Pixi,
Thanks for the detailed response to my questions. It was extremely enlightening about your views and the way you think.
Frankly, I was floored by your response. I’ve never seen a seemingly very intelligent person twist their own tail in so many knots as I intend to point out. I’ll be watching to see if anyone comes to your defense since you care so deeply about pointing out who wins and loses debates. In this case, I think it’s clearly game over. To paraphrase you about UE, perhaps I haven’t won, but you’ve just lost.
Let’s start with your first response in your post: In fact, I’m going to dedicate this entire long post of mine to your first two sentences.
Well, a couple of different ways. First is that this is how we define consciousness: Consciousness is self-referential information processing.
Holy cow, Bingo, right off the bat… Game over. ;-)
Generally, when people like you define the problem by their conclusion, they always get the right answer. It’s a tautology. It’s also nonsense.
As you know, I agree with you that consciousness is self-referential processing. Well, wait, from reading the rest of your stuff I don’t. I believe consciousness is a
form of self-referential processing. That’s a critical distinction - more on that later.
Do you realize the huge mistake in logical argument you’ve made here? It also violates the very process of empirical science you claim to champion. I’m going to assume you don’t see it and hope your blinders are not so tightly affixed that you might actually understand why. If not, I know some people who’d be happy to sell you something called “The Ontological Argument for God” – it’s based on the same tautological reasoning.
Consciousness is and was an observable phenomena long before humans had little if any understanding of computation and self-referential programming. In that sense it is a somewhat unique form of observable because long before Turing Machines were ever mentioned or understood (which put self-referentiality on deep formal footing for the first time via recursion less that a century ago), both ancient scientists and philosophers noticed it was a subjective observable, as opposed observing the external environment that everyone can experience. I guess in order to avoid being accused of the same mistake as you, I need to point out that I’m assuming your materialist stance for objective reality to make things easier for me to explain to you and to prevent distracting tangents.
I can see now why you have such a hard time accepting the idea of qualia, or allowing for my fairly basic attempts to define it. Because to a large and possibly exclusive extent, qualia IS the subjective observable the ancients wanted to explain just as we do. That’s all it is. “Consciousness” didn’t magically appear on the scene only once somebody could define it as self-referential processing like you.
Am I getting through to you yet? I’ll assume no and try to give you a concrete example to think about. Let’s look at the process of digestion, something I think we’ll agree is a lot less controversial than consciousness. Why is it less controversial? Because from multiple perspectives it’s is safe to say we really deeply understand digestion, at least it’s most essential elements. It’s been explained. We have learned from painstaking science over centuries that digesting is the process of well-definable biochemical dissolution and absorption of well-definable nutrients conveyed from food in our gut to our bloodstream and the concomitant elimination of waste.
Am I entitled to use this explanation as a definition for digestion? Yes. Why? Because logic and empirical science has essentially proven it. All the essential gaps have been filled yet it is always possible via science that we will discover that digestion actually does other things too (and in fact, it does).
And furthermore, before digestion was explained, it was still a purely observable phenomena that could be defined categorically if less completely in a number of ways. In this sense, digestion can be defined as the sequence of events that can be observed as food entering the stomach, getting really mushy, moving to and getting more icky in something we call intestines as various bodily glands add juices, and then comes out as poop and pee. What else is happening in there. Before modern science all we could do was hypothesize.
Would Plato have been correct in arguing with Socrates centuries ago that the definition of digestion is as I first stated above (involving biochemistry)? No, because even if Plato had a decent intuition of what biochemistry might be there was then insufficient evidence to prove that the explanation could be taken as a definition. I’m sure there were many competing ideas at the time and they lacked the science and knowledge to resolve it.
As far as consciousness is concerned, the debate may be over in your mind but it clearly isn’t in the scientific community or in philosophy. Strange loops still have the status of hypothesis, not established theory or law. There is as yet no consensus that “strange loops” are an answer to consciousness much less the definition. There is no conclusive proof for it as a theory nor does it yet make abundant predictions capable of confirmation or deeper elucidation at present. We cannot yet even characterize or succinctly formalize all the necessary and sufficient conditions for something to act as a strange loop. We don’t understand the principles sufficiently to engineer AI of comparable conscious sentience to our own.
For all these reasons and many more, you’re not entitled to define consciousness purely as a strange loop yet my friend or by the more amorphous and incomplete concept of self-referentiality that takes many forms known and possibly unknown. I state this with confidence despite the fact that like you, I believe it will be proven to be the cause and explanation eventually.