Consciousness Offline: Le Salon des Refusés

Amsciforum 2013-03-10

Summary:

Yes, there was a phenomenal confusion in doubling our mind-body-problems by doubling our consciousnesses. No, organisms don't have both an "access consciousness" and a "phenomenal consciousness." Organisms' brains (like robots' brains) have access to information (data). And organisms feel. That can only be conscious, because that is consciousness. Access can be unconscious (in organisms and robots) or conscious (in organisms, sometimes, but probably not at all in robots). So the confusion is in overlooking the fact that there can be either felt access (conscious) or unfelt access (unconscious). The mind-body problem is of course the problem of explaining how and why all access is not just unfelt access. After all, the Darwinian job is just to do what needs to be done, not to bask in phenomenology. Hence it is not a solution to say that all access is unfelt access and that feeling -- or the idea that organisms feel -- is just some sort of a confusion, illusion, or action! So if feeling has or is some sort of function, let's hear what it is! (Back to the [one, single, familiar] mind/body problem -- lately, fashionably, called the "hard" one.)

Link:

http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/skywritings/index.php?/archives/219-Consciousness-Offline-Le-Salon-des-Refuses.html

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » Amsciforum

Tags:

consciousness mind-body.problem

Authors:

stevanharnad

Date tagged:

03/10/2013, 12:13

Date published:

02/18/2013, 12:28