Hey Piggy! I'm trying to see if I can distill your position so that I understand it.
You believe:
Consciousness is the product of the brain, like nutrients are the products of digestion, sugar is the product of photosynthesis, destruction is the product of tornados, etc. Sometimes you describe this as "performing consciousness," or blue, so do you mind if I call it "performing qualia?"
Now, if qualia is not data, then is it matter, or energy? Which type of matter? Which type of energy? Do we have even the faintest hint of what it is, physically? This thing that we only know exists because we sense it from inside of it?
I think "performing qualia" is fine. Not as precise as we'd like, I'm sure, but for the moment it may have to do.
That last bit's the kicker, isn't it?
That's the thing about consciousness -- we don't even really know how to frame the most important and fundamental questions.
One thing about data, tho, is that nothing is data. "Data" is an abstraction, and it implies an interaction between an observer and something observed. If we all vanish tomorrow, there is no longer any data, just stuff.
That's why I avoid describing what goes on in the brain, as much as possible, in terms of "data" or "information". It's too easy to entify such things, and come to think of the abstraction as if it were the thing being abstracted.
We have to be very careful with "information" especially because there's more than one meaning of the term, depending on the field, but in all cases it's a measurement.
The way I look at what's happening in the brain is in terms of physical, chemical, and electrical interactions.
It just gets too easy to think that there is an image of a tree, for example, sliding down our optic nerves. But it's really more like the stone, water, and shore. The light causes something to happen in our skulls which is not light, but which translates some of the patterns in the lightwaves into different sorts of patterns in our nerve webs.
These patterns are just as different from one another as the patterns in the stone are from the patterns in the water.
But that doesn't matter for the body. The body doesn't care. As long as the different sets of patterns relate to one another in consistent ways, the body can make use of them in similarly consistent ways.
And great headway has been made in observing and understanding these patterns in the gooey mass inside our skull.
But it's a much bigger problem when we get to the neural correlates of consciousness (NCCs). Here, there's a tremendous gap between the neural patterns and the patterns of what we call qualia.
For instance, if you shine the right sort of wavelength and frequency of light into a human eye, the physics is pretty straightforward for how that light bounces off the retina and causes a chain reaction of electrochemistry.
It's also pretty straightforward physics if we're talking about something like a squint response.
But what about red?
What the heck is red, and where does it come from? Nobody has a clue.
There's no red in the light. There's no red in the neurons. And as we've seen, one animal's brain may perform red in response to that light, while another's may perform gray, and yet another's may perform no color at all. Even stranger, in some brains where activity is aberrantly transferred across brain real estate which normally shouldn't be affecting each other, you can get red, AND a flavor!
We have no calculus yet to describe the relationship between the neural activity and the qualia. We just don't.
In other words, we have no idea
why the NCC for red
is an NCC for red. Or put another way, we don't know why the human brain performs red in response to having that sort of light bounce off a retina, rather than performing some other color, or some other qualia besides color, or no qualia at all.
And this is one of the primary problems with the stance taken by PixyMisa and rocketdodger, for example. They hold what I call the "passive position".
Rocketdoger has said that there is no such problem, it's just that this particular type of light manifests as red "from the inside". But this is no explanation, and it doesn't take into account the fact that different brains perform different colors, or no color, in response to the same kind of light.
You can get different colors by building a different brain (e.g. a dog's brain) or by altering the activity of a human brain (e.g. taking hallucinogenic drugs).
Why is that so? Nobody knows yet.
PixyMisa holds a similar position. For example, he has said that thermostats might be conscious because there is informational feedback going on inside them. As best as I can tell, Pixy holds the position that
any sort of representation inside a machine results in consciousness.
The trouble with that position is that it's long been disproven in the lab. We know for a fact that a relatively small portion of what might be called "representations" in the brain, or "information processing", even self-referential information processing, ends up getting translated into qualia, or conscious experience.
Probably the most well known example of non-conscious information processing is subliminal stimulation, and now it's been proven that not only do our brains process subliminal stimulations (for example, visual images that have too short a duration to be included in our conscious experience) but that our brains can even learn as a result of exposure to such stimulation without our ever being consciously aware that we've seen anything, much less learned anything.
So the passive approach won't work.
Consciousness is something the brain does, something it's specifically built to do. It doesn't just happen as a side-effect or by-product of "information processing".
I've given a description of what consciousness appears to be, given the current state of research. It's what I've called a "phenogram".
We know there are certain physical processes in the brain associated specifically with conscious awareness. Whether these are causes themselves, or whether they're simply side-effects of other processes that are causative, nobody can say at this point.
But what is clear is that consciousness is a bodily function of some sort, that it has physical causes in the brain, that it is not an automatic by-product of information processing, and that human brains -- and monkey brains, and almost certainly all mammal brains -- are designed (by evolution) to perform this task.
It's also clear that phenograms have extension in space and duration in time. They are real spacetime events.
But what the heck they are... that's what cognitive neurobiologists are struggling to discover.