Because phenomenal consciousness does not admit of degree. — bert1
↪bert1 The argument for this? — Banno
There are many degrees of seeing, hearing, smelling and tasting. — jgill
but no degrees between not being able to experience at all (i.e. the condition most people think rocks are in) and being able to experience something. — bert1
Consciousness is frequently conflated with awareness. I recall psychological experiments that illustrate someone being conscious of an impending threat, but unaware of it. — jgill
So awareness is being judged by consciousness' seeming premonitory ability to react to a threat? — neonspectraltoast
So awareness is being judged by consciousness' seeming premonitory ability to react to a threat? — neonspectraltoast
??that we aren't aware we're aware of — neonspectraltoast
If phenomenal consciousness is only 'awareness of something' then it is possible to be aware of very little content and / or modes of content. So, say one can only hear or not hear. There is no degree in volume or tambre, etc. But what then is awareness? What is the "what it's like to be" of this sound, however rudimentary? It sems to me (in my ignorance) that both emergence and panpsychism offer little to this question. No philosophical position tackles this well, even if we claim seperate realms between the physical and mental."The idea of phenomenal consciousness is that no matter how vague and insubstantial your content of consciousness is, you are still conscious, because you are aware of something, whatever it is. And that is all that is needed to fulfil the definition, so you are fully conscious in the phenomenal sense. (NOT in the medical sense like Banno keeps returning to - that sense indeed admits of any number of degrees.) So the idea is that anything is either phenomenally conscious or not, there is no middle ground, there is no partial consciousness, there are no borderline cases, there exist no states, functions, configurations or whatever in which it is indeterminate as to whether a thing is conscious or not." — Bert1
I can't think of any examples of borderline cases of consciousness. If one thinks that consciousness emerges, say in the development of an embryo, then there is a change from the embryo not experiencing anything at all (not conscious), to the embryo experiencing something (conscious). But the distinction between nothing and something in this context must be sharp, no? What could a middle ground between something and nothing possibly be? If you can think of an example, please let me know. — bert1
Are we conscious? If so what we call ‘consciousness’ is in fact just ourselves being aware of ourselves as ‘conscious’. — I like sushi
In short, NO.Question to you, Gnomon: Are you an endorser and apologist for the substance of this article by Goff? Do you stand for him? — tim wood
Precisely there are different degrees and forms of experience just as there are different measured physical properties depending on the structure of the system under observation.. Using the term “consciousness” causes an unnecessary resistance to the concept of panpsychism because the way we usually use consciousness is to describe our own self aware, self reflective, language oriented awareness and we do not attribute that degree or form of experience to all of nature. — prothero
Asserting the individual constiuents of rocks "quantum events" have some form of non-conscious proto-experience is an entirely different matter. — prothero
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