AkuManiMani said:
Endodermal, mesodermal, and exodermal tissues -- all of it. If its alive its performing SRIPs.
Please give me an example - a specific example - noting that
all of your previous examples have been wrong.
Lemme get this strait. You're honestly arguing that two thermostats in dynamic feedback with eachother are examples of SRIPs, but the collective functioning of an
entire multicellular organism does not qualif -- pardon --
quantify as a self-referential system? Do you not even realize that the basis of you position is held together by special pleading?
AkuManiMani said:
Hence my objection to your usage of the term. What you're calling "consciousness" isn't whats being discussed when most other English speakers use the word.
In fact, it is precisely what's being discussed; rather, it's that most people (like you) don't know what's happening and how it happens.
Pixy, in an earlier post you stated that even while a person is a sleep, there are "conscious processes" occurring. You also stated that the difference between waking an sleeping states is being "aware" vs "unaware". You're clearly using the terminology differently than the common use.
The words "conscious" and "aware" are synonyms in common usage; hence being
conscious of one's self and being
aware of one's self mean the same thing. When a person is in deep sleep
[or otherwise unconscious
in common parlance] there is mental activity but they are not considered to be conscious. Unconscious mental activity is considered subliminal and, regardless of whether or not this activity is self-referential, it is still
unconscious.
AkuManiMani said:
The logical conclusion of your tautology is that individuals are never unconscious.
Well, duh. If they're unconscious by that definition, they're not individuals, they're corpses.
The point is, that by your definition of consciousness, any organism, with or without a functioning nervous system, is conscious.
AkuManiMani said:
And an organism is made up of up to trillions of such modules. All of them processing information within and between each other, collectively regulating and modifying their behavior and development.
Yes.
AkuManiMani said:
The entire system is inherently self-referential.
No. You still completely fail to understand what self-reference is.
So an organism directing, regulating, and modifying
it's own behavior, structure, composition, and development is
not a self-referential process?
Read Hofstadter. He takes 600 pages to explain it, from many different angles. I've already explained it here repeatedly; if you haven't grasped it by now, you're not going to understand it from a forum post.
After roughly two years of discussions with you, I've already read
atleast 600 pages worth of Hofstadter. All you do in these exchanges is mindlessly parrot his arguments and use it as a checklist of accuracy against any statement made.
Read Godel, Escher, Bach, and then come back. It covers not only self-reference but other key concepts like the Church-Turing thesis and Godel's Incompleteness Theorem.
As fascinating as the CT-thesis and Gödel's Theorem are, of what relevance are they to the ontological status of consciousness?
You clearly haven't, because the examples you propose do not constitute examples of self-referential information processing. Not one of them.
Authoritative special pleading does not an argument make.
Then why do you keep getting it wrong? In every example, you mistake simple reference for self-reference.
An organisms must reference
itself in order to maintain and regulate
itself. When an organism carries out these functions it must process information inherent to
itself. A living organism is a system that references
itself, in feedback with its environment. This is true
regardless of whether or not it has a brain or nervous system.
You keep getting that wrong, too, of course.
Again, flatly asserting that someone is "wrong" is not an argument,
PixyMisa.
That definition you so clumsily avoided? The very first definition?
You've already brought up this point and I've already
addressed it.
Awareness of one's thoughts, eh? Thinking is information processing. Thinking about your thoughts is self-referential information processing.
So if someone is not thinking about their own thoughts they aren't conscious. Got it.
