Chalmers isn't wondering about the purpose, or the benefit, of consciousness when he asks that. He's wondering about the mechanism.In his article Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness (1995), David Chalmers posed the (hard) question: "Why doesn't all this information-processing go on "in the dark", free of any inner feel?"
↪Luke
I think Dennett suggested that it was an evolutionary "neat trick". In other (anthropomorphising of evolution) words, it is a means evolution stumbled upon which achieved an adaptive end. Perhaps a more adaptive end could have been reached by neurological processes evolving differently with no consciousness evolved, and perhaps not.
I see consciousness as a function of our brain's innate tendency to develop a model of physical reality based on our sensory and motor interactions with reality. Qualia might be seen as the symbols various parts of our brain present to 'modeling central' to represent the state of things in reality - the marks on the map, so to speak. Consciousness may simply be, what happens when some parts of the brain are outputting symbols in the form we associate with qualia. while simultaneously other parts of our massively parallel processing brains are monitoring the cloud of symbols being presented.
I don't see why it would be unreasonable to answer Chalmers with, "That's just the way evolution went." Unfortunately succinct perhaps, and I could suggest reasons to think that's the case, but I think this post is long enough. — wonderer1
The physical processes would work fine without being aware of themselves. They do so in many other life forms.
Damage is being done, the sensory system detects the damage, and it pulls away. How many other species even learn from the experience, and avoid the thing that caused the damage whenever they sense it?
If all off our mental activity is entirely physical, how is it we are not like those other life forms and machines? We aren't like them.
How is what makes us different accomplished?
Have you read the article? It's not long.
I don't see why it would be unreasonable to answer Chalmers with, "That's just the way evolution went."
— wonderer1
"That's just the way evolution went" does not explain the "adaptive end", the evolutionary purpose, or the biological advantage of the development of phenomenal consciousness. In other words, it does not answer the hard problem of why we have phenomenal consciousness. "Evolution did it" is about as explanatory as "God did it".
That said, I would believe an AI is conscious if it acted in a spontaneous way that could not be explained by its programming, and which showed that it really cared about something. — Janus
Are one’s thoughts on the same constitutive footing as one’s qualia in terms of their sense of self or are one’s thoughts a step removed or a step “higher” than one’s qualia? Would I still have a sense of self without any qualia but with my thoughts? — Luke
I just skimmed through parts of it. It was interesting, but to be honest, I asked my question because based on what I did read I thought it unlikely that the authors suggested the notion that "qualia constitute the self". — wonderer1
However, I'm still not seeing why you think the author suggested that "qualia constitute the self". — wonderer1
Then, imagine if you were to lack qualia of any kind at all, and to find that none of your sensory experience was owned by you? I’m sure your self would disappear. — the article
I think the authors would likely agree with the statement that, "If there were no qualia there likely would be no self.", but that is a different statement. — wonderer1
Yes, I know I did not support my answer to Chalmer's question. I thought I made it obvious that I recognized that. I only have so much time to participate in these discussions, so I suggested an 'in a nutshell' answer. — wonderer1
BTW, Do you think Chalmers is an evolution skeptic? — wonderer1
Language reflects the 4 dimensions we exist in. — Benj96
Have you read any fiction? Language need not "reflect the 4 dimensions we exist in". — Luke
My questions - in the section that you quoted - were about the self. I don't see how your post addresses that (assuming that you intended to). — Luke
I quite agree. But, if my understanding is correct, this is the position many have that Chalmers is arguing against. As is William James.The physical processes would work fine without being aware of themselves. They do so in many other life forms.
↪Patterner
It is a hasty generalization to go from, "The behavior of many lifeforms occurs without consciousness." to, "All of the behavior of humans could occur without consciousness." — wonderer1
No I'm not talking about the content of language. I'm speaking about the structure of language.
Fiction still uses nouns, verbs, adjectives, grammar and syntax. Read what I said more carefully — Benj96
If you haven't read the full article, then how are you in a position to question my reading of it?
