An abiogenesis solution to the origin of life does not effect the fact of evolution.
What is the confusion?
Why do we dream pixy?
Epigenetic inheritance of states of mind clearly falsifies the idea of a purely genomic phenotype constrained evolution of consciousness.
...let's see...here we have a feast of fallacies. Anyone care to name a few?
No one has helped you on this yet, so I invite you to specify one. Start with the most glaring, if you will. I am eager to learn from my mistakes.
Every feature of consciousness arose incrementally for the sole reason that it helped pass on the gene responsible for that feature.
….but Mr. Scott…I pointed one out quite explicitly.
- Where has it been scientifically established that we know ‘every feature’ of consciousness?
- Where has it been scientifically established that we know how these features were / are created (arose)?
- Where has it been scientifically established that we know the reason these features occurred?
- Where has it been scientifically established that there is a ‘sole reason’ and it is as you described?
But for the sake of argument…. we’ll just assume you’re correct. Provide a list of ‘features of consciousness’ and the genes they correspond to. When you’re done you can expect a call from the Nobel committee.
It's called scientism. The appropriate thread would be here: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=4
define states of mind as a clear metric, then cross survey and do regression analysis of epigenetic components vs. social learning in families, communities and societies.
Otherwise it is magic phrase you wave like flag.
The physiological changes that states of mind induce is certainly quantifiable and metric to extents.
It's been shown that in the children of mothers who got PTSD after the 9/11 attacks that they were much more likely to also have similar symptoms when they grow up, for example. I can give more.
It might save you time to watch this documentary in the meantime (Horizon - Epigenetics - The Ghost In Your Genes), if you have missed my previous threads on the topic.
How would someone test something which is "untestable"? I hope that's not a serious question.What if consciousness inhabits the brain and gives rise to it, so it's not that the brain produces conscious experience but consciousness that produces the brain?
How would you test this reverse causality for something that is inherently non physical and untestable?
I see, so clumsy hands and the size of our solar system is stopping us from building conscious words. I mean wtf is 'it' in this sentence " and voila, it will be conscious"3. Imagine for a moment, standing inside a single synaptic cleft, peering into a gated channel, observing the conformation changes as a transmitter molecule binds, and an ion is carried through to other side of the membrane, it really does all look like ropes and pulleys, but there are an awful lot of them even in a single channel within a synapse!
4. Construct a rope and pulley mechanism encompasssing not just this synapse but all of them(1014), and all the axonal, dendritic and somatic membrane channels on every neuron (100 billion of them or so) involved in a working human brain, and voila, it will be conscious! It seems self evident. The problem, of course, is in generating that kind of complexity with our clumsy hands, and the limited space we have to work with (our solar system).
I see, so clumsy hands and the size of our solar system is stopping us from building conscious words. I mean wtf is 'it' in this sentence " and voila, it will be conscious"
What if consciousness consisted of non-corporeal invisible nano-squirrels which invade brain neurons...
How would you disprove this?
As I thought "it" is no-thing at all.Sorry if English is not your primary language. "It" in the final phrase refers to the initial object of the sentence, the impossibly complex imaginary rope and pulley mechanism which imitates the actions of our brains down to the level of its molecular mechanisms.
As I know you are aware, others here have already argued that complex machines much smaller than ropes and pulleys are also capable of imitating the computational actions of the brain, and these may very well achieve sufficient complexity and appropriate design for producing consciousness in much less space than would be required for ropes and pulleys.
My point was directed at the much earlier discussion here regarding rope and pulley Turing machines and their potential for being conscious.
Incidentally, if you believe "consciousness" has some component(s) which are not ultimately dependent on the activity of specific brain structures I would be grateful to hear about them.
The physiological changes that states of mind induce is certainly quantifiable and metric to extents.
It's been shown that in the children of mothers who got PTSD after the 9/11 attacks that they were much more likely to also have similar symptoms when they grow up, for example. I can give more.
It might save you time to watch this documentary in the meantime (Horizon - Epigenetics - The Ghost In Your Genes), if you have missed my previous threads on the topic.
The data suggest that effects of maternal PTSD related to cortisol can be observed very early in the life of the offspring and underscore the relevance of in utero contributors to putative biological risk for PTSD.
Stress-induced increases in glucocorticoids during pregnancy influences fetal brain development, producing permanent changes in glucocorticoid programing in offspring in both human and animals, that are, in part, dependent on the gestational age of the fetus
Both stress exposure during pregnancy and reduced activity of placental 11β hydroxycortisteroid dehydrogenase type 2, the enzyme that catalyzes rapid conversion of maternal cortisol to inert cortisone, result in an increased exposure of the fetus to glucocorticoids, resulting in low birth weight and the subsequent development of metabolic syndrome and other diseases
On the other hand, the similarity between correlations observed in the current study of 1-yr-old offspring and adult offspring of Holocaust survivors should not preclude longitudinal investigation of these effects because even effects related to in utero programing and/or early stress can change over time. For example, elevated salivary cortisol levels in offspring were observed at 3 yr but not 7 yr (20). Thus, there are likely to be contributions to cortisol levels based on the offspring’s own development history. The current cohort provides an opportunity to examine the longitudinal development in cortisol over time in relation to both remitted or ongoing maternal symptoms and factors related to child development and, accordingly, to disentangle the contributions of genetic, prepregnancy, in utero, and postpartum influences on offspring cortisol levels in a sample where the intensity, frequency, and duration of the stressor is clearly defined, and the symptoms are clearly quantified in a prospective manner."
As I thought "it" is no-thing at all.
Unlike a human which certainly is some-thing.
Correct me if I'm wrong on the following:
You would call a non-working human brain an "it." After we fire it up with oxygenated blood containing nutrition and energy so that it functions just like yours and mine, you'd call it some-thing, rather than an "it." Why?
Would you say something like this about one of these proto-conscious robots? Turned off, it's an it, but turned on, it's some-thing?
These are not simple yes/no or short quip questions for you, !Kaggen. They are invitations for you to elaborate your thoughts on consciousness and educate us mechanists (Mechanism (philosophy)WP).
Hey, search youtube for "conscious robot" there's some really neat stuff!