Your view of consciousness requiring a physical action to create the spark reminded me of something Douglas Adams said: "... for all other life forms out there, the secret is to bang the rocks together".
When you stop dodging the question of what consciousness is we may be able to make progress in this thread.
You must be kidding me.
Has it escaped your notice that I'm the only one so far to have cited any actual studies on consciousness?
Unlike those who call me arrogant, I don't rely on an as-yet unproductive hypothesis and tell folks to go read up on it. I've actually cited studies about the organ which produces consciousness and discussed those studies.
The view of consciousness asserted by the other side appears to be based entirely on the bare assumption that the same physical processes which are responsible for non-conscious activities of the brain are also responsible for the phenomenon of conscious experience. If there were any evidence to support such an assumption, it should have been provided by now.
But so far all we've seen are references to the hypothesis itself.
At this point, to any skeptics lurking on this thread, enough red flags should be flying to make you think you were in a May Day parade.
To begin (but not end) with our own experience of consciousnes, we can observe that it is distinct from non-conscious processes. I've already mentioned the cocktail party effect, for example.
Also, we should note that our conscious awareness has a locatable physical instantiation, although not necessarily a precise one. Our feet seem to be below the area where conscious awareness is taking place. For that matter, so does the jaw.
The forward boundary is somewhere around the eyes.
The upper boundary is somewhere around the top of the skull. When we put a hand on top of the head, the boundary seems to retreat somewhat, giving the impression that it's below the hand.
This in itself is an indication that it's likely that we're looking at a biophysical activity of the physical organ of the brain.
And in fact, since it is a fairly simple matter to distinguish between the phenomenon of conscious experience, on the one hand, and the bulk of brain activity of which we're not consciously aware, on the other -- such as regulating our breathing, for example -- it makes very little sense to assume that these different functions must rely on identical biological processes.
When we look into the experimental evidence, we find further support.
The subliminal studies which I have cited (where are the counter-evidentiary studies?) clearly and unequivocally draw a line between non-conscious processing and conscious experience, and irrefutably demonstrate that the brain processes, stores, and uses information that is not made available to those brain functions which generate conscious awareness.
The split-brain studies and blindsight studies and decision studies go further. (All of which have been linked on this thread, by the way.)
In the blindsight experiments, we see that the brain can (and does) process information enabling the body to navigate an obstacle course before feeding any of that information to the structures responsible for generating conscious awareness.
In the split brain studies, subjects with a severed corpus collosum can feel an object, out of sight, with one hand and have no awareness of what the object is. (It's not that they know but can't say -- which is typical of certain aphasias -- it's that they are not aware of what the object is.) Yet they can point to a picture of that object among pictures of other objects. When asked why they pointed to that picture, they have no idea.
Obviously, the brain is doing one heckuva lot of work non-consciously. Conscious awareness comes after. It's an add-on. It's a distinct function. The decision studies (which I've also cited) bear this out.
To cap it all off, we now have a study done on subjects with deep brain probes, which demonstrates clearly that the brain initiates biophysical processes when consciously aware of objects in the environment that it does not initiate when it is not consciously aware of those objects. (I have cited that, as well.)
And these are not neuronal processes. The researchers involved in that study confirm a trend that has been the trajectory in biology for a while now -- the abandonment of a neuronal model of consciousness.
And yet the computationalists continue with this talk of consciousness being produces by the execution of code.
It's time for them to pony up with some experimental verification of their outlandish claims, which seem to violate the most fundamental laws of physics.
Conscious awareness is something the body does. As such, it requires physical action to initiate and sustain. The current experimental evidence indicates that it is not initiated and sustained by the same processes which support non-conscious processes in the brain.
And if anyone wants to refute that, they need to cite some evidence, not yammer on about how naysayers need to understand their hypothesis.