Humans are unsurpassable by any species when it comes to depth cognitive abilities.
Why would they need to be? What makes that "greater". More "superior". What have we done with that "depth" that hasn't been at the expense of some 'other'?
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Humans are unsurpassable by any species when it comes to depth cognitive abilities.
It doesn't necessarily make us superior, anymore than a Cheetah is superior because its the fastest or the Blue Whale is superior because it's the largest. I was simply stating that's why humans are the scale for sentience, because our sentience is demonstrably superior.Why would they need to be? What makes that "greater". More "superior". What have we done with that "depth" that hasn't been at the expense of some 'other'?
It doesn't necessarily make us superior, anymore than a Cheetah is superior because its the fastest or the Blue Whale is superior because it's the largest. I was simply stating that's why humans are the scale for sentience, because our sentience is demonstrably superior.
They are the real carnivores, and we are the vulnerable and gentle creatures at the bottom of their food chain. Its a good thing they are so slow.Plants give us food and oxygen, so that our bodies die and become their compost. They farm us. They are smarter than us actually.
No. The smallest unit capable of being called “alive” is the cell; the smaller viruses, which infect cells, are not condidered by biologists to be living things. Atoms are definitely not alive.Are atoms alive?
I personally define consciousness as self-awareness. How that can be determined is another question.How are you defining consciousness? Cognitive thought with symbolic representations? I would say rather that consciousness is simply awareness and response to the environment. I see cognitive thought as just a more advanced and more sophisticated expression of consciousness.
Maybe, in light that our entire make up is only compromised of atoms, the quality then remains, of which life is essentially non living as well. Essentially, that life itself, dosent actually exist either.No. The smallest unit capable of being called “alive” is the cell; the smaller viruses, which infect cells, are not condidered by biologists to be living things. Atoms are definitely not alive.
Hmmm… this is an interesting idea. I think that one aspect which defines life, though, is cellular metabolism, which all living things experience, and that another is cellular mitosis.Maybe, in light that our entire make up is only compromised of atoms, the quality then remains, of which life is essentially non living as well. Essentially, that life itself, dosent actually exist either.
Responsiveness is demonstrable and shown. Conscious awareness is not proven, nor really useful, as aside from responsiveness nothing can be done, for a plant to fight or flee. Nervous systems of organisms are associated with that, and the creatures with brains do show sentience, that any among us can see, with looking. Jellyfish may, possibly, but plants don't, if we understand responsiveness is not meaning the same thing.Whether there is "evidence" of it or not. The Natural world is waay more conscious and aware than we give credit.
Jellyfish are absolutely sentient, even if not in the same way as a human (why is 'human' the standard?).
Isn't responsiveness awareness? Isn't consciousness simply awareness, from the most basic level of being able to response to the world at whatever level that is, all the way to cognitive self-reflective awareness? Isn't it really simple a degree of complexity and sophistication of the same basic thing, which is consciousness itself, which is present at all levels, all the way up and all way down?Responsiveness is demonstrable and shown. Conscious awareness is not proven, nor really useful, as aside from responsiveness nothing can be done, for a plant to fight or flee. Nervous systems of organisms are associated with that, and the creatures with brains do show sentience, that any among us can see, with looking. Jellyfish may, possibly, but plants don't, if we understand responsiveness is not meaning the same thing.
Living is because of water. Experiments were done where single living cells were dehydrated and water was replaced by a large number of solvents, postulated to be possible solvents for life on other planets.The results were nothing worked in any of these other solvents, down to individual enzymes. Once water was added to lifeless dehydrated cells, everything worked and the state we call life appeared. Organic alone was not enough nor is water replaceable for life to appear on earth. All the biochemistry of life, on earth, is tuned to water. Water was the source of natural selection at the chemical level, so all can work in water.Yet we are entirely made up of atoms.
Begs the question. Are atoms alive?
An AI "thinks", but is it really consciousness? My point being that mechanical devices mimicking nature, is not the same thing as nature.A pressure switch is responsive to it's environment. But does that mean it's "aware" of it's surroundings?
That humans create and use tools is a "natural" phenomenon. But that doesn't make the tools we create self-aware, even if they can mimic our self-awareness. A pressure valve may mimic awareness of it's surroundings because it will consistently and predictably react the same way to changes in pressure but it's not actually aware of these changes nor is it choosing to react to them. It's just a mechanism we humans created to mimic our own awareness and choice.An AI "thinks", but is it really consciousness? My point being that mechanical devices mimicking nature, is not the same thing as nature.
So it's really not a semantic argument, but a matter of natural, orgainic, living systems, verus a mechanized imitation of them. A pressure value, is not conscious, but a duck is. A duck has consciousness and life force. A pressure valve does not. A watch is not a human being.
