westprog
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 8,928
Interesting thread! I'm going to ignore all the "gay ants" and "key characteristics of life" stuff and go back to the OP.
As far as I'm concerned, the hard problem of consciousness i.e. the feeling of what it is like to experience something ( quale ) is the key issue and one which nobody has ever really adequately addressed yet. Now, QM has some weird stuff going on for sure. But in the end it seems to me that it is still just describing the behaviour of some physical bits of the universe. And however strange and unfathomable this behaviour may be, it doesn't get us one step closer to understanding where the experience of what something is like comes from.
The experience of qualia seems so unlike anything to do with the habits of sub atomic particles I just can't see how it could ever help, though I may be wrong. It reminds me of AI in a way;
There was a period when the limits of computing power were used as a reason by some people to explain why we couldn't produce real AI. Then we got all the computing we wanted and the problem didn't get any easier to solve.
Similarly, strange QM behaviour is being suggested as the solution to understanding consciousness. But I can't imagine what kind of strange behaviour of particles or waves, however bizarre, could ever succeed in bridging the gap between 'how things move' and the subjective experiences of qualia through our senses.
I think the above is a good summary of the current situation. One way to address the problem of subjective experience is to deny that there is any such thing, or that it's just a description we give to already well defined phenomena. (Recent posts referenced eliminative materialism as a name for the idea). It has the advantage of producing a theory which conforms with known physics, though lacking the benefit of explaining anything.