Rocketdodger and JoeTheJuggler,
I think I'm a two. ( 'People who are not as educated in the above, yet use logic to deduce that since everything else in the known universe is, in point of fact, physical then it is very likely that consciousness is as well, even if "it doesn't seem like it is from a subjective point of view." ')I was an electronic engineer for twenty years designing Si chips at the functional level and I've done a chunk of computing, although not at the AI level by a million miles.
If it is the case that there are
1) People who are educated well in computer science, computation theory, neuroscience, and possibly electrical engineering, that actually understand how consciousness can arise from dumb matter.
then I would truly love to join their ranks. It would obviously take a certain amount learning but that just takes patience and time.
The thing is this: There are plenty of things I don't fully understand, like QM and relativity. But mostly, when I have started to investigate them and found material at the right level, I can see what the issues are and also come to an understanding that if I had the time, patience and a better brain, I would be able to understand them (or as much as anyone understands them). Eventually, I usually seem to uncover some key thing that makes it understandable in principle, even if I don't go any further.
But with anything I've encountered on consciousness it seems to me that all of it is either dealing with, on the one hand; the mechanics of thinking and perception; and on the other, consciousness. They never seem to get any closer.
My natural inclination is to imagine that consciousness is an emergent property of the complexity of the brain. I just have no clue as to how it could actually happen. I would love to have any tips, books, sites that you think would help.
ETA JoeTHeJuggler, I don't have a stance on philosophy vs science as such, other than to note that all the big advances in understanding the world at the big, middle and tiny levels have come through science. I don't see any reason to expect that will change any time soon. Actually that is a stance
