If so, the problem we face is delineating a set of behavioral criteria which can help us unambiguously identify the conscious from the non-conscious. What would such a criteria look like? Thinking? Not observable. Goal-directed behavior? Bacteria move towards light. Language in a broad sense? Bacteria use chemical signalling. I have a feeling that we will fail to identify a behavior or even a group of them that can help us determine the presence/absence of consciousness because every behavior humans are capable of has a parallel in non-human organisms and I'm going out on a limb here but even in bacteria. So, either we must conclude that all organisms are conscious or that no organism is conscious. — TheMadFool
True, that we must identify some characteristic behaviours, however consider the following :
Let's assume that bacterias do have consciousness due to certain behaviours. However, all behaviour of a bacteria is a simple input - output function ,that is, it senses a stimulus and initiates a series of physical reactions that cause a certain movement (output). If such a simple organism can posses conscious then there is to no reason to limit ourselves to the realm of living. Many man made equipments also produce a output given a input (not going to say stimulus as stimulus is for the living). Hence, if a bacteria has consciousness in any sense , then many inanimate equipments must have consciousness too in the same sense. — StarsFromMemory
So, birds do have self awareness? — StarsFromMemory
And I don't seem to find a reason for why consciousness gives me a survival advantage over an ameoba, which you say has no consciousness. I suppose there are none, but you could help me find some and establish your point. — StarsFromMemory
As a side note, when I began this thread, I too hoped to prove that consciousness is a product of evolution. But even then, I was fairly sure it was not a product of natural selection. — StarsFromMemory
Emergentism claims that consciousness is more than the sum of its parts. Or put another way, that the parts are a necessary, but not sufficient condition for (self) consciousness.
Panpsychism claims that the parts (or a part) are sufficient for consciousness, but in order to make this claim its proponents need to redefine consciousness as two different things; phenomenal and access. Phenomenal consciousness being a necessary condition of access consciousness. Or, put another way Access, or self-consciousness, emerging from phenomenal consciousness.
Put this way there seems to be little or no difference between the two positions apart from the convoluted terminology required in order to argue for panpsychism.
When we talk about consciousness aren't we really talking about self-consciousness? After all, what could non self consciousness possibly be?
Okay, I did read your essay (nice read) — StarsFromMemory
What about properties like fluidity or rigidity that don't exist on the small scale but exist when the individual particles combine in a fixed way?
I understand that emergentism has major flaws and is not widely accepted, however, I don't think your objection is justified. What is objectionable is that emergentism claims irreducibility of those properties. That is simply unjustifiable to believe in. — StarsFromMemory
Also, why don't you consider the possibilty that phenomenal experience arise from the processing of sensory input by the brain as detailed by 'The Integrated Information theory' and Global Workspace theory? — StarsFromMemory
Also, what do you make of the Combination Problem that threatens the idea of panpychism and the conceivability of a P-Zombie that experiences the same physical states without any mental states. You do state that you think they are not possible, any concrete reasons for that belief? — StarsFromMemory
The functionality of things is what groups them. The way information flows through systems, the causal connectedness or isolation of them. — Pfhorrest
Panpsychism fails to make any empirically useful statement — Zelebg
The functionality of things is what groups them. The way information flows through systems, the causal connectedness or isolation of them.
What is a product of evolution that is not a product of natural selection? — Txastopher
Sure, anything that can reasonably be considered an object can also be considered a subject of experience.
My reason for rejecting the possibility of philosophical zombies is my direct awareness of my own phenomenal consciousness plus anti-emergentism leading to my functionalist panpsychist conclusion whereby everything has some experience, and things with the same function have the same experience, so something functionally equivalent to a human would have the experience of a human. — Pfhorrest
There is nothing reasonable in what you are saying, so I'm asking you for the fifth time to explicitly name it. Leaf, branch, tree, forest.. what is conscious? — Zelebg
so it would make no sense to talk about something that is functionally identical to a human except it has no phenomenal consciousness, a philosophical zombie, because everything has phenomenal consciousness (a first-person perspective) that depends on its function, so something functionally identical to a human has the first-person experience of a human. — Pfhorrest
The fact that is not impossible that a P-Zombie can exist — StarsFromMemory
The fact that is not impossible that a P-Zombie can exist — StarsFromMemory
Anything that evolves from mechanisms other than natural selection is a product of evolution but not of natural selection. — StarsFromMemory
That system is not completely functionally identical because its components have additional functions that the components of a real brain would not. Those differences in behavior (the things the homonculi do besides just emulating neurons) correlate with the differences in experiences that the system as a whole undergoes. The similar behaviors (of the system as a whole) would still bring with them correlatively similar experiences too. — Pfhorrest
"Where do we draw the line? At vertebrates? The nervous systems of insects may not be as complex as ours, and they probably do not have as rich an experience of the world as we do. They also have very different senses, so the picture that is painted in their minds may be totally unlike ours. But I see no reason to doubt that insects have inner experiences of some kind. — StarsFromMemory
If you go by panpyschism or functionalist panpyschism, then all of those are conscious.
Also, you don’t run from a bear because you’re scared. You get scared when your body starts to run. Reaction first, experience second, or it might be too late. It’s also why people often do or say things they don’t “really” mean. — Zelebg
I can promise you even people who stay and don't run from the bear are still scared, its not that simple.
I see, a tree is conscious even if all of its parts are already conscious on their own. So I am conscious and my brain is conscious, but so is my elbow and my nose, my eyelash, my pimple, my socks, and my bubblegum. How cute, and is there any actual reason, any reason at all, that makes you believe that? — Zelebg
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