So your experiences are entirely independant of the brain?
Ahhhhh.... I'll go with no since you include 'entirely'.
The brain processes information. This produces a distortion of the conscious field which in turn produces - or rather
is - experience. So experience is independent in that it operates on a separate substrate, but it's not independent in the sense that it's
caused by the brain in the first instance. If the brain stops processing information, or disappears, then the distortion - the experience - vanishes too.
Unless...
...no, best to leave that one alone.
No, I didn't. I just don't assume that the action of consciousness is special in any way.
It's not entirely different, no. It's still my answer.
Nothing special about them at all, that's my point. They act together to do consciousness. If can figure out how, there's no reason why can't reproduce it in a machine, unless the biological components are somehow required.
You're making an assumption there. You are assuming that the robot has been created by reproducing the functionality of humans, which mandates an understanding of how humans operate. This is logical on a practical level but it's an unwanted addition to the point I'm trying to make and it muddies the waters.
Imagine, then, that some distant alien species creates, by pure chance as far as we're concerned, a robot that behaves exactly like a human and is of the same level of intelligence. It is composed of alien metal and that sort of thing. It might have neurons, it might not, it doesn't matter.
Why do you believe this alien machine must share the attribute of consciousness with the human animal? And what common element would cause this consciousness to manifest?
1) No it's not. You can actually run by jiggling your legs around properly. But if you do it improperly, you won't be running. Running is a real thing, but it's not an object, it's an action. That's what I'm saying consciousness is.
But actions don't exist any more than flolloping does. These are just sounds and squiggles we use to clarify our communication.
Look at it this way: We could define an infinite number of movements concerned with moving our legs. We could invent a word for moving the left leg 3 inches to the right jumping 1.7 inches off the ground using our right; we could invent another word for doing the same thing but moving the left leg 3.132 inches to the right. And so on ad infinitum. We are not creating the world as we churn out this nonsense, we're just making sounds and squiggles.
2) Consciousness is also just a word.
It is, and so is
tree, but the difference is that trees and consciousness are words that represent
things, running and flolloping are not.