Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amConsul wrote: ↑June 5th, 2021, 11:40 pm
I don't think so, because the anatomies of (C)NS-less organisms are well known; so if there were such functionally equivalent non-neuronal structures, the scientists would have found them already.
That is only an assumption, and not of the kind that tends to play out well in history.
No, since if "the anatomies of (C)NS-less organisms are well known"—which is true!—, there are no hidden, hitherto undiscovered organs or systems "that fulfil the same functions as brains."
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amConsul wrote: ↑June 5th, 2021, 11:40 pmWhatever kind of (conscious) mind they have, birds do have brains. Nonhuman animals needn't have a humanlike brain in order to have a (conscious) mind, but they must have some kind of brain or other. For example, octopus brains are very different from human brains, but they are brains all the same.
Nonetheless, the assumption was made that they lacked higher mental functions due to their lack of a cortex. They knew about the pallium, but not about some of its functions in bird brains.
Being wrong about the capacities of nonhuman minds doesn't mean being wrong about the necessity for brains.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amBy the same token, other equivalences may be found in other organisms. The octopus's non-centralised brains alert us to the fact that configurations of consciousness-shaping organs can be unexpectedly different.
An octopus does have a central(ized) nervous system!
Brains come in various sizes and shapes, but there are no brainlike nonbrains in organisms that are functionally and informationally equivalent to brains.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amConsul wrote: ↑June 5th, 2021, 11:40 pmIt is not the case that in the realm of speculation all hypotheses are equally (im)plausible or (im)probable. The hypothesis that nervous systems and especially central ones are necessary for conscious minds appears highly plausible and probable in the light of our scientific knowledge of nature, and there is no convincing evidence for its negation!
Yes, there's plenty of convincing circumstances for its negation - unexpected complexity and flexibility in the behaviours of non-brained organisms. It's not evidence, but it's real and often dismissed without investigation based on brain-based dogmas.
No, there isn't! There's just plenty of unjustified conclusions. For if complex and flexible forms of behavior are brain-independent, it by no means follows that phenomenal consciousness is brain-independent too.
"Most researchers accept that even quite complex perception, cognition, and control of action can go on entirely 'in the dark'."
(Godfrey-Smith, Peter. "The Evolution of Consciousness in Phylogenetic Context." In
The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Animal Minds, edited by Kristin Andrews and Jacob Beck, 216-226. London: Routledge, 2018. p. 220)
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amIt would be very basic, but it may well feel like something to be a microbe - or certain microbes (who knows?).
"May" in the sense of "logically possible", yes; but given what we know about the morphology and physiology of bacteria and protozoa (unicellular microorganisms), it is extremely improbable.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amConsul wrote: ↑June 5th, 2021, 9:30 amThere are levels of (intransitive and transitive) consciousness in the sense of levels of awakeness or alertness, or of awareness (perception, cognition) of oneself or one's environment, and there are levels of intelligence; but what is a "level of sentience"?
To experience the same kind consciousness as a tardigrade - to know what it feels like to be a tardigrade. My argument is that, to us, feeling like a tardigrade would feel like nothing, like deep sleep, but such feelings would be significant to tardigrades.
(By the way, being animals, tardigrades don't belong to the unicellular protozoa but to the multicellular metazoa.)
Is there anything it feels like to be a tardigrade? Anyway, if there is, they surely don't know what it feels like to be a tardigrade in the sense of having introspective knowledge of it. If you have a feeling without being cognitively aware of it, in what sense is it significant to you? For instance, when I am in pain but don't know I am, it means nothing to me.
(Galen Strawson would object that in the case of experience, "the having is the knowing", with this kind of knowledge being non-propositional or objectual "knowledge by acquaintance" rather than introspective knowledge qua propositional "knowledge by description". That's the distinction between
knowing something and
knowing that something is the case/true. The question is whether you can know something/somebody without knowing anything
about it/her/him—in the sense of having mental representations of it.)
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amI am saying that humans would be unable to perceive the simplest consciousnesses. They are too trivial as compared with our deeply complex psyches. We humans have long been dismissive of other organisms' capacity to feel and, while much improvement in this area his happened in the last century, it appears to me that we just lowered the bar, while remaining gatekeepers - of anthropocentric conceptions of what it feels like to be alive. It's hard not to be anthropocentric because it's all we have. There are still many researchers who believe that insects have no phenomenal consciousness - that being an insect does not feel like anything.
I am aware that you have a more nuanced view on this, and draw the line somewhere around brained nematodes. I am not convinced that we have solved as much of this puzzle as you are.
I am saying that natural consciousness is an exclusively zoological phenomenon, and there is certainly nothing anthropocentric about my saying so. I do not believe that all animals are phenomenally conscious, but I strongly tend to believe that all brained animals are, or at least those among them with non-primitive brains. (I know that "non-primitive" is an imprecise adjective.) It is uncertain whether insects are phenomenally conscious, but it isn't unlikely that they are—unless the higher-order theory of phenomenal consciousness is true, in which case the number of phenomenally conscious animal species is reduced drastically.
"Most generally, then, higher-order theories of phenomenal consciousness claim the following:
Higher Order Theory (In General):
A phenomenally conscious mental state is a mental state (of a certain sort—see below) that either is, or is disposed to be, the object of a higher-order representation of a certain sort."
Source:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/cons ... ss-higher/
Such higher-order representations require a highly developed cognitive apparatus enabling an inner awareness of one's conscious states, which most brained animals lack.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2021, 2:02 amWhen I conduct the thought experiment I think of blind pulses within, like breaths or heartbeats, and tingling on the outside where the environment is sensed. There is no emotion, no care. Just sensations, attraction and repulsion, excitation and slowing. We call such things "biological machines" but that's just an analogy because they are obviously not machines - they are simple living, sensing beings.
One meaning of "machine" is "a combination of parts moving mechanically, as contrasted with a being having life, consciousness and will" (Oxford Dictionary of English). Given this meaning, living organisms aren't machines. But in the broadest sense a machine is a mechanism or dynamic system
of any kind; so given this meaning, living organisms are machines too.
By the way, Carruthers argues that…
"…perception / belief / desire / planning / motor-control architectures are of very ancient ancestry indeed, being present even in insects and spiders. So the sort of cognitive architecture depicted in Figure 2.1 is likely to be shared by almost all animals that possess some sort of central nervous system."
(Carruthers, Peter.
The Architecture of the Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. pp. 65-6)