What do you imagine "actual awareness or a choice" to entail? The result of a conscious thought process? I would not limit awareness, or consciousness, to the active thought level. These behaviors that you described are self-adapted systems in response to the environment, which then become, I suppose you could call them unconcious programmed patterns of nature, which are still a part of consciousness itself just as it is in all of us. We instinctively act and do and follow certain programs without any higher-level conscious awareness of it, but it was something "learned" at some point in deep history through some type of awareness handed down to us. It's not just mechanics imitating consciousness.A plant that changes it's orientation to follow the sun across the sky so as to maximize photosynthesis is not a man made mechanism, but it is a biological mechanism involving a temperature increase that's causing cell contraction that then changes the plant's structural orientation. It is just a bio-mechanical response mechanism. Not an actual awareness or a choice.
Again, how are you defining "actual awareness"? Cognitive thoughts? I don't. A tapeworm which has no brain is clearly consciously aware of its environment enough to make rudimentary decisions. "food, not food", and so forth.I'm not saying that a plant life form cannot be 'aware' in some limited way, but I think we need to be careful to recognize that mechanisms often mimic awareness without actually posessing any actual awareness. And this is true whether that mechanism is man made or or "natural".
Yes, but that is quite weird and illogical. As awareness by definition implies being cognizant of one's cognizance. And this IS specifically a conscious thought process.What do you imagine "actual awareness or a choice" to entail? The result of a conscious thought process? I would not limit awareness, or consciousness, to the active thought level.
What you just described, however, is not AWARENESS. To be aware is to be cognizant of one's cognizance. Which is the source of our ability to choose a response.These behaviors that you described are self-adapted systems in response to the environment, which then become, I suppose you could call them unconcious programmed patterns of nature, which are still a part of consciousness itself just as it is in all of us.
Again, you are refusing to recognize actual AWARENESS. And so you are ignoring the possibility of choice that results from it. Once we become AWARE of our thought process, we can opt to follow it's proscriptions, or not to.We instinctively act and do and follow certain programs without any higher-level conscious awareness of it, but it was something "learned" at some point in deep history through some type of awareness handed down to us. It's not just mechanics imitating consciousness.
To claim that the plant is 'aware', is simply false, because whatever response mechanisms it may have, they do not rise to the level of being cognizant of it's cognizance.To say the plant is aware through consciousness itself, at a very deep subconscious layer, and not just biomechanical is not unreasonable. But to say that the plant "thinks" is a stretch. "Hey look, the sun! Time to unfurl my leaves!".
The tape worm is not "aware" of it's environment. It simply has a number of mechanisms that enable it to detect conditions within it's environment and react to them. Detection/reaction is not 'awareness'. As was pointed out by the pressure switch example.Again, how are you defining "actual awareness"? Cognitive thoughts? I don't. A tapeworm which has no brain is clearly consciously aware of its environment enough to make rudimentary decisions. "food, not food", and so forth.
And you are wrong. Because not all living things rise to the level of awareness. Many of them are not cognizant of being cognizant. They are simply bio-mechanical mechanisms that possess the ability to detect changes in their environment and to respond in a self-sustaining way to them. They are not 'aware' of their environment, or of themselves existening within that environment, or of their being any choice regarding how they respond to the changes that they detect. They are 'automatic'.All I am saying is that what we are doing at our highly sophisticated levels of language and decision trees and whatnot, is all just a higher developed express of that same fundamental consciousness itself found in all living things.
Awareness is a condition that exists ideologically. It exists and existed before any life form achieves it, as a fundamental existential possibility. Some life forms have evolved to achieve it, to varying degrees, while others have not. But it isn't a requisite of or for life. This is where I think you are profoundly mistaken. Life is/was an existential possibility of it's own, that existed before any particular combination of mater and energy managed achieved it. And of course only a very particular combination of these was able to do so.IIt doesn't matter if it's a plant or a goldfish, or a snail, or a human. Consciousness doesn't magically appear out of nothing in the evolutionary tree, like "poof" and then there's Adam and Eve in the garden with fully developed minds and language.
It's not quite weird and illogical at all. It seems you are just unfamiliar with how it can be used. For instance: Awareness - WikipediaYes, but that is quite weird and illogical. As awareness by definition implies being cognizant of one's cognizance. And this IS specifically a conscious thought process.
Not according to what I just quoted, nor the deeper levels of understanding what AWARENESS is about. If one just takes the colloquial meaning and go with that, well, then not a great deal of "awareness" on the subject can be understood.What you just described, however, is not AWARENESS. To be aware is to be cognizant of one's cognizance. Which is the source of our ability to choose a response.
I am refusing to limit my view or understanding of it to one narrow school of thought about the subject. Very much so I am refusing to do that. Just to show how anything but clear cut these things are, and the history of Western thought in refining its ideas about was consciousness is, post the Decorates mechanized view of reality, which you appear to be echoing. Note how what I bolded below is supporting the "weird and illogical" views.....Again, you are refusing to recognize actual AWARENESS. And so you are ignoring the possibility of choice that results from it. Once we become AWARE of our thought process, we can opt to follow it's proscriptions, or not to.