You tell me. For some reason you didn't adress my point, however wrong you think it is, and instead said something silly.
Even if a camera does compute, that still doesn't mean its conscious, or even physically capable of it.
I think you're losing track of the discussion. I never said it did or was.
If a computer is unconscious it cannot care, have intentions, or observe; ergo, it cannot conduct science.
I don't see how any of that follows.
Are you using some special sense of the term "aware" that is not synonymous with being conscious?
No. Conscious = SELF-aware. Otherwise thermostats would be conscious.
The seconds statement is true by definition; reaching a conclusion is a conscious faculty; if the system in question lacks consciousness it cannot reach conclusions.
Calculators reach "conclusions" and yet they're quite unconscious. They simply give the correct answer. Anything else is just a matter of degree.
To be quite frank, I found the question to be too stupid to warrant anything more than sarcasm.
I'm sorry you feel that way.
Well, I think the same thing when someone tries to sell me the idea that, somehow, we're only ever sure that we experience something. Not only does it provide no answer and is of no use, and ignores a vast amount of data that clearly shows that the universe we perceive exists in some way, but it takes the experiencing itself for granted. "Experiencing", that is, as defined as anything else than computation.
It's the same reason why people can't fathom computers being conscious. They simply can't imagine that their own experiences could be something so simple as Pixy or Dodger claim. Quite simply, they are basing their judgment that other humans are conscious based on similitude of behaviour, but somehow deny the same conclusion for machines that exhibit said behaviour. It's almost as if they are operating from a pre-conceived conclusion.
So I ask again: are you absolutely sure that you experience, the way you think you do ?