this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2023
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Like neurons? My argument was that in abstract sense, a single ant could be considered a neuron. It senses the environment and other ants for inputs, and it interacts with the environment and other ants for output. A network of ants is capable of complex behavior. By this logic of course, just about any entity could be considered a neuron, and any collection of entities a neural network, which I think is what the original article is getting at. Now is the ant colony conscious? I don't know. Am I conscious? I think so, it seems like it. Are you conscious? You seem a lot like me, and I think I probably am, so I think you probably are too. Basically what I'm saying is I haven't heard of a definition of consciousness that doesn't wind up encapsulating everything or nothing, or that isn't human-centric.
So, you're saying that you don't need experience to be conscious, just the the potential to experience? I'm not sure if I agree with that. Yeah there's diminishing returns, I don't think that an old person is significantly more self-aware than a kid in the grand scheme of things, but pretty much every thought I've ever had, that I realized I had anyway, was in terms of a sense I had, or at least derived from the senses. Even a newborn has been feeling and hearing since embryo. Now there is instinct to consider, that was evolved and while it can influence and direct consciousness, I don't think acting on instinct is a conscious act itself. I'm saying, can a brain in a jar with no contact with the world, that's never had contact with the world at any point, be aware of itself? What is self without environment?