Tamminen wrote: ↑July 30th, 2018, 7:39 am
Greta wrote: ↑July 30th, 2018, 5:33 am
That's fine, but the same could be said today about consciousness being merely the potential for something more impressive again that lay in wait within consciousness.
I like that, but what else could this more impressive be than a clearer and deeper consciousness, perhaps eventually reaching some sort of transparency of being.
Then again, how could the reflexive and mindless organisms living before brains emerged have imagined consciousness?
They couldn't anticipate the bundling together of their nerve cells into lines that lead to a central processor, which would then ignore almost all of that data brought to it and instead assemble the few chosen subjects together into what we refer to as cohesive worldview.
We are not blind to our limitations, though. Our mental opacity - the problem of other minds - is famous, as our our attempts to overcome this and extend our comprehension via communication. The issue here is locality - whatever we do we reflect local perceptions. The next step hen is the linking of numerous human brains to central processors that, like our brain, would filter out what it deems to be trivia and cohere what it deems the most important into a cohesive meta-consciousness.
It's already here in part, but at present looks to be at the "nerve net" stage (animals with nerve nets have no central brain but sense freely with less connection than brained animals - for such an animal, losing a limb might not worry the other limbs whereas we brained animals would be devastated). So the next step in consciousness should be the capacity to think through multiple minds in disparate places, overcoming both locality and, to some extent, subjectivity.
The key term here is "to some extent"; subjectivity remains as long as not everything and everyone is connected, so there will be more room for improvement again. However, trying to imagine that kind of dynamic - beyond consciousness - is probably akin to my dog trying to understand calculus.
Tamminen wrote:As I have said, I have a holistic view of the universe, meaning that the universe is a spatio-temporal totality. Physical time can be thought of as a dimension, as opposed to subjective time. Consciousness is an essential "property" of this totality, but the early stages of the universe were also necessary in the same way as the existence of the fetus is necessary for the existence of the conscious human being. The world has also its becoming, which means becoming conscious in the form of individual conscious beings.
I have always quite enjoyed your expressed worldviews, although I've always been dubious about the certainty expressed at times.
The only objection I have is the idea of consciousness being essential. If it is essential, then so are gravity, quarks, electrons, atoms, molecules, clouds, stars, planets, moons, asteroids and having enough space for all of that crap to do its thing. Like those other parts of reality, consciousness is simply one more emergent property and its potentials don't equal necessity any more than being born guarantees living to adulthood.
Our solar system, for instance, could easily have not harboured consciousness, just as so many seemingly do not (at present!). However, the scale of the galaxy and universe makes clear that emergence of mentality is more inevitable than essential.