Terrapin Station wrote: ↑May 12th, 2020, 12:30 pm
Gee wrote: ↑May 12th, 2020, 12:17 pm
I love the picture, so I will break this down simply.
1. Many millennia ago God created everything, then created man in his image, so only man had a soul (consciousness).
2. Centuries ago, man outgrew God and decided that he created himself, but he still had a soul (consciousness) as it was necessary for human rights.
3. Then man discovered evolution, which confirmed that God was not necessary, but left the problem of where the soul came from, as we still believed in it. We decided on the brain.
4. Then science discovered that other species have brains that work somewhat like ours. So we invented a kind of reverse evolution where we assume consciousness is possible if another specie's brain is close enough to ours, but we are not willing to admit that other species might have souls.
5. So consciousness either was given to us by God, or it magically evolved in the human specie and then reverse engineered itself back to species with similar brains. Therefore plants could not possibly be conscious.
Is this close to your thinking?
In reality, science has discovered that plants are aware, conscious, of themselves, their environment, and others of their specie. They do not have brains.
I'm an atheist. I don't believe in "souls."
I am certain that you believe what you posted above, but you should not assume that I will accept it. When people state that they are atheist and that they don't believe in "souls", that generally means that they are not religious; so what, neither am I. I was not talking about religion, I was talking about knowledge and belief and where they source from.
All knowledge sources from somewhere and belief has certain requirements of knowledge in order for it to be believable. One of those requirements is that knowledge must not be too new, it has to be familiar in order to be believable. So this means that a person can track ideas, knowledge, through history. I tracked the idea that consciousness comes from humans, and the above is what I found. If you track the 'consciousness is the universe' idea, often you will find an Eastern religion/philosophy at the source, because this idea follows closer to those religious beliefs and so is easier to believe.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑May 12th, 2020, 12:30 pm
Consciousness isn't something "magical." It's simply a property of certain materials, in certain structures, undergoing certain processes.
So it isn't magical, it is
certain? Well that certainly clarifies things.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑May 12th, 2020, 12:30 pm
We know for sure that human brains are the right sorts of materials/structures/processes for those properties. We can be pretty sure that very similar brains are going to be the right sorts of materials/structures/processes, too. We just don't know how different brains can be for consciousness to still obtain.
We know no such thing. What we know is that human brains affect consciousness, other brains also affect consciousness, but that does not mean that brains
cause consciousness. A speed boat racing through a lake will affect the water, it causes waves, but it does not cause the water. Brains do not cause consciousness.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑May 12th, 2020, 12:30 pm
But there's no good reason to believe that very different sorts of materials/structures/processes would amount to conscious properties.
There is every reason to believe it, if these "materials/structures/processes" are part of life. I will try to explain where I think the thinking about consciousness gets lost.
Many years ago, I took a speech class in a local college. The instructor spend 15 minutes explaining how he carefully organized his information in order to present a coherent speech on problem solving. When he was finished, I put my hand up and stated that he had forgotten the first and most important step in problem solving; he had forgotten to identify the problem. If you miss this first step, all of your subsequent work is a waste of time.
When I look at people trying to understand consciousness, I see a lot of people arguing about where it comes from, even though they have no understanding of what consciousness is or how it works. People decide that consciousness comes from the Universe, or "God", or the brain, then they cherry pick science for the evidence that will support their beliefs, ignoring other evidence, and allowing them to rationalize their confirmation bias. This does not appear to be a valid way to solve the problem.
Gee