I disagree. For very simple organisms it is possible to enumerate their sensory gamut and this gives you a measure of their awareness in terms of response to the environment. A simple organism is a self-sustaining aggregation of a few million chemical reactions; it is the organisation of the components and their reactions that is important.
You are throwing the entity out with the bath water. I am considering that the entity is more than the sum of its chemical reactions.
Are you saying that if one assembles the appropriate chemicals in the correct configuration, it would naturally rise up and walk?
Presumably you
knowwhat the spark of life is? of course there is no spark we are all automatons.
OK - a brain of some sort (a neural plexus) is necessary for the neural interactions that give rise to consciousness, and requires a body for support and sensory I/O, so your regard seems superficially reasonable, pending an explanation of what you mean by 'an emergent property of the organism as a whole'.
The precise relation and emergence of consciousness in an animal is not known, correct me if I'm wrong. I am not attempting to explain it. I am simply making an observation of the conscious entities which we have to observe.
We've been round the 'all life is conscious' and even 'everything is conscious' roundabout elsewhere, and it leads nowhere useful; it emasculates the concept and leads to mystical universal consciousness woo. I'm quite happy to accept 'awareness' as a measure of response to environmental stimuli, but this is very different from conscious awareness.
Yes I agree it is a primitive ability, rather like the ability current robots exhibit. I regard such a life form to have an embryonic self awareness, entirely unconscious.
But you feel that a biological cell is not an automaton (an entity that follows or responds to coded instructions)? When Craig Venter's team assembled Synthia, a synthetic DNA sequence in a denucleated bacterial cell, which replicated just like a natural bacterium, did they create an automaton? If not, why not?
I am not denying the physical material realities of how biological life operates/behaves. I am considering aspects of a living entity which are in a sense virtual rather like the way our ego is virtual.
What would you accept as a demonstration of consciousness?
I see this as a science of the future and is not something I have given much thought.
At least you now appear to accept that a non-biological consciousness could be demonstrated. I did find it curious that you (elsewhere?) posited consciousness in simple biological creatures, but were not prepared to accept consciousness in an arbitrarily complex artificial computational system, emulating, for example, a mammalian brain. Yet you still seem unable to articulate why. Something about organic chemistry?
Again if the synthetic entity is alive, I have no doubt it could be conscious. I repeat that the only life form we know of is life as we know it on earth. Have we any idea at all how to construct a different life form or conceive of it?
OK - I take it that means you accept my minimal definition for life (posted earlier).
Provisionally, I was accepting the definition in terms of the qualities of biological cellular life.
So you are open to consciousness in any dynamic self-organising, self-sustaining, structured system that responds coherently to its environment (my minimal definition of life) - even if it was a non-biological construct?
No, I doubt life is fully understood as yet.
What has that to do with anything? Chess doesn't require consciousness.
I meant a robot could hoodwink me into thinking its conscious.
There's your problem. We try to use critical thinking to translate unconventional non-scientific ideas and concepts into science. This gives us a common language for investigation and analysis. For this we need evidence and or detailed explanation. I suggest the problem isn't the language per se, but the ideas and concepts expressed in it.
I see no problem other than translation into another ontology.