Well the highlighted part is ambiguous and unproven;
Why the reluctance to acknowledge that ‘consciousness cannot be achieved by programming alone’ (aka: the highlighted part) ?
On the surface, the only activity thus far associated with consciousness, human activity, bears some resemblance to computer activity (probably in no small part because human beings program the things to behave in ways that are intelligible to us). Thus it is easy to anthropomorphize. IOW…computers can do human-like things and this is how these achievements are accomplished (programming)…therefore it must be reasonable to assume that human behavior is accomplished the same way. And not only that…from a simplistic POV…brain activity can be described in terms of information processing…and isn’t that exactly what computers are all about.
Consciousness is not a defined term (nor is it’s mechanism understood), thus it is difficult to definitively establish that the above connection is untenable (…’prove that it’s not possible!... you can’t, therefore it must be at least possibly possible…especially given all the obvious reasons to believe so!’…). This thread is a good example of those difficulties (what is information processing, what is computation, what is function, what is subjective, what is objective, etc. etc…..philosophy gets a good workout).
There is the religious belief that anything that exists can be explained by science (a somewhat limited epistemology the limits of which are often completely ignored by those who practice it). Religious beliefs are often easier to subscribe to than facts. Thus Chomsky and his pessimism over a scientific understanding of human nature do not get the publicity that Dawkins and his bubblegum understanding of human nature achieve. It has been suggested that the noble ship of science may finally break upon the treacherous shoals of consciousness. ‘Impossible’ is not a word that can exist in the religion of science.
When it comes to ‘consciousness’…there is the inevitable need to believe that what we are is a consequence of something intelligible. Integration functions, information processing, neural networks, etc. All of these, of course, are intelligible to a degree (and, ultimately, as unintelligible as everything else)…but it is what all of these things combine to create that is the relevant issue. What is interesting is the search for an objective description of something that exists entirely as a subjective experience (Ontemology....or perhaps Epistology). There is the ‘what creates it’ that is the domain of the neuroscientists…and then there is the ‘what the hell is the ‘it’ that is created’….?
Everyone may have been justifiably annoyed when Pixy insisted that SRIP created consciousness so consciousness was SRIP…but does anyone, in fact, have any idea what it is that is created?
Consciousness is the answer to the question: what does it mean to be you?
I doubt that it is a coincidence that neither science nor any (known) human being can answer that question (unconditionally true…but isn’t ignorance bliss?). Until one, or the other, does…we simply cannot claim to have a definition of consciousness.
...which suggests an interesting question: who would understand my definition (if I had one)? What is understanding anyway? (very happy SRIP

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A while back I pointed out that one of the defining features of consciousness is its ability to self-adjudicate…to evaluate the propriety and / or authenticity of its own existence and respond accordingly (or not, as the case may be). The objective, it would seem, of this thing we call ‘consciousness’ is to achieve an accurate rendition of itself. To ‘know’ itself.
Ever met a computer that felt the need to ‘know itself’?
…and now I have to go and drown in profundity. You did, if you recall Piggy, ask why this question constantly ends up at the R & P section rather than the science section? It’s cause something exists…us [consciousness…blorp…whatever]…and we don’t know what we’re talking about when we talk about it…which is fine, if we’re talking about mollusks…but not so fine if we’re talking about talking.
…cue famous phrase: “ we use words so we can avoid having to face the fact that we don’t know what we’re talking about! “
(…three jelly-beans to anyone who can identify the author [those familiar with the author are excluded from the competition])
