Information processing is just a general description of what every physical system does. Subjective experience is not.
Right, subjective experience happens on a specific information processing system -- the brain and its neurons, which happen to process information at a level which is quite distinct from the information processing that happens among the fundamental particles that make up the neurons, which I see no reason to worry about yet.
You seem to be firmly stuck in a conceptual mode
[by will or by flub] thats preventing you from seeing what I'm getting at. Metaphorically speaking, what I'm trying to get you to do is step back and stop thinking merely in terms of the abstract symbolism you're using to count tally sticks and focus on the sticks as physical objects.
Remember that computations are carried about by
physical hardware. Whatever a given IP system produces is by virtue of the interactions of it's physical constituents. Terms like "inputs", "ops", and "outputs" are just the functional labels we apply to what concrete objects are doing. Understanding, in the abstract, the computational ops that underly the symbolic representations on your calculator's screen is not the same as understanding the LCD thats displaying those symbols or knowing how to make one.
Step back into metaphor with me because I really don't think you truly grok what it is I've been saying. Think of the mind as a computer monitor, consciousness as the illumination of the screen, and qualia as the various color pixels that are able to be produced by the display. Symbols on the screen are the products of the computations performed, but the actual display
[i.e. the screen, the pixels, and the power used to light the screen] used to conveying those symbols is a product of the
-physics- of the hardware.
Information processing is ubiquitous and therefore has no explanatory force with regard to understanding specific physical phenomena such as consciousness.
Funny, I think the same thing about invoking quantum mechanics or EMF field effects to try and explain consciousness.
Of course the world is computable but simulating a phenomena via computation is not the same as reproducing the phenomenon in question. If one wants to produce fire, electrical current, fission/fusion power, consciousness, or gravitational acceleration they must produce the sufficient physical conditions.
Right, but 4 out of 5 of those things are direct consequences of the underlying physical laws. You appear to assume consciousness is as well, but you have not given any compelling reason to back your assumption up.
So do you think conscious experience is something going on in a magical ether realm of abstraction separate from the physical universe?
Its a self-evident fact that computations are what physical systems do, not vis versa. Claiming that computation explains consciousness is like saying driving explains cars -- its a logical flub.
It is not at all self evident, otherwise the digital physics folks would not exist-- their view is that computations are what physical systems
are, and it works as well as materialism does as an ontology.
Nescafe, if I take a pencil and write "1" on a piece of paper is it literally the number one?
Because conscious experience is a physical result of brain activity.
So is heat, carbon dioxide, and a slight electromagnetic field.
Your point being?
The simulation of a powerplant
...is just a switching pattern on a computer that we use to symbolically represent an actual power plant.
that was controlling the real powerplant
The
physical computer was controlling the
physical power plant at the direction of it's
physical human operators.
was also a physical result of computer activity in the hypothetical mentioned upthread.
"Simulation" is just a label we apply to the portion of the computer's activity that we think of as representing the plant.
Why is consciousness not the same sort of physical result?
For the same reason my drawing of an apple is not the same sort of physical result as an edible fruit.