westprog
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 8,928
So consciousness has something to do with reproduction? Or metabolism? Growth? Adaptation to environment? Some combination of these?
What's so difficult about "we don't know"?
So consciousness has something to do with reproduction? Or metabolism? Growth? Adaptation to environment? Some combination of these?
What's so difficult about "we don't know"?

I don't understand how you can differentiate the two. The pattern of bits IS a memory.
What is a memory other than a record of past events? A computer records past events, and references them later for other tasks.
Some space alien with a different type of brain than ours (not a biologist, so I have no creative example) could say something like "These creatures cannot be aware, all they have is firing neurons that react to stimuli, where do they store information?"
This is just starting to sound like human chauvinism to me.
No, I'm not
What's so difficult about "we don't know"?
I don't know why there's this absolute terror at the thought that there might actually be something unique or unusual about human beings. So far, the evidence is that there is. It might turn out that there isn't, but why prejudge?
AkuManiMani said:Because organisms actively reduce their internal entropy which, to my knowledge, is something no other naturally occurring object does.
I'm not sure that this is true. It may be true that no other object does so consistently.
Reversing entropy needs energy of course - and there's nothing thermodynamically impossible so long as the entropy books balance.
This is something that's been covered in a lot of evolution discussions. I'm sure that one of those could be plugged in to explain it better.
Third Eye Open said:Some space alien with a different type of brain than ours (not a biologist, so I have no creative example) could say something like "These creatures cannot be aware, all they have is firing neurons that react to stimuli, where do they store information?"
The aliens would of course be wrong - but they at least have the excuse of being aliens. We know better. We know that unlike computers, we do remember things. How it's done is the trick. So far we don't know - but we can be reasonably sure it doesn't work like computer memory.
I don't know why there's this absolute terror at the thought that there might actually be something unique or unusual about human beings. So far, the evidence is that there is. It might turn out that there isn't, but why prejudge?
My badnik.![]()
This is a less-than-trivial question; one that can't be answered in such a cursory manner
Only if its both instructed to do so and has the capacity (cache, RAM, HDD) to do so
[derail, just a bit]
Aku, I am thoroughly impressed. The minute I posted, I wondered if I had gone overboard; I had other things to do here in the real world, and I kept thinking that I had perhaps been just too snarky in my comment. Whether I had been or not, your reply is just perfect--an acknowledgment of a different point of view and a request for clarification, and no return of snark for snark. It was a much better reply than my post deserved, IMO, and my hat is off to you.
That said, just a couple of comments to get you started, and I offer to answer anything more if you want to ask, here or elsewhere. First, two great resources--one free, and one worth paying for. The Athabasca University Behaviorism Tutorial is a great place to start; it focuses mostly on the differences between radical behaviorism and methodological behaviorism (in my experience--supported by multiple surveys--most people who are taught about behaviorism by non-behaviorists tend to conflate the two. It is not their fault, of course, but it is glosses over half a century of research and theory; Radical Behaviorism is as different from methodological behaviorism as it is from Cognitive Psychology!). The other source? Baum's "Understanding Behaviorism", which a few forumites have read and thanked me for. Baum was my prof a lot of years ago; the book is a bit like being in seminar with him.
Ok, one more: the journal, Behavior and Philosophy. Seriously, though, not before at least the tutorial. Although if you are well-versed in philosophy, you may have no problem.
Indeed!There is nothing wrong with 'we don't know'
No, I wasn'tHe wasn't saying 'I don't know', he was asserting that only living things are conscious.
me said:I might assert something along the lines of
Maybe you could consider that maybe I considered as much bloody ages agoIf the answer to that is 'I don't know' also, then maybe you could consider that maybe it's nothing to do with life specifically.
...the subtle nuances of the devastating counter-arguments you compress into single sarcastic condescending sentences without further explanation.
No, it isn't. Any given pattern of bits could be entered into a computer ab initio. It is merely a state. And when a computer enters another state, it knows nothing about future or past states.
No, it accesses data. It has no way of knowing whether the data is a record of past events. It's just bits.
I think that back when people had to toggle in the bootstrap code by hand they were less likely to make this kind of category mistake. I think part of the problem is calling it "computer memory". If it were called "computer state", a more accurate term, then the confusion would be less likely to arise.
The aliens would of course be wrong - but they at least have the excuse of being aliens. We know better. We know that unlike computers, we do remember things. How it's done is the trick. So far we don't know - but we can be reasonably sure it doesn't work like computer memory.
I don't know why there's this absolute terror at the thought that there might actually be something unique or unusual about human beings. So far, the evidence is that there is. It might turn out that there isn't, but why prejudge?
Get over it, alreadyIt isn't terror, it is extreme distaste.
Distaste, because if we cannot engineer consciousness -- even by accident -- there will never be a singularity and our species will live out the rest of its days stagnating as hairless monkeys.
Seems the implications do, indeed, fill you with terrorI don't think you really understand the implications.
Or crayonsTo interface directly with our brain at any useful level, we need to be able to engineer consciousness.
Ever stopped to think that maybe you could be perceiving complexity where there is none?
Try it
It won't hurt
Confirmation bias, much?Well, it is a relief to know that I am not missing anything by giving your posts a single glance and then moving on to something useful (like the posts of people who are actually interested in a discussion).
Thanks for clearing that up!
Some of us think that life, as we know it, rocks