Are you conscious of what other people are thinking? If not, why should you be conscious of what your cells are doing?
This.
Are you conscious of what other people are thinking? If not, why should you be conscious of what your cells are doing?
This.
Are you conscious of what other people are thinking? If not, why should you be conscious of what your cells are doing?
So, no evidence then?
I doubt anyone but Pixy truly shares it (the SRIP equivalency).
Yep.
Well.... Only one of them is conscious at the human level. All of them have subjective experience and are self-aware, they're just less complex.
Well, those pesky details are part of human consciousness, the only incontrovertible example we have. How many we can strip away and still have "consciousness" depends on how we define it of course. By mine, SRIP consciousness is too simple: there is no experience as I define it above, no translation of somatic and environmental input into an (to repeat myself) integrated, constantly-updating sensory and evaluative map of oneself and the world within which to deliberate. So for me SRIP is indeed necessary but not sufficient. However, that's just my own working definition; it happens to make the most sense to me in the most contexts; I don't get too worked up about definitions, 'cause however we choose to label what's going on, I have a sneaking suspicion what's going on could care less.- As I've noted, I'm amenable to a definition of consciousness that holds SRIP as necessary but not sufficient. But why from some SRIP human consciousness emerges but not others is not complex: You add the other functions of the brain (speech, visual perception, memory) and that's what you get. The details, of course, are immensely complicated, but the overall picture is not.
Are you conscious of what other people are thinking? If not, why should you be conscious of what your cells are doing?
If you want to say that my definition is necessary but not sufficient to your definition, I'm amenable to that. But first you have to provide a definition, and a reason for preferring it.
My position is that if cells are conscious (I'd have to study cellular biology to see if they meet my definition) we would have no way to be aware of it.Other people are conscious. Is your position that cells are indeed conscious and we're just not aware of it?
Pick one.I provided several definitions of consciousness the medical community uses.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necessity_and_sufficiencyI don't know what you mean "my definition is necessary but not sufficient to your definition".
What?...but that’s not your argument is it Pixy.
There is no "thing". That's a fundamental error. There is only the process.You are arguing that the thing and the process that creates it are one and the same.
No. Anything that performs self-referential information processing is by definition performing consciousness. What you may or may not understand is irrelevant.Thus…anything that can be understood to involve the process known as SRIP is, by definition, conscious.
No.Therefore the immune system is conscious. The digestive system is conscious. A cell in the process of repairing itself is conscious. The majority of car engines manufactured in the last decade are conscious A laptop is conscious. Etc. etc. etc. etc. Depending on how, exactly, the various meanings of those four words are defined (and they are not explicitly defined anywhere…just relatively…like everything else)….there may actually be nothing in the entire universe that is NOT conscious.
No. That's at least three logical fallacies in one sentence.We'll just assume that the position of one of the world's best known practicing cognitive scientists qualifies as evidence of something.
...but that’s not your argument is it Pixy. You are arguing that the thing and the process that creates it are one and the same. The medium is the message. Thus…anything that can be understood to involve the process known as SRIP is, by definition, conscious. Therefore the immune system is conscious. The digestive system is conscious. A cell in the process of repairing itself is conscious. The majority of car engines manufactured in the last decade are conscious A laptop is conscious. Etc. etc. etc. etc. Depending on how, exactly, the various meanings of those four words are defined (and they are not explicitly defined anywhere…just relatively…like everything else)….there may actually be nothing in the entire universe that is NOT conscious.
As for this nonsense….
…that is...no evidence to support the conclusion that all instances of SRIP are not necessarily conscious.
According to Pixy... SRIP = consciousness. Where there is SRIP, there, also, is consciousness. Pixy has laid out his argument a number of times. As Clive (and others) have pointed out, there are holes in it. How big they are cannot be explicitly established (theories depend on philosophies... philosophies are not science). One thing that is safe to conclude is that the theory is not falsifiable. Lots of folks don't agree with it...as Beelzebuddy pointed out:
...so we'll conclude that Beelzebuddy, for one, may not agree that if it's SRIP, it's conscious (as for the rest of the 'masses' who do not agree with Pixy, we'll overlook that for now).
….but, apparently, not just Beelzebuddy…
Christoph Koch:
“….there is no agreement about what it (consciousness) is, how it relates to highly organized matter or what its role in life is.”
We'll just assume that the position of one of the world's best known practicing cognitive scientists qualifies as evidence of something. Given that he states quite explicitly that there is no consensus (which agrees just as explicitly with another quote I’ve introduced….Beelzebuddy) it can hardly be reasonable to come to definitive conclusions about what is, or is not conscious…. except for the one thing that we know (by default) actually is.
