Guybrush Threepwood said:
This seems to me to be what you are doing with consciousness, whatever level of explanation we have isn't enough, you want one more, whereas with Geckos you seem happy with electrostatic forces. I can't really see a difference between the actions of neurons causing consciousness and opposite charges attracting.
Indeed, it's a form of special pleading - applying a double standard to the rules of evidence.
No, it is not a case of special pleading, because all such cases are like this one.
With geckos, if we want to understand the correlation between the construction of their feet and their ability to climb smooth surfaces, atomic theory provides us a sufficient framework to understand the cause of the correlation. But without that framework, we have no explanation for the correlation.
By contrast, we currently have no explanatory framework for NCCs, whether we're speaking of the few that we have discovered or the many which we have yet to discover.
We can be confident that such a framework exists. We simply do not yet know enough to determine (or even imagine) what it is.
Of course, there are always deeper questions to fathom. This is true of atomic theory, and it will no doubt be true of whatever theory provides us an explanation of NCCs.
On a much more mundane level, we could consider the case of the groan in my attic.
I noticed a correlation between high winds in my yard and a groan that can be heard in my bathroom coming from my attic. But I had no idea why that correlation existed.
I could stop there and be satisfied that high winds
somehow caused a groaning sound. But being curious, I decided to investigate.
Winds being fickle, and my attic being difficult to navigate, it took some time before I discovered that the correlation was caused by a loose vent cover that vibrated in high winds and transmitted that vibration along the joists above the bathroom.
So now I understand
why there is a correlation between high winds and that groaning sound.
Is this a complete explanation of the phenomenon?
No.
There are many more questions to be asked. For instance, what is the windspeed threshold? Is this threshold affected by ambient air temperature and/or the temperature of the joists? Why does the loose vent cover produce the exact sound that it produces?
But those additional questions do not change the fact that I previously was unable to account for the correlation, and now I can.
So no, there is no special pleading going on here at all.
The fact remains that currently we have no explanatory framework which might tell us
why a given neural state is correlated with a given conscious experience.
And the fact that the discovery of such a framework would necessarily lead to deeper questions... that does not in any way imply that the framework, when we discover it, would indeed provide an explanatory link between the two sets of observations.
To call this a case of "special pleading" is to misunderstand both the meaning of the term "special pleading" and some of the basic concepts of science.