Hang on, I said nothing about self-awareness. But are we talking about a p-zombie in the context of materialism or dualism or what?
That's meaningless. We're not talking about them in the context of any metaphysical position. We're supposed to be trying to think about p-zombies to precisely establish which metaphysical position makes sense.
What does it mean for something to be "a self"?
A self or the "I" is the grouping together of certain families of conscious experiences. Thus a self can listen to music and eat ice cream and these experiences are only
had by the one self*. Another self does not partake in these experiences but has his/her own family of experiences.
*Assuming the non-existence of ESP.
At best, he is saying that to be self-aware is to be conscious.
You can be conscious without being aware that you are a self. I don't know what it means to be aware without being conscious though unless you simply mean certain behaviour. If we are not conscious of an object in our enviroment, yet can point to it (blindsight), how is that being aware apart from saying we will behave in a certain way??
I have no idea whether that's right, because we're using the term conscious to mean 385 different things. If consciousness is qualia, for example, then self-awareness is an entirely different matter.
Yes of course it is. A materialist can't believe in a self at all! That site says:
"Furthermore, there are several different qualities a p-zombie might lack. Often, a p-zombie is assumed to lack qualia, but other possible qualities are intentionality, free will, consciousness or soul".
Qualia
is consciousness. It is any possible experinece, not just perceptual experiences. The soul is simply a self which survives the death of the body (to believe in a self obviously doesn't necessitate that one survies the death of ones body). To have free will presupposes a self it seems to me (and obviously presupposes consciousness). Intentionality presupposes consciousness.
For the materialist all there are is a series of successive similar psychological states. This leads to the illusion of a self -- not a true self. A "self" for the materialist is just the
sum of all your experiences. A proper self is the author of experiences. Experiences are
had by such a self.