Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
1 minute ago, iNow said:

How are you defining consciousness?

the ability to have a behavior recognizable as being able to use tools and resources to achieve intended consequences.

Posted
Just now, ALine said:

the ability to have a behavior recognizable as being able to use tools and resources to achieve intended consequences.

Then, yes. Bees are that. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, ALine said:

A definition for consciousness could also be a debate in itself I kind of want to start.

Ask 10 different people what it means and you'll get 12 different answers. 

Posted
Just now, iNow said:

Ask 10 different people what it means and you'll get 12 different answers. 

there has to be one that satisfies all of them. 

What is one you can think of?

Posted
2 minutes ago, ALine said:

there has to be one that satisfies all of them. 

What is one you can think of?

No definition of consciousness that includes bees is going to be useful to humans, imo. Stretching it to fit is a mistake.

Frankly, I can't think of a definition of consciousness in humans that would be meaningful to us. Are we all automatically conscious because we're human? Are we distinguishing between consciousness and sentience? 

I have noticed there seems to be a minimum threshold on a combination of intelligence/education/experience, such that you need to know a certain amount before you can even hope to know more. It's that moment for many when "the light bulb comes on", when "things just click", and the human brain suddenly has enough "smarts" to keep it curious and thriving. Some humans never seem to meet this threshold, where your own (consciousness?) becomes self-sustaining and capable of dynamic growth.

Posted
12 minutes ago, Phi for All said:

It's that moment for many when "the light bulb comes on", when "things just click", and the human brain suddenly has enough "smarts" to keep it curious and thriving

I love this part you said.

17 minutes ago, Phi for All said:

No definition of consciousness that includes bees is going to be useful to humans, imo. Stretching it to fit is a mistake.

I would argue that a similar definition can be discovered due to both us and bees having neurons, just different structures.

Posted
32 minutes ago, ALine said:

I would argue that a similar definition can be discovered due to both us and bees having neurons, just different structures.

So all things that possess neurons are conscious? I told you, stretching definitions too far dilutes them into meaninglessness. 

I really think, if you're going to include humans in this, you should focus on human consciousness. Our brains are different, our capacity for knowledge and learning is different, and that has to affect this concept you're trying to define. Trying to draw similarities between humans and insects with regard to thinking is futile, imo.

Posted
2 hours ago, ALine said:

there has to be one that satisfies all of them. 

What is one you can think of?

In previous discussions, I've defined consciousness as merely the basic awareness suggested by an organism's observed--or observable--behavioral responses to stimuli.  We cannot determine organisms or objects of interest as possessing consciousness if they are incapable of producing observable behaviors suggesting that quality.  Bees produce objectively observable behaviors and their behavioral responses to centuries of direct human contact suggests minimally their awareness on some level.  However, if the question is does bees possess human equivalent consciousness, the answer would be suggested by whether bees are able to produce human equivalent responses to human equivalent stimuli.

From another perspective, if an organism or object's reactions to stimuli suggests some basic level of awareness or consciousness, then we might ask ourselves if the attraction or repulsion between the poles of magnets suggest some level of awareness between magnets?  Although not a level or measure suggestive of human awareness, I would argue that the attraction/repulsion between the poles of separate magnets suggest a type of basic awareness between magnets.  For those who might argue otherwise, you should understand that from my perspective having consciousness does not necessarily confer intelligence or that an organism or object possesses a mind.

Posted
1 hour ago, DrmDoc said:

From another perspective, if an organism or object's reactions to stimuli suggests some basic level of awareness or consciousness, then we might ask ourselves if the attraction or repulsion between the poles of magnets suggest some level of awareness between magnets?  Although not a level or measure suggestive of human awareness, I would argue that the attraction/repulsion between the poles of separate magnets suggest a type of basic awareness between magnets.  

You are operating with your own idiosyncratic definition of consciousness, which seems to bear little relation to the term as it is defined in cognitive sciences or philosophy of mind.  If you start defining terms any way you want, then yes, I suppose you could conjure aware magnets.  Since this is a science forum, there is an emphasis on consensus on what terms mean, hence my attempt to post the SEP summary of some commonly adopted definitions of consciousness.  For example...

What it is like. Thomas Nagel's (1974) famous“what it is like” criterion aims to capture another and perhaps more subjective notion of being a conscious organism. According to Nagel, a being is conscious just if there is “something that it is like” to be that creature, i.e., some subjective way the world seems or appears from the creature's mental or experiential point of view. In Nagel's example, bats are conscious because there is something that it is like for a bat to experience its world through its echo-locatory senses, even though we humans from our human point of view can not emphatically understand what such a mode of consciousness is like from the bat's own point of view.

(the encyclopedia entry also describes a half dozen other ways of defining consciousness, some focused on more objective behavioral aspects, some on the perceptual, some on access to information, and some on a sort of meta-cognition - the point to make here is that we must decide which focus to discuss, when approaching the possible consciousness of very simple neural networks like a bee's brain)

 

 

Posted

Bees individually or consciousness of say a hive or swarm? I think you could say yes to either depending on a number of definitions, but maybe not always prove it.

Posted (edited)

Self-consciousness is the ability to say that one exists by oneself.

The basic test to see if someone knows they exist is to see how they react to their mirror image.

Human child becomes conscious (begins to recognize himself/herself in the mirror) around age two.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_test

 

Edited by Sensei
Posted
16 hours ago, ALine said:

A definition for consciousness could also be a debate in itself I kind of want to start.

OK, conscious of what?

Posted
8 minutes ago, carterluke said:

Bees might not be conscious like humans, but reseacrh shows they can solve problems, recognize patterns, and even show signs of stress. Some scientists believe this could mean they have a basic form of awareness. What do you think?

We'll never know...

It's the old Dr Doolittle problem, if we could talk to the animals, they wouldn't make any sense...

Posted

‘Biocentrism’ by Robert Lanza, MD has some thought provoking things to say on this subject.
Was also a well written, researched (as far as I could tell) and an enjoyable read, in my own opinion.

His thoughts centre on the theory that all living things are conscious and that from that consciousness, the Cosmos arises. Immortality is invoked somewhere, I recall….
   
It didn’t convince me, but I still enjoyed the book.
    

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.