I will try to convince you of the conceivability of p-zombies, and disembodied consciousness. I will explain later the role of the conceivability of them in my worldview.
That something is conceivable isn't the problem. That what it's conceiving is pointless is the issue.
1) Disembodied consciousness - If the experiments that test out-of-body experience would succeed, they would _prove_ disembodied consciousess. If you lie on a bed, and you feel that you hover outside your body, and go to a safe, enter this safe, read the number that is written there - and you get it right - it would be proof of disembodied experience, provided that it were done with all the controls. I think Susan Blackmore was performing such tests for a long time.
I am not arguing that these experiments are successful - only that if they are, they establish disembodied consciousness. And therefore disembodied consciousness is conceivable.
How absurd. You're saying the lack of evidence for disembodied consciousness is somehow proof that disembodied consciousness exists?
2) I don't agree with the argument you presented above for the same reason I do not find Turing's test convincing. Do you find Turing's test a good test for intelligence?
I think the question of intelligence is wholly irrelevant to the topic of the subject experience of feelings or consciousness.
By the way, IF mind-reading were real, then a mind-reader could tell a p-zombie from a human being... A p-zombie wouldn't have a mind to read.
First, mind reading isn't real, so it's not. Even if it were, it would be no more conclusive of the subjective experience of consciousness or feelings than, for example, EEG readings or MRIs.
ETA: For that matter, how is mind-reading different than these actual measures that correlate with mental activity? In most fiction, mind-reading is shown as someone able to "hear" the thoughts as speech. Let's say you could do that. Would it be any more conclusive evidence of the subjective experience than EEGs, MRIs or for that matter speech? If your p zombie is different from a person, you still haven't said how. By the definition of such a zombie, someone who could "read minds" would be able to "hear" the thoughts of a p-zombie. If you want to support a theory of a soul, you should just come out and make your case for it. This zombie silliness just doesn't cut it.
3) I can invent a specific scenario for a p-zombie to exist. Remember, all I am arguing for now is the _conceivability_ of p-zombies, and disembodied consciousnesses.
You're missing the point. That you can conceive of something doesn't make that something real or useful in any way whatsoever.
Basically the zombie idea is that you're saying you can have a person that is just like a person in all ways except for it lacks that subjective experience we're discussing. You can't even prove that it lacks that, because in all measures (what the zombie-person self reports, MRIs, EEGs, and even--if it were possible--mind-reading) it looks just like a person.
About the only thing this thought experiment is useful for is demonstrating that you can't prove the subjective experience for anyone but yourself.
This inability to prove that subjective experience does nothing to support the idea of disembodied consciousness or dualism. Nothing at all.
4) After all these are you guys who claim that it is a scientific discovery that the brain causes the mind. If it a scientific discovery, then it must be conceivable that it wouldn't be the case, it must be conceivable that the brain wouldn't cause the mind, and that they would be separate. Otherwise, what type of a scientific discovery it is, the opposite of which is simply inconceivable?
This doesn't make sense at all. First, the idea that the mind is caused by (or is an emergent property of, or a function of) or wholly dependent on the brain isn't a "scientific discovery" but an hypothesis or theory. It makes predictions. We expect when you introduce certain drugs, you'll get the report of a different subjective experience of the mind. It predicts that certain EEG patterns will correlate with certain subjective experiences and mental states. Ditto, MRIs, fMRIs, brain damage, etc. It's a very robust theory.
There is no need to make an alternate theory that the mind can exist independently of the brain. If you want to make that hypothesis, go ahead. But it's up to you to provide some evidence to support it, and there is exactly none. (And as mentioned an abundance of evidence showing the mind-brain correlation.)
Regarding "emergent properties", could you perhaps define it, or clarify it in some way? These words are vague to me. I understand what a property is, but what does it mean to call a property "emergent"?
You could read up on it in any good introductory biology or chemistry textbook, but I'll give you a quick rundown:
You know the properties of the various atoms, right?
When they're organized into compounds or more complex molecules, you get brand new properties that were not a property of any of the component atoms. For example, elemental sodium is a metal, and elemental chlorine is a gas. But sodium chloride is table salt. Its properties are nothing like the properties of sodium or chloride.
When you organize molecules into cells, you get lots of properties that none of the molecules had. Organize cells into tissue, and you can get new properties. Tissues into organs--new properties. Organs into organ systems, new properties.
One example: the circulatory system has the property of being able to maintain some degree of homeostasis in the blood pressure. This is not something any one organ is solely responsible for--much less any tissue of any constituent organ, any cell of any of these tissues, any molecule of any of these cells and any atom of any of these molecules.
Was it you that talked of running to legs as mind to brain? (sorry, lazy to go through all these posts).
Yes. I said that was my response to someone who made a strawman characterization of materialism by saying materialists think that the mind is equal to the brain. It is no more so than "running" is equal to "legs".