I didn't mean to put words in your mouth. Since you seem to object to any suggestion that there are two consciousnesses in a split brain patient, I naturally infer you believe there's only one.
Did you really look at the aroma experiment graphic I posted? (below)
The right brain smells a rose through the right nostril and the left hand (controlled by the right brain) picks up a rose on the table. At the same time, the left brain does not smell the rose because the left nostril is blocked (unlike other senses, nasal signals do not cross on their way to the brain) and the left brain denies verbally that a rose was smelled.
So, if the right brain is conscious of the rose smell, and the left brain is unconscious of it, this manifests the separate consciousnesses of the split halves. IOW each side is unconscious of what the other is conscious of.
(results are similar with sight, hearing, and touch experiments)
By any definition I've ever heard, this indicates two separate consciousnesses.
By what definition of consciousness could one reach a different conclusion?
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And again you over state what I did not say, in my statements. I did not object to two consciousnesses, I stated that we should be cautious without clearer definitions of which specific behaviors we are talking about and that there may be some more rigorous testing to rule out cross communication.
And again there may be ways of phrasing 'consciousness' that would make that case true. However, without specific testing to see what emotions and memories the individual may experience in response to the stimuli and other testing there could be communication.
Who was that patient and what were the specifics of the case?
And no, it does not meet the criteria of two separate 'consciousness' if we look at levels of arousal and then look at levels of awareness. Technically it would indicate that yes, the person was not aware of the olfactory stimulus, however, there is more to the definition of consciousness then that.
Again it is important to look at which behavior under the rubric of consciousness you are using. Strangely I think I have presented something similar recently, there is no unified entity referred to as consciousness.
Most correctly the individual was unable to verbalize the nature of the olfactory stimulus presented, now did they ask them to draw a picture with the left hand or to express memories at the time? Perhaps picture matching as well? (These are the ways to see what other cross communication might be occurring)
So yes if you want to say that 'consciousness' is merely the ability to express verbally (for the left hemisphere), you have different forms of awareness and two separate areas that do not communicate sufficiently to express a verbal concept related to the olfactory stimulus presented to the other hemisphere.
So if you wish to define consciousness so narrowly, then you could say that the left hemisphere was unable to verbalize the awareness in the right hemisphere. But I am not sure that says there are two separate consciousnesses.
However, as stated there could be other ways to see if the midbrain is sending information from the right hemisphere to the left.
My main objection is that the term consciousness include many different behaviors and there one should be careful in describing which behaviors are being referred to.
My pedantic point is overdrawn.