PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Okay.I don't buy the "that's all there is" argument. I'm familiar with it, I've used it, but to me it still leaves a considerable explanatory gap. Here are a few issues I have....
Yes. A distributed processing system might be a good way to describe it.Firstly, if we look at the human brain, I'm sure we agree that it is a massive, but largely decentralised, parallel processor.
A fair bit, yes.In the waking state, particularly, it is carrying out a phenomenal amount of processing. A colossal amount.
Modest, rather than microscopic, but yes.Yet, only a microscopic portion of this is conscious.
Yes, there is: Self-reference.Thus, to me there must be some qualitative, material difference between conscious and unconscious processing.
Yes.Not to make consciousness "special," in some romantic human way, but because this to me is simply logical.
No, that's not what I'm saying; furthermore, I'm not sure what you mean (beyond the fact that it's not what I'm saying). What do you mean by "conscious" and "not conscious" here? Conscious what? Not conscious what?Secondly, and relatedly, if I read you right, your contention is that areas of the brain dealing with Self arbitrate and define what is "conscious" or "not conscious."
Then you are misusing the term consciousness. Either that, or misusing the term self.Yet it is clear for me personally that selfhood is just another aspect of consciousness
Flatworms have a sense of self, distinct from the sense of other, though they do not have a concept of self; they have awareness, but not self-awareness. Self is far more fundamental than consciousness; consciousness is a layer built on top by the mechanism of self-reference (i.e. feedback loops). (And the "self" in self-reference is not the same self, but a generic self. Anything that references itself is self-referential, whether it is itself the self or not. Clear?)
Then I have no idea what you are talking about when you say "self". Try defining your terms.and not one that definably needs to be present in order for there to be conscious awareness. I don't see any inherently special function attributed to selfhood here on a strict materialist basis.
Are you or are you not a materialist, Nick?You might wish to accuse me of dualism for examining such things. That's up to you. But I am not a dogmatist here. I'm interested in consciousness and I don't buy it that it is purely a function of data processing.
If you are, then self has to be purely a function of data processing. There is nothing else it can be. That still leaves us to explain it - but we have already done that.
If you are not a materialist, then you can say whatever you like, but it has no bearing. Materialism is the only possible basis for understanding this.