Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
Proof?
You are giving some special quality to neurons that doesn't exist (to our knowledge).
If I built your exact brain out of computer chips, with exactly the same speed, is that not a brain that would generate consciousness?
If I built your exact brain out of metal cogs, with exactly the same speed, is that not a brain that would generate consciousness?
If I split that metal cog brain in half, separated by 1 mile, and connected the separated cogs with 1 mile long axles, is that not a brain that would generate consciousness?
If I remove those 1 mile long axles, and replace them with a computer that reads what one set of cogs do, and then transfers that data to the separated cogs via a network and some servos, is that not a brain that would generate consciousness?
If I replace that computer, network, and servos with somebody doing the calculation by pen/paper, and running back and forth to turn the cogs by hand, is that not a brain that would generate consciousness?
At that point, no, I don't see that consciousness would be possible.
And btw, I'm not giving any special properties to neurons. Quite the opposite. Neuronal activity is invisible to consciousness.
As you say, it doesn't matter that it's neurons doing what's being done. If the signals were carried some other way, the result would be the same, as long as it operated with the same thresholds and connections, and as long as the modules were arranged in the same configuration.
(Whether such an object could actually be made out of computer chips or cogs, I couldn't say. I seriously doubt it could be made with cogs, which are not very amenable to threshold-dependent response.)
But, as with your heartbeat, there must be a limit to how much the signaling can slow down before the higher-level phenomenon ceases.
I don't think that you or I or anyone alive is in a position to say where that point is. But I have no doubt that it's somewhere higher than a person running a mile between each synapse.
As steenkh noted above, consciousness is a rather fuzzy thing, smeared out over time. We're not aware of events as they happen, often not even in order, and by the time we are conscious of events, what we're aware of is not the raw input but something very highly processed, all filtered and chunked and lumped.
We act on perceptions that we're not conscious of. Most of what the brain does is independent of consciousness. Consciousness appears to be an after-effect, a downstream function.