—Luke
I don't suppose you'd accept, "Through the use of mutant superpowers."? — wonderer1
If you haven't read the full article, then how are you in a position to question my reading of it?
You think that your ability to guess about the parts that you didn't even bother to read is better than my actual reading of the article?
If you think it's unlikely for the authors to suggest that "qualia constitute the self" then read the bloody article and find out. Have you read it all yet?
Explain why you think "qualia constitute the self" is not implied by the article:
I think the authors would likely agree with the statement that, "If there were no qualia there likely would be no self.", but that is a different statement.
— wonderer1
Firstly, that isn't a quote from the article. Secondly, how does your statement "if there were no qualia there likely would be no self" not imply that "qualia constitute the self"? I might be wrong about it, but it seems to me to be strongly implied by the article.
I wish you would have saved me the time by dismissing my claim of "mutant super powers" and just moving on, but... — wonderer1
You think that your ability to guess about the parts that you didn't even bother to read is better than my actual reading of the article?
— Luke
I would put it more like, I thought the probability was high that I was bringing a much more relevantly informed perspective to reading the article than you did. — wonderer1
Furthermore, my understanding of the sort of information processing that neural networks are good at, leads me to understand the importance of testing my intuitions. So I saw questioning your interpretation of the article as a good test of my intuitions which were based on merely skimming the article. — wonderer1
Yeah, I've read the article now, and I still don't have the foggiest idea why you think Humphrey was suggesting what you think he was. — wonderer1
Whether I subconsciously picked up on it during my initial skim I have no idea, but when I read it through today I noted that Humphrey puts scare quotes around self when he first uses the phrase the self. That leads me to believe that Humphrey was only using the word self as a matter of convenience in conveying his idea to a lay audience, and also seems to me like a point against your interpretation. — wonderer1
I think that what most people mean by "the self" includes not just qualia, but that which acts on the basis of qualia as well, and at the very least. That which acts on the basis of qualia is not itself qualia. — wonderer1
I think the authors would likely agree with the statement that, "If there were no qualia there likely would be no self.", but that is a different statement.
— wonderer1
Firstly, that isn't a quote from the article. Secondly, how does your statement "if there were no qualia there likely would be no self" not imply that "qualia constitute the self"? I might be wrong about it, but it seems to me to be strongly implied by the article.
— Luke
1. I didn't suggest it was a quote from the article. — wonderer1
2. I've explained that I think the 'self' is more than qualia, and I think the functionality of the self would be likely to break down without qualia to sustain its functionality. Not immediately, but given time. — wonderer1
Since it seems like you are much more interested in point scoring than in understanding, I'm inclined to drop the discussion. However, if you want to present, what you believe to be a sound argument for your interpretation, I might be enticed to discuss it further. — wonderer1
So because we only care about aspirin when we have a headache then it follows that first person private sensations don't exist, or that if they do exist then they are the same for all people? — Michael
The ideas of consciousness, sensation, appearance, reality, are all manufactured by philosophy, partly to feel like we are necessarily special, as I discussed above. — Antony Nickles
Are you saying that they're a fiction? — Michael
Suppose miraculously I was able to produce an accurate account of every detail of the evolutionary path leading to humans. Would it then be unreasonable to conclude with, "So that's just the way evolution went?"
BTW, Do you think Chalmers is an evolution skeptic? — wonderer1
But it leaves no evolutionary role for consciousness to play — bert1
It doesn't have to be either/or. — flannel jesus
I really do think that enormous confusion is caused in many areas — not just consciousness, but free will and even more purely physical phenomena — by the simple mistake of starting sentences in one language or layer of description (“I thought about summoning up the will power to resist that extra slice of pizza…”) but then ending them in a completely different vocabulary (“… but my atoms obeyed the laws of the Standard Model, so what could I do?”) — Sean Carroll
And nowhere is there an explanation of, say, how consciousness came to be, or even if he thinks consciousness is real. — bert1
It's casual at it's own lever of abstraction. — flannel jesus
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