AB,
Naturalists have no way of knowing if an animal experiences…[
And you have no way of knowing what they
don’t experience.
…the same form of conscious awareness as humans.
A claim no-one makes. What “naturalists” can do though is to identify in other species very similar neural architecture to our own, behaviours that are congruent with our conscious self-awareness, adaptive learning phenomena that require reasoning about stimuli different from those experienced hitherto etc.
That’s how people who actually work in the field from various disciplines can model a wide range of species as being consciously aware albeit in their own different ways.
They cannot enter the mind of an animal.
They don’t need to, and nor can you.
I am using my knowledge of computer programming to deduce that animal behaviour can easily be replicated by programming logic without the need for conscious awareness.
You may have knowledge of artificial intelligence systems vastly simpler than brains, but that tells you nothing about the emergent complexity necessary for animals to behave as they do.
Animals may appear to have conscious awareness, but their behaviour is much more predictable than humans, and they do not seem to have the ability to contemplate things such as the beauty of nature.
Again something you cannot know to be true, and in any case that’s a very narrow and unwarranted (and frankly bizarre) description of what conscious awareness entails. Many species can accomplish tasks vastly more sophisticated than those any computer we have just now could achieve. Again you’re essentially saying here just something like: “An abacus is an adding machine. A PC is an adding machine. An abacus can’t send an e-mail. Therefore a laptop can’t send an e-mail”.
Doesn’t work does it.