Wowbagger
The Infinitely Prolonged
Consciousness is a possible emergent property of complex adaptive systems, when they take themselves into account when modeling their enviornment.
....or something like that.
....or something like that.
OK, then try this:Thanks, as I'm not a native english speaker, I'm having a hard time with the terminology.
Hi, yes, it's easier to apply my definition to entities that we know for sure that they're are conscious , but I think it can be also applied to any entity that is even virtual.
Well, maybe I am, maybe my theory will evolve and become the theory of everything, you never know.
I have a strong feeling that this theory is related to the law of conservation of energy.
latest news:
-I'm a little busy trying to refute the quantum mechanics nonsense.
With regards to the philosophical zombies, how can you know it's not actually feeling pain? You're going to have trouble with this theory if you dismiss counter-arguments by believing they don't exist.
Also, make sure to keep the world informed with your progress at![]()
Consciousness is a possible emergent property of complex adaptive systems, when they take themselves into account when modeling their enviornment.
....or something like that.
I disagree. I think he's very close to an operational definition of the what it is that we are referring to when we distinguish conscious processes from unconscious ones.
People get this Zombies Stories to seriously. They don't feel pain by definition. That's why we call them Zombies. The idea of Zombies came because it's conceivable the non existence of consciousness. So, why is there such a thing? It's just a tool to think about the hard problem.
I honestly have no idea what I meant in my initial reply but the point I wanted to make is that one can't know the zombie isn't feeling pain. However, that also makes it unfalsifiable and irrelevant to reason1's conditions for consciousness.
To reason1, what aspects of your theory can be tested and how?
I'd like an explanation of this, too.Jeff Corey said:"recalling and memorizing happen unconsciously" is a meaningless statement.
I am not sure how that analogy is supposed to fit, yet. What is the equivalent of "ice floating" to consciousness? What, specifically, can we not "guess" about consciousness from my definition?That doesn't help. And Ice is an emergent property of many water molecules. But you can't guess, by this alone, that ice can float...
Ah, that'll work, too.I've always liked Dennett's analogy: "center of narrative gravity".
Consciousness is a possible emergent property of complex adaptive systems, when they take themselves into account when modeling their enviornment.
....or something like that.
I disagree. I think he's very close to an operational definition of the what it is that we are referring to when we distinguish conscious processes from unconscious ones.
As I said, Hofstadter covers this in great detail in Godel, Escher, Bach, a fascinating read, and again in I Am A Strange Loop (which I haven't yet read).