kuroyume0161 said:
Are you saying that we can know nothing of consciousness because it requires introspection? That is a falsehood. We can observe consciousness through other conscious beings (i.e.: other homo sapiens). We can also study the development and stages of consciousness through studies of a variety of animalia of varying degrees thereof. There are certainly tests that could be and have been performed to determine awareness, analytical problem solving, and retention of information.
Not at all. We can certainly know some things about consciousness
a priori by the very fact we are consciousness, and some things via observation of other things that are conscious. However, we cannot know how the internal mind works, because the very thoughts you would use to do so are predicated on that internal mind, and the observations you make would be of the things that give rise to the internal mind, and not the internal mind itself. There are abstractive levels between nuerons/brain and internal perception that I do not believe can be understood or observed. Nor do I think we can completely understand the universe, because of the simple fact we are constrained by the fact that we exist within it.
Let's put it this way. Can you give ballpark, approximate figures about what you think (and possibly what experimental data suggests) are the consciousness levels of certain other animals (chimpanzees, dogs, buffalo, gnats) comparative to one another or to humans? If you can even consider these levels, then we can know about consciousness. It is an effible quality that most likely has effible (and measurable) quantities. We just don't know much about them - considering that we've only been studying the matter for less than a century and we're talking about the most complex system in any organism, that makes proper sense.
I understand what you are saying here, and I agree that some things can be known. But what consciousness is, beyond a metaphor, cannot be known, because consciousness *is* knowing, and cannot be perceived because it *is* perception.
Think of it this way. We can approach our search from the physical side, and learn all about the physics, chemistry, biology, and structure of the brain. This will not tell us what consciousness is, only the substrate on which it operates. Or, we can approach it from the mental side, and learn all about psychology, memory, knowledge, logic, emotions, etc. But those are the products of consciousness, not consciousness itself.
Ah, but can we not study the interaction of the two with conscious, reporting witnesses? We can and have. In fact, we have seen people without just about every part of cognition we can think of, but all they can report is that they are not conscious themselves of the missing parts. Consciousness doesn't seem to lend itself to examination of it's black box.
The only other possibility I see are mind-altering drugs, and the direct perception of the resulting changes in your internal mind. But let me tell you, it doesn't work. I can tell you the course of my consciousness was fundamentally altered, but I can't even explain, to you or myself, *how* my consciousness was changed except by vague metaphor. We can know exactly the mechanism by which the the drug acts on neurotransmitters and receptor proteins, but how such a simple alteration translates to such highly altered consciousness is impossible to start to fathom.
By what possible other way are we to figure it out?