We're familiar with TV crime dramas. We have a suspect we think may have done a murder. Why do we think that? We have some evidence. And we are seeking more evidence in order to obtain more certainty on the matter. So what might we look for? In the case of this crime, we might look for:
- a dead body
- proximity of people to that body in time and space
- a report on the cause of death
- fingerprints on the crime scene
- alibis
- motive
- opportunity
- DNA
...etc. All the usual stuff. — bert1
So it's possible there are things our senses and devices can't perceive that are the foundation of this imperceptible macro-characteristic. It makes sense that we can't perceive the micro-properties. — Patterner
Hmm. Is a TV crime drama a useful analogy? These are written and directed to highlight certain things about the suspects and manipulate an audience - false leads, clues and behaviours specifically filmed and constructed to take you in a direction. This is not like ordinary evidence, in is contrived to elicit a response. Maybe true crime would be a better analogy? Or maybe crime is not useful at all. Perhaps what you are saying can be made more simple - what are the key indicators of consciousness? How do we determine if something has consciousness? — Tom Storm
I know that it's almost impossible to pin down a definition, but my current one I think is quite simple: The most fundamental unit of consciousness is a reflection of the outside from on the inside, and vice versa. There is an " in here" and an "out there". — Watchmaker
As a panpsychist I have been asked a few times for evidence of consciousness in rocks and other such objects. — bert1
Not being a panpsychist, looking for consciousness in inanimate objects is not something I would normally do, but since you brought it up... It seems clear to me the idea of consciousness originated to refer to a human mental process. — T Clark
Maybe, but even that sentence is theory-laden. It's stipulating it's a process. — bert1
If we're going to start somewhere, I suspect it's not processes in human beings - that's a way down the road. The starting point is my awareness. — bert1
I should have stuck to real life to avoid your criticism about contrivance. True crime would be better, and that's really what I meant. — bert1
I was going to write a different OP titled something like "Is there any theory-neutral evidence for consciousness?" — bert1
But with consciousness, what do we use to determine what to admit as evidence? Do we look in dictionaries for definitions? Well, I think we should. That will help. But people typically don't do that, and that's really weird. — bert1
To make that work, seems to me you have to either 1) show that rocks have mental processes or 2) show that consciousness in humans is not a mental process at all. If you can't do that, you should just come up with a different name for the process you're describing. — T Clark
Now I guess you're going to show us how what we experience as awareness can be observed in rocks. — T Clark
What are we going to look for as evidence of consciousness in (a) a rock, and (b) a human? — bert1
...with consciousness, what do we use to determine what to admit as evidence? — bert1
So it's possible there are things our senses and devices can't perceive that are the foundation of this imperceptible macro-characteristic. It makes sense that we can't perceive the micro-properties.
— Patterner
Righto, OK, thanks. That sounds like you are open to the possibility of panpsychism. Is that right? It also sounds like you might be a mysterian like McGinn, perhaps: the idea that we can never know exactly how physical processes cause or constitute consciousness, while nevertheless accepting that they do. — bert1
In short, we would need to arrive at a minimum criterion for what counts as consciousness, such that any and all candidates under consideration which meet that minimum criterion could be sensibly called "conscious"... — creativesoul
I quite like that. Is it a definition or a theory? if you were a lexicographer, would you consider writing that in your dictionary you are authoring? — bert1
I'd guess the following style of inference would work for it:
"What behaviours must an entity exhibit that renders consciousness the most plausible explanation for them?"
That's an ampliative inference - fallible, non-deductive. Sometimes called inference to the best explanation. — fdrake
Can you give me an example of theory neutral evidence? — Tom Storm
Further, no behaviour strictly entails any internal state absent a background theory which fills in the gaps. — fdrake
the concept is likely a cluster concept (also see here). — fdrake
I strongly disagree with this! Or at least, if this is true, we as philosophers of consciousness are fucked. Cluster-fucked you might say. It seems clear to me that consciousness is not a single cluster concept, but one word with several distinct meanings. A topic in itself perhaps and well worth a thread if someone can be arsed. — bert1
Thoughts on this are very welcome. The one bit of theory neutral-evidence I can think of is exactly related to consciousness, and that is the insight that I am conscious. — bert1
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