AkuManiMani
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2008
- Messages
- 3,089
That doesn't explain why you think consciousness is dependent on 'self-organizing energy controlling properties' - even if you think "controlling the organization of our surrounding environments to produce artificial constructs" is the essence of consciousness (and I'm not suggesting you do). What makes consciousness require 'self-organizing energy controlling properties' ?I actually addressed this in the portion of my post that you sniped out:The self-organizing energy controlling properties that allow single celled organisms to exist and behave as they do are an extremely scaled down version of the same capacity that allows us to control the organization of our surrounding environments to produce artificial constructs [i.e. art and technology].
Because the deliberate behaviors of conscious entities are themselves examples of such a processes.
So what? what has that to do with consciousness? As long as the entity in question has energy to run its processes for a reasonable time (e.g. months, years, or decades) why should it matter that it will eventually fail? As I said before, living things also fail and die.Like I've already emphasized in previous posts, organisms are self-sustaining systems.
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Non-living systems, like our present day electronic devices, do not all exhibit these properties.
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They are not dynamically self-generating or self-sustaining. Living systems are the only systems that exhibit this property, and conscious systems exhibit this property so such an extent that they extend their creative and organizational capacities beyond the confines of their biological structure to the surrounding environments.
And when they do die they lose their ability to not only support consciousness but to continue to maintain their unstable structural configuration. Life is not the sum of an organism's material components and functions but the process that organizes and utilizes such for some purpose(s). As of now, our machines are nothing but the sum of their assembled components & functions and they have no purpose beyond those defined by the living conscious entities who made them. They are projections and extensions of our consciousness and lack any life or direction of their own. The difference between living organisms that support consciousness and non-living machines isn't a matter of expiration date, but of process; the latter cannot achieve the capabilities of the former without itself being alive/conscious.
So what? Are you saying it isn't consciousness unless it expresses some form of culture?In humans this capacity is expressed in our material culture.
No, I'm saying that material culture is a product of consciousness. Its an extension of the biological self-making capacities [i.e. autopioesis] into the external environment. Such capabilities are a hallmark of life and consciousness itself.
I suspect that whatever property allows single celled organisms to self-generate and self-sustain is either a physical requisite of consciousness, or a rudimentary level of consciousness.
You say you suspect metabolism is prerequisite for consciousness - but you still haven't explained why.
Because such systems exhibit properties that necessarily distinguish the behaviors of conscious systems from non-conscious: they do not run down the thermodynamic path of least resistance, by default. As soon as they lose this property they cease being conscious and cease being alive soon thereafter.
Are you saying you suspect life is necessary for consciousness? If so, why not just come right out and say it? And explain why you think that.
Erm, I'm pretty sure thats what I've been painstakingly arguing for the passed several pages now. What conversation have you been following?