Integrated Information Theory Consciousness may not require a liver, let's say a lobster is conscious and doesn't have a liver, but the lobster or human does need to have the equipment to remain alive and...conscious. If the human hadn't had a liver to start with, it wouldn't have become conscious.
I do think the idea of the brain and body not being modular is an important one. They haven't been designed in the way we design machines. I don't know how much bearing this has on the maths side of it, that is completely beyond me. But if they are really equating neurons to logic gates, the maths is just meaningless I think. The actual mechanisms are so much more messy, plastic, multifaceted than binary logic gates.
Brains and bodies don't work by processing information. The brain works through things like neurotransmitters, neuromodulators, electrical impulses, wave-like phenomena. Calling all this "information processing" doesn't tell us anything more about what is happening.
"Patterns" is another troublesome concept
@original2. Can we think about a relatively simple biological process to see why. Bacteria can swim towards a desirable stimulus (let's say some sugar) or away from a toxic chemical. It seems they would need to recognise a kind of pattern in the increasing or decreasing concentration of the chemical. But in fact we know every detail of the chemical process that achieves the directional swimming, and there's nothing left for "pattern recognition" to do.
The same is true of the more complex processes in the brain. It works through things like electrical impulses and so on, not pattern recognition.
Pattern recognition is something a person does, not their brain.
What does the embodied mind tell us
@frank? I suppose it tells us that Tononi isn't seeing the whole picture?