Well I've given him a few days, but I guess Piggy dropped our conversation thread. I shall have to rein in my disappointment.
The feedback loop thing goes way waaay back in this thread. To summarize: "consciousness" is a crappy term that means something slightly different to absolutely everybody, yet everbody will swear up and down that they know it when they see it. Pixy's SRIP was a counterargument: ridiculous as it is, you cannot prove it wrong because it's just as unfalsifiable as everyone else's definition.
(by the way, a purely subjective definition means it's pretty damned useless as a concept to study scientifically, and should honestly be thrown out entirely until someone can find something falsifiable to demonstrate about it)
Regarding your change, I'd object to it even if we weren't talking about the color thing. Calling all subjective experiences "subjective experience" implies they're a unified whole, which we've learned enough to say is completely false.
I think the idea behind shuttit's post was that, if the networks could be exchanged wholesale, if you could take the world's finest tweezers and swap the red cones for green (or something infinitely more complex downstream), you would see red for green, and vice versa. I agree, but I don't feel that detracts from the point I think most others are making; that "red" and "green" are entirely arbitrary distinctions that mean nothing more or less than "this population" versus "that population." If the two were swapped and you didn't already have a facebook of associations linking them to their respective (and now out-of-) contexts, you'd never know the difference.
Unconsciousness comes with a small period of retrograde amnesia. Aided by anesthesia you go down quick and stay there, so the last thing you remember is a bit before the gas really hits you, with no periods of light sleep/dozing awakeness to give you a sense of time.
Yes, but unconsciousness eventually arrives. if consciousness = SRIP, we would never be unconscious. SRIP seems to me a necessary condition, but doesn't tell the whole story. Maybe an SRIP of sufficient complexity...?