UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
The difference between our views is shown in your second sentence here. While you seem to say that there are other differences than the number of observers I'm saying that the number of observers is the difference between public and private behaviour. Then you almost hit the nail in the head when you say: "Attaching the word "private" to it would normally just mean exactly the same sort of observation but restricted to only one or a few individuals..." I say 'almost' because I'm using private behaviour the same way as behaviorists. Private is observed by one individual, not one or few individuals. In general I think you've interpreted my position pretty accurately.
Wether my consciousness can not be observed by others in principle or if the observations are limited by lack of technology does not matter. It only matters wether it can be currently observed by one or more individuals. If only one: it's private. If by more than one: it's public. I think we can agree on this.
But here's where I predict we will disagree:
The way I see it is that not even I can observe my own consciousness. Atleast I don't think I have done that yet. Ofcourse I have observed my own private behaviour and the world around me and then inferred that I'm conscious because I have learned from other people how to use that word. But I haven't observed anything that is just my consciousness, there has always been some other observations that has lead me to conclude that I'm conscious.
But isn't it the case that as long as you've been aware of anything at all - that is that you have observed anything at all - that you were observing your consciousness? Consciousness is not a thing you observe. It is the fact that you observe anything at all.
I disagree. I'm using the word 'observe' to mean exactly one thing. Only difference being the number of observers.
I don't really understand. I'm currently observing a computer screen. There's nobody else here. If somebody else was here then they could observe it too. I am also currently observing my consciousness and at the moment it contains, among other things, a computer screen. If somone else was here then they could observe the computer screen, but not my consciousness. At this point we need two definitions of "observe", don't we?
But just to be clear: I don't view consciousness as a thing, physical or non-physical. But if it does exist as a thing then my view is that the only difference between observing the consciousness and other things is the number of observers. I'm interested to hear what other differences you see, though.
I can't accept the context of the question, because I'm still unsure of exactly what the word "observe" means to you.
We have no option but to learn the word from other people from their public behaviour and they can only confirm our understanding through our own public behaviour. That creates some uncertainty and fuzzines.
Imagine we build a computer which can pretty accurately replicate all the cognitive functions of a human brain - that is it can carry out all of the "computations" and does it in roughly the same way. The computer is not conscious. It has no internal awareness of anything. But it is perfectly capable of learning language and ends up with a complex set of concepts based on an internal model it has built of physical reality. So it knows what atoms and stars and humans are, and it can understand verbs concerning behaviour.
Can this machine, which is capable of learning from the behaviour of humans it picks up with its various sensors (but does not "observe" them, because "there's nobody home"), learn the meaning of the word "consciousness"?
The only way I can think of to define 'being conscious' objectively, is through public behaviour. But if I remember correctly what you've posted in other threads is that you disagree with that way of defining it. You are talking about the private side of things. Right?
I'm not sure I've ever offered an opinion on the definition of "being conscious". Trying to defining the verb "be" is even more treacherous than "consciousness." For some people they end up having the same meaning.
What is the Being of being?
Last edited: