What is done cognitively with sensory information appears to depend on the complexity of the nervous system. — Txastopher
it's not necessary whereas in humans it appears to be a useful evolutionary adaptation. — Txastopher
I'd take issue with your use of 'never'. Sure, we don't understand it at the moment, but never predict it? — Txastopher
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. — Txastopher
The functionality of things is what groups them. The way information flows through systems, the causal connectedness or isolation of them.
And phenomenalist panpsychism had the same usefulness as naturalism: it ends up purporting that a completely trivial property belongs to everything (naturalness/first-person experience) sure, but in the process of denying that a property that would be absurd if substantiative applies to everything. — Pfhorrest
Actually nothing in what you wrote implies that consciousness is the result of evolution. Because certain things can be the result of evolution does not mean all things are. — Coben
And scientists, after long bias, are beginning to consider that plants are conscious, despite the lack of nervous systems. They have memory, react to pain, communicate, even across plant species, make choices (albeit much slower than we do in general, but not always), and have across whole plant reactions that look very much like nervous system reactions despite not having one. There is absolutely no reason to assume they are not conscious. Note my wording. — Coben
Phenomenal consciousness is nothing more than the having of a first-person perspective, and applies to everything. — Pfhorrest
So then we have to consider whether there are two kinds of bodies in the world, conscious and non-conscious, or just one, conscious. If all other things are equal, it seems to me that the default position is that there is one kind of body. — bert1
So then we have to consider whether there are two kinds of bodies in the world, conscious and non-conscious, or just one, conscious. If all other things are equal, it seems to me that the default position is that there is one kind of body. — bert1
Beyond that understanding, the term is meaningless. Yes you can muse about whether a computer, or even a specific program within is "in some sense conscious", but the phrase contains no information, it's empty. You have no idea how such a consciousness would feel like internally, or what it entails for your treatment of the device. — Echarmion
No, because consciousness implies “mental content”, an infrastructure that can internally model or represent itself vs. everything else. There needs to be a virtual reality simulator built on top of the reactive system, but whether such a system can fit in an insect brain or a single cell is still a question. — Zelebg
Ok, I see you can't answer those basic existential features of our consciousness.
Let's turn then to metaphysics. Does that exist? — 3017amen
Then you really can't explain the nature of that metaphysical feature of conscious existence, correct? — 3017amen
f your answer is the former, then there is no need, as you are suggesting, no? — 3017amen
And so you are telling me that you don't know why you have a sense of wonderment, correct? — 3017amen
Or to making perhaps more lucid, what event caused mathematical truths to come into existence through consciousness? — 3017amen
why does mathematical abstracts exist when they are not needed to survive in the jungle? — 3017amen
Why are we even discussing it? Why are you wondering about it? — 3017amen
all events must have a cause. Is that statement true or false? — 3017amen
all events must have a cause. Is that statement true or false? Is that statement an axiom for scientific discovery? Why should you care to explore its tenants? Why are we even discussing it? Why are you wondering about it? — 3017amen
I think that the universe simply popped into existence. Talking about what was before the universe is then meaningless and an object can only exist within the universe and the universe is all there is and will be. — StarsFromMemory
Time has no beginning so the universe couldn’t have been created. Creation happens in time but before time nothing is all that is possible. — Leviosa
You would have to support your argument with the exclusive virtues of survival, purposelessness, randomness and chance, to say the least.
Accordingly, mathematics then becomes redundant since it is not needed for anything, as it specifically relates to that Darwinian criteria. We don't need it to survive.
Then, of course, add art, music, philosophy, wonderment, love, the will, and all other related features of self-awareness from consciousness, that are also beyond logical existence as it were(subconsciousness/un-consciousness) or unexplained phenomena. The evidence points to something beyond said criteria. — 3017amen
Where I'm stuck is the specific meaning of strangeness I had at the time. — Qwex
When I made the OP I had a small glimpse of a big idea, yes I need to perfect the OP with more information. I'll come back at a later date with a lot of thought put into it. — Qwex
What's stopping things from happening when, per se, power such as a universe exists? What's to stop a much simpler world from manifesting? — Qwex
Yeah but you assumed I posit that this person is sat there as the moderator or something when all I'm suggesting is he's the catalyst. — Qwex
I have not claimed God. I have claimed creator.
That means, resources were ordered so that a big bang would occur, I guess in the form of noxious clouds.
This doesn't mean the spirit of the creator passed into the fray and it become omnipotent. It means it had know-how and resources. — Qwex
What's stopping things from happening when, per se, power such as a universe exists? What's to stop a much simpler world from manifesting? — Qwex
My reason to opt for yes, over no, is that there's a lot of strangeness(unknowingness, pure strangeness, super-massive nature, statistical anomalies); so, external to the universe, is probably not nothing, but, some kind of life — Qwex
I can pretty much guarantee you that if someone were to put a gun to your head or threaten you or your family with something serious that meaning you've been looking for would be back in an instant. — BitconnectCarlos
Why should we have two ways to avoid falling objects when one confers no biological survival advantage? — 3017amen
If the atheist can actually make a human and create consciousness, case closed. In the meantime, the phenomenon of 'self aware beings' certainly not only suggests a metaphysical existence or will of sorts, but continues to provide for a sense of wonderment that causes us to think about things like art, music, math, philosophy, cosmology, love et al. all of which confer little to no biological survival value. — 3017amen