- #211
M. Gaspar
- 679
- 1
Thanks.Originally posted by hypnagogue
M. Gaspar, please don't take my comments to mean I don't want you posting in this thread. I just want the discussion to stay on track. On further reflection, I think my main objection was that you posted a flurry of posts which could have been condensed into one post. But anyway, now that you're caught up and into the discussion that shouldn't be a problem anymore. So I apologize for coming off the wrong way and ask you to please not hesitate to make your own contributions to this thread.
Why? I think it's a GREAT idea.That having been said, I would like to comment on a view that is in some degree held by both M. Gaspar and Dark Wing. Both seem to advocate "response to information" as tightly bound up with the concept of consciousness. Strictly speaking, although consciousness certainly does involve response to information, it is not a good idea to equate or tightly correlate the two.
Remember: there are "degrees of consciousness" ...even within a single system. A system as a whole might be "aware" of certain incoming -- or stored -- information ...but not of others at any given time. There is a distinction between the word "conscious" which relates to what we tend to think of as an "awake" state in biological organisms (did they faint or are they comotose?)There are mounds of research suggesting that a great deal of the information processing that the brain does occurs entirely independently of consciousness.
Let us not "collapse" into one another the dual meanings of the word "conscious" ...tho I admit to having a very hard time coming up with the distinctions that I'm referring to.
I think of consciousness as going on at many levels ABOVE or BELOW whatever threshold makes them "known to" the entity as a whole. But if an entity is receiving and responding to information -- even when it doesn't "know" it is -- it is still "conscious" of the information on some "level".
You see, we don't know of all the "sensory appartus" that may be at our disposal -- and, in fact, being USED. Obviously, these people are "sensing" and "responding to" SOMETHING and thereby "conscious" of it whether they know it or not!For instance, patients with blindsight can meaningfully interact with objects even though they have no visual awareness of these objects or conceptual awareness of exactly how it is that they can react meaningfully to things they can't see. This suggests that "response to information" is not a sufficient condition for consciousness; response to the environment can occur without attendant conscious experience.