Perhaps.
Yet, to say this, you were forced to devise entirely new and arbitrary definitions of the ON state for various entities. The rocks, the water, the wind, the sun, whatever.
If a rock channels water south, is it ON or OFF? If the water comes from rain, is it ON or OFF? If the sun is blocked by clouds, if the wind is warm or cold, are these things ON or OFF?
Like I said, you can come up with definitions to suite your argument. That is fine with me, who cares.
Unfortunately for you, nobody else would know wtf you are talking about unless you explained it to them in great detail.
With a thermostat circuit ... not so. ON means current is flowing in one direction above a given threshold, OFF means it is not. Very simple -- and understood by almost everyone.
Any object, or system of objects can, in principle, have their gross and fine characteristics represented in some binary language. The universe is composed of an infinitude of binary relations that can be expressed in such a way. Even so, the nature and significance of each of those relations are identical.
I think that the problem arises when individuals confuse the descriptive language for the actual object(s) of that description. Simply writing out a formal description of an entity, whether in text or machine code, is not the same as producing the thing IAOI --
especially when such a description is incomplete or flawed.
Even in the instance of phenomena that are relatively well understood [like gravity] a formal simulation of said phenomenon is not an example of the real thing. The only way to reproduce an example of a
TIOAI would be to use one's formal knowledge to
physically produce it and not just virtually simulate it.
In the case of consciousness, there is a severe paucity of formal description, and those that are provided are largely
ad hoc shots in the dark. How can one seriously, and with a strait face, claim that they have reproduced it from such a flimsy basis?
You are kind of like Nick227, I think. Neither of you seem to realize that the entire point of language is to allow intelligent agents to communicate with each other and that the more efficient and expressive a language the easier it is for them to do so.
I'm pretty sure
Nick227 and
westprog realize the role and purpose of language.
What is at issue here is the lake of adequate formal language to not only describe consciousness, but to actually
reproduce it. If it took you so much time and effort just to describe something as rudimentary as on/off, what in blue blazes makes you think that you have a sufficient definition of the very basis of your conscious experience? It is a problem that
vastly dwarfs merely describing on/off switches -- which is why its has been historically called the
hard problem.