make it sound like there is some "magical ingredient" in addition to the material substance. That's why my thesis avoids using the misleading terms "psyche" and "consciousness". Not because they are inherently wrong, but they can be misinterpreted as implying that particles are conscious in the same way humans are. But atoms mechanically absorb & emit energy, and change physically, without forming any abstract images (imagination). Instead, I propose a view that could be called Pan-Informationism.It's a pseudo-materialist solution, in my view. It says there must be some extra, magical ingredient in everything which is 'consciousness' in some latent or implicit form, which then manifests in living beings in particular. — Wayfarer
On my account there isn’t any “stuff” that would need to be observed or empirically analyzed, and there isn’t anything more for science to understand about it. I’m not positing that there are any other kinds of substances or properties besides physical things and their ordinary empirical properties — I’m saying that noting the difference between a first person and third person perspective on that same physical/empirical stuff is sufficient account of “phenomenal consciousness” and there’s nothing more that needs saying about that.it has no possible answer as to what this 'stuff' is or how it can be observed or brought into the ambit of empirical analysis. So it becomes another of the 'promissory notes of materialism', something which we are assured 'science will one day come to understand'. — Wayfarer
I'd say the question is: what or who is the subject of experience? — Zelebg
I think the most important thing to realise is that it's an open question. — Wayfarer
The hard problem is hard because it assumes emergence.
— bert1
Why is emergence a problem? Emergence is a well known property of complex physical systems. — Pantagruel
In my thesis, the universe began as non-conscious creative Energy, or as I call it, EnFormAction : the power to enform. Then via a long gradual process of Phase Transformations (emergences) raw Information (mathematics) was developed into the complex chemistry of Life (animation), and thence into the compounded complexities of Mind (intention). The Potential for Consciousness was there all along, but only at the tipping-point was it actualized, or crystallized, into the power to know. The link below is a brief overview of Evolution via EnFormAction. No magic; just continual incremental changes. — Gnomon
I just read von Bertalanffy's book on Systems Theory. Near the beginning he talks about how metaphysical theories are validated by their "elegance".I want the story of how non-conscious stuff interacting can end up with conscious stuff. — bert1
What it concerns, though, is the relationship of nested hierarchical systems. And, specifically, the appearance of "trigger" subsystems whose function is to focus interaction from a subsystem to its parent. Kind of like the study of encephalization, the development of the central nervous system and brain. — Pantagruel
Not because they are inherently wrong, but they can be misinterpreted as implying that particles are conscious in the same way humans are. — Gnomon
But the "information-processing" part in general doesn't suddenly spring into being; everything all the way down is capable of processing information, at some level.
— Pfhorrest — fdrake
Two accounts:
(A)
So - phenomenal consciousness is defined as independent of access consciousness. These are conceptual distinctions.
But:
Observations:
Phenomenal consciousness and access consciousness track each other.
Access consciousness comes in degrees.
Conclusions:
Therefore, phenomenal consciousness comes in degrees.
Therefore, panpsychism + no explanatory gap + no p-zombies.
The counter argument (@180 Proof) seems to be:
(B)
Observations:
Consciousness (Phenomenal consciousness and/or access consciousness) tracks reflexive information processing.
Reflexive information processing comes in degrees.
Conclusions:
Therefore, a conceptual distinction between phenomenal consciousness and access consciousness is useless. There's only one aspect of consciousness, which when present in a large degree, seems to yield phenomenal consciousness ("what is it like" states).
Therefore no p-zombies, no explanatory gap, but also no panpsychism (maybe).
It looks to me like the difference between (A) and (B) arises solely through propagating the conceptual distinction between phenomenal and access consciousness through the same evidence; the argument is really over whether the distinction makes sense in light of what we know about consciousness. — fdrake
Is there one construct (functionality alone, account B) or two (functionality and phenomenality, account A)? — fdrake
Such perception is the second to last major class of function in the larger function that I picture access consciousness to be, the last one being reflexive judgement of those perceptions and the formation of belief through one’s self-awareness and self-control. I suspect you are instead picturing the whole of access consciousness as just that last reflexive step, and so everything before it as “phenomenal consciousness”, but I don’t think that’s consistent with the original definitions of the terms.
There isn’t a “subject of experience”, per se, but only the representation of an inherent, dedicated, human capacity, which each your propositions have contained in it.
Emergence is in the mind of the beholder. So no Mind, no illusion of sudden change. A magician could try to make his assistant disappear without using a cape, but then the trap door that's usually hidden in the dark would be apparent, and nobody would be fooled. Emergence only seems like magic, because the audience is figuratively "in the dark".Why can't all these emergences happen in the dark? Why is consciousness a necessary consequence of all this? — bert1
What I meant was the swarming effect reminds us of observing quantum mechanics/randomness, and EM moving particles associated with the conscious energy analogy.
How do you know this? I can only infer that other humans are conscious because they behave the same way as I do in similar situations. Do particles behave like humans? Do they show signs of fear as a strange energetic particle approaches? Do they love their entangled partners? Is your little toe conscious in "exactly the same way" as you are?Particles are conscious in exactly the same way humans are. — bert1
For example, its a headfuck to try and figure out how spatial stuff could emerge from non-spatial stuff. If you have a bunch of things that don't take up any space at all, what are they supposed to do to each other such that they end up with something that takes up space?
Why do you say mental properties are non-spatial? — Zelebg
I am not talking about the subject in the contents of the experience — Zelebg
subject outside of the experience which is subjected to experience that experience. — Zelebg
This subject is the subject per se, and it is the only mystery here — Zelebg
It can not be denied that at least part of the consciousness is an emergent system or entity simply due to the fact there is this unification of elements, seemingly independent and autonomous agents, working together as a whole to achieve a common goal, which they individually might not even be aware of. — Zelebg
If I was to speculate about consciousness, I would say that consciousness unites everything. It's at the bottom of all reality. It creates all that we experience. There is nothing more fundamental than consciousness.
In the 21st century, we are familiar with computers that process mathematical (immaterial) information, but are not perceived as conscious, though some can fake it (Chinese Room thought experiment). So, "Information" per se, does not necessarily imply Qualia : the "what it's like" of conscious conception. Ironically, the original meaning of "Information" referred to the metaphysical quality of Knowledge (awareness). — Gnomon
If one thinks himself the subject of experience, he does so only because he thinks in relation to the object being experienced. In doing that, he still has thought nothing of the one who is thinking himself the subject, which he cannot do without the use of exactly the same phenomenon to account for the phenomenon he is using — Mww
the foundation of the identity of apperception itself, which antecedes a priori all determinate thought. This principle is the highest in all human cognition....” — Mww (quoting Kant)
The issue I have is that there is no information 'per se'. The word itself has many meanings, depending on the context; it's not as is there is an identifiable fundamental type called information. It also seems to me the only naturally-occuring process with reference it makes sense to speak in terms of 'information' is living organisms, as DNA encodes biological information. But there is no such information encoded in the vast majority of matter and energy found throughout the cosmos.
All information we know of is embedded in spatial arrangement of matter, so information is just 'geometrical relations of matter' in essence — Zelebg
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