Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2021, 10:06 am
Consul wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2021, 9:12 am
Of course, the only (phenomenal) consciousness that is directly accessible to me is my own human one; so the meaning of my concept of consciousness is fixed with reference to (the contents of) my own human consciousness.
Therefore, you cannot - i.e. are not able to - carry out a formal scientific or philosophical investigation into plant consciousness, can you? So what do you propose? Should we abandon this quest, or is there a way we can proceed?
What would matter is solely the
meaning of the discovered sensations in plants, to provide a basis to demand a base level of respect for plants (applicability of moral consideration by the human).
At question is of course not whether plants have a similar conscious experience as animals, as if that would be a ground to determine whether plants should be provided with moral consideration (respect) or to decide whether plants should be seen as
meaningless machine like automata.
When
meaning is the foundation (the start point of consideration), then the spectrum of meaningful notions of the concept consciousness would be braodenend beyond the scope of the animal one.
With regard the importance of a potential recognition of meaningfulness of 'plant experience'. If plants are to posses of
meaningful experience, whatever that may entail on an individual level (e.g. a blade of grass vs a 1,000 year old tree), then they are to be considered meaningful within a context that can be denoted as 'vitality of Nature' or Nature's bigger whole (
Gaia Philosophy), of which the human is a part and of which the human
intends to be a prosperous part.
From that perspective, a base level of respect (moral consideration) for plants may be essential for successful long term evolution.
My primary concern and motive to address the subject is
synthetic biology (eugenics on Nature) in which plants and animals are reduced to
meaningless beyond the value that a company (a short term self-interest perspective) can see in them.
If plants are sentient and have certain interests to be happy, synthetic biology may be one of the worst disasters possible for them. Synthetic biology may destroy what is required for Nature to prosper.