It 'emerges' when the organism has a nervous system sophisticated enough to support consciousness.
I don't know enough about information processing to understand why having a central nervous system is the
sine qua non for consciousness, but I suspect there's some circularity in defining what is sophisticated enough. "To be conscious, an entity must have the ability to experience consciousness" sounds like a tautology. However perhaps we've modeled with computers how much juice would be needed for feedback, memory etc.
Consciousness is a kind of dualism, in the sense that the 'self' is perceived as being separate from the body it inhabits.
Agreed - but it seems tautological as well: "Being a dualist means you see your 'self' as a separate entity," and "Seeing your 'self' as a separate entity means you are a dualist." I wonder how it developed. I'm curious about when, why and how humans acquired this trait, and if any other animals experience it.
I wonder why more people don't see that. Descartes presupposes that he exists; it's the subject of his sentence. But I am seriously uninformed about the context of his work and that of other philosophers.
What is the minimum set of physical functions an animal must have in order to possess run?
Yep. "Run" doesn't exist without bodies to run with. Nausea doesn't exist outside some creature feeling nauseated. That's the problem I see with qualia.
Why wouldn't that be thought? Does the sound of running water make you need to pee? Do you bemoan your lack of free will in doing so? Dogs are incredibly thoughtful creatures with a constant social calculus going on behind their eyebrows. Your dog could choose not to pee there, if it understood that The Alpha (you) would get upset. Isn't that free will?
I don't bemoan my lack of free will at all. I find it kind of comforting, actually: Nothing is my fault.
I would like to think my dog is thoughtful and loves me, but (almost?) all of her behavior can be explained by instinct and conditioning. She gets praise when she pees outside. Scolding has taught her that I don't want to
see her pee inside, so she doesn't do it in front of me. She's still a puppy. So, literally, baby steps.
She was cute as hell doing manic puppy circles in the park this morning on dew-covered grass; does that mean she was "feeling" playful? Something I've noticed about the breed: They don't like getting wet. My previous doggo would run around to dry herself off. This one's tummy was wet with dew, but running just made her wetter, so she kept running and I kept laughing and I theorize she likes the sound (or smell?) of laughter. "Kisses," burrowing under the covers, cuddling - well-socialized dachshunds are known for this. There's no behavior I can think of that can't be explained by instinct and operant conditioning. I don't know what that says about the concept of free will.
Correct. The mutations can go in all directions, but only viable directions will survive. The end result is non-random.
Random mutations determine who survives to breed. Sperm-ova combinations are random in themselves. l know I'm missing something about natural selection here but can't quite get my head around the fact that each change in the genome is dictated by random events, including how long a given organism survives, so randomness is at least as important as non-randomness. A whole clutch of fish eggs may have some advantageous mutation, but if some other sea critter eats the whole batch, the mutation could die out.
The thing is, I don't
like the conclusion that consciousness simply emerges. In fact by nature I think I'm a dualist. Literally by nature. My mother had a completely different upbringing from me but we have a similar vague "feeling" that some factor exists beyond the purely material. (I have just run across the phrase "human exceptionalism" which I need to explore, but it would be compatible with a binary belief about consciousness: Humans do indeed have "magic beans" that other organisms don't).
ETA: This post seems to jump around a bit, but I experience these thoughts as connected. Suitable transitions would make it even longer, so it is what it is.