Koch, therefore, is evidence that 'if it's SRIP...it's conscious' is a fallacy (how can we say a car [or any SRIP process] is conscious when there is no agreement about what consciousness is [except us] ????). It's an assertion and it's not falsifiable.
…but assuming Dr. Koch lacks credibility (how did you put it before Beelzebuddy….a sample of one ??????)….we have the three different medical defnitions which Fudbucker provided earlier (NONE of which included any mention of SRIP)
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=8486678&postcount=2565
…or the one provided by Dancing David (no mention of SRIP)
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=8486722&postcount=2567
…or the one provide by Mr. Corey (…again, no mention of SRIP)
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=8486839&postcount=2573
So what we have are quite a number of definitions from various JREF contributors and relevant communities…medical, psychological, neuroscience, etc. …none of which refer to SRIP. That doesn’t mean SRIP is necessarily not relevant, it just means that these bodies typically utilize a functional definition according to which numerous processes that would be defined as SRIP would NOT also be defined as conscious.
That’s called evidence. It supports various positions...one of which would be: " just because it's SRIP it does NOT necessarily follow that it is conscious "! All of this 'evidence' was taken directly from the last few pages of this thread. I guess, Roborama, you were watching the Olympics or something when those posts were presented.
The main problems with these (in the context of this discussion) is that they're too vague and superficial. The first one is admittedly loosely defined ('awareness & response to stimuli' can be attributed to an amoeba) and aimed towards practical means to establish the clinically useful levels of human consciousness:I provided several definitions of consciousness the medical community uses.
.2. the somewhat loosely defined states of awareness of and response to stimuli, generally considered an integral component of the assessment of an individual's neurologic status. Levels of consciousness range from full consciousness (behavioral wakefulness, orientation as to time, place, and person, and a capacity to respond appropriately to stimuli) to deep coma (complete absence of response).
.A clear state of awareness of self and the environment in which attention is focused on immediate matters, as distinguished from mental activity of an unconscious or subconscious nature.
[not a definition]1. The state or condition of being conscious.
2. A sense of one's personal or collective identity, especially the complex of attitudes, beliefs, and sensitivities held by or considered characteristic of an individual or a group.
None of this has anything to do with what you quoted: I asked for evidence, and someone said that the fact that the cells in your body do "SRIP" (a claim that hasn't been verified, but that I'll accept for now for the sake of argument) shows that SRIP is not sufficient for consciousness....but that’s not your argument is it Pixy. You are arguing that the thing and the process that creates it are one and the same. The medium is the message. Thus…anything that can be understood to involve the process known as SRIP is, by definition, conscious. Therefore the immune system is conscious. The digestive system is conscious. A cell in the process of repairing itself is conscious. The majority of car engines manufactured in the last decade are conscious A laptop is conscious. Etc. etc. etc. etc. Depending on how, exactly, the various meanings of those four words are defined (and they are not explicitly defined anywhere…just relatively…like everything else)….there may actually be nothing in the entire universe that is NOT conscious.
As for this nonsense….
Other people are conscious.
No. Anything that performs self-referential information processing is by definition performing consciousness. What you may or may not understand is irrelevant.
There is no "thing". That's a fundamental error. There is only the process.
There's only one kind of stuff. What do you think the definition is?
How can you tell ? (serious question)
Something that is performing consciousness is conscious. But something that "involves" (your phrasing) something that is performing consciousness may or may not be conscious.Sophistry at its most sublime.
Something that performs SRIP is performing consciousness. But somehow it is inaccurate to suggest that something that is performing consciousness is …conscious ….????
Still waiting for you to say something sensible on the subject.…what do you think the definition is? Is ‘stuff’ a ‘process’, or is ‘stuff’ ‘stuff’, or is ‘process’ ‘stuff’? I guess there is ‘only the process’…until there is ‘stuff’.
Nope. It is a learned behaviour.We ‘know’.
No.It is surprising how blasphemous this sometimes sounds here, but there is another variety of epistemology that we human beings depend upon to adjudicate our world (besides the scientific one). Thus, we have the capacity to come to accurate, legitimate, and credible conclusions without a shred of ‘scientific’ input what-so-ever.
We ‘know’.
Thus, we have the capacity to come to accurate, legitimate, and credible conclusions without a shred of ‘scientific’ input what-so-ever.
Nope. It is a learned behavior.
.
And yet we are very often wrong about these conclusions.
So I ask again: how can we tell that other people are conscious ?
We ‘know’.
It is surprising how blasphemous this sometimes sounds here, but there is another variety of epistemology that we human beings depend upon to adjudicate our world (besides the scientific one). Thus, we have the capacity to come to accurate, legitimate, and credible conclusions without a shred of ‘scientific’ input what-so-ever.