The phenomenon we need a definition of is currently only known to exist in animal brains. Whether or not it actually is or becomes possible for machines to be conscious, we will never have any way of actually investigating the possibility without a much better understanding of the neurobiology first. I'm as interested as anyone here in the prospect, and I'm frankly thrilled by the notion that we might one day figure out how to build conscious machines, but Piggy is right that it's a complete waste of time to jump the gun at this point.
Except that Piggy is jumping the gun at this point. From our understanding of neurobiology, we can say that consciousness as it is usually defined* is an illusion, and that we haven't found anything in the brain which cannot be simulated
in silico, in as much detail as we care to put into it. It's possible such a thing exists, which would indeed make it difficult or impossible for a machine to be conscious, but we haven't found it yet. Or anything like it. The null hypothesis at this point is that we will continue to not find anything, suggesting machines can be conscious as soon as they get beefy enough to run full-scale neural simulations.
That's the problem with Piggy's logic: he's rejecting the null without evidence. Though a machine could be programmed to have virtual neurons which interact in the same manner as a human's; though it may behave and walk and quack just like a consciousness; he's arguing that isn't
really conscious, because it lacks that
je ne sais quoi only to be found in real wetware. Much earlier in the thread Pixy derisively termed this idea a "magic bean." If you act conscious and have a magic bean, congratulations, you're conscious. If not, sorry bro.
Most of Piggy's latest walls of text have been a careful redefinition of the argument to make it seem like this isn't the case, so he can restate his assertions unchallenged. It's not working this round, either.
*The definition of consciousness tends to vary from person to person and moment to moment. It's one of those difficult concepts that people really like to hang onto, so it scuttles off into the darkness the instant you try to keep a light fixed on it.