Physical reaction is not equivalent to awareness — Hanover
I thought of that too but there's a problem in this. We can't distinguish between real consciousness and simulated consciousness (I suspect you want to make this distinction). Having access only to the external behavior of matter, I'm forced to conclude that plants have consciousness. — TheMadFool
I am capable of distinguishing the two. In fact, it's far more difficult to find similarities than distinctions.So, a plant growing towards the sun and a man looking for shade in the hot sun are indistinguishable. — TheMadFool
I am capable of distinguishing the two. In fact, it's far more difficult to find similarities than distinctions — Hanover
How then are they separable as distinct from each other? We don't have direct access to the minds of other animals. All we have is their external behavior (how they respond to the environment). Again I think we have very different conception of the term ''consciousness''. — TheMadFool
And then I think that it is difficult to be conscious of something else and not to be conscious of myself or to be conscious of myself and not be conscious of other things. I think that one implies the other. You mean that these philosophers say that self-consciousness is not about that? — mew
No, I think you're right about that. Your being aware (i.e. having the perceptual knowledge) that there are objects in the world that exist independently of your perception of them requires awareness that you can potentially experience them -- i.e. that they be potential objects of experience. You arrived at this conclusion without Kant's help. Congratulations! — Pierre-Normand
We could possibly design a robot to be conscious like humans. If they could create a model of sensory information and use that model to navigate the world and to contemplate themselves being aware of their world, then why would we say that this robot isn't conscious, or self-aware? — Harry Hindu
How then are they separable as distinct from each other? We don't have direct access to the minds of other animals. — TheMadFool
The simple fact that a branch bends towards the sun is not sufficient to prove the plant is conscious — Hanover
For me something is conscious if said thing responds to its environment. — TheMadFool
I could, I suppose, list the various differences between plants and people in order to point out how the former lacks the behavioral manifestations of consciousness, but I'd not be proving anything that isn't already fully accepted, and I don't feel like performing a mindless academic task. — Hanover
Do we know how it works? If we don't know how it works, do we really know what it is? — mew
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