No - the thought that Russell praises is not qualitatively different than the thought that may someday arise on another machine.
Machines emerged from the cosmos, thoughts emerged from machines, is there something that will emerge from thought?
Would it be out of line to say thought is an emergent property of the universe?
When Russell calls thought "the light of the world," does he mean it is the light of humanity - the best we've been able to do so far? Or is there something more to it?
Point of order: There are people who say this. They are, in my opinion, crazy (or at the very least, deeply wrong), but they exist.
Are you saying that sane people are deeply interested in self-preservation? Is "I want to live" the rock-bottom definition of sanity, because organisms are essentially programmed to want to stay alive as long as possible, and an organism that doesn't care one way or another is malfunctioning?
I hate to think what these questions say about my life.
OK, say we don't have to be conscious in order to have a self-preservation instinct, but we do have to be conscious in order to fear death. What purpose is consciousness really serving? Maybe you need it to have higher-order Bertram Russell thought, but why is this whole business of thinking necessary?
I suppose it isn't any more than necessary than "life" - it's simply what arises, by degrees, when conditions are ripe for molecules to start replicating themselves.
Sorry to be thick, so far I've avoided consciousness threads - for a reason.