AB,
It is not the ant behaviour that is quoted as an emergent property, but the externally observed result of the ant behaviour, which is the ventilation of the ant hill.
That’s plain daft. You don’t get just to decide arbitrarily that some things exist only in people’s perception (emergent properties) while others (cars and bananas) don’t. A flock of birds is still a flock of birds whether or not there’s someone to look at it. If you want to go full on Bishop Berkeley and tell us that nothing exists outside the models our minds construct (the “brain in a vat” idea) by all means give it a go, but you don’t get to pick and choose what does and what doesn’t exist “out there” when it happens to suit your faith beliefs.
Of course - that is why I categorised it as an internal property rather than an externally perceived functionality
It might be an “internal property” as you put it, but it doesn’t cease to exist when there’s no-one to look at it - which was your notion about why consciousness can’t be an emergent property.
The reason it is beyond understanding is simply because it is impossible to define as a property of deterministically controlled material elements.
Why are you avoiding again? It’s not “impossible to explain” as you put it – it’s just impossible to explain
fully. As are other phenomena like gravity. As were many other phenomena that were once impossible to explain but now can be, like thunder. And even if something is currently “beyond understanding” all that gives you is a “don’t know” for the missing bits – nothing more, nothing less. If you want to fill the gap with an explanation though, then that explanation must itself be “understood and defined” if you’re not to be seen to be indulging in crude special pleading.
If you really want to go there though, by all means set out your “understanding and definition” of “god”, “soul” etc so the rest of us can examine these claims and assertions.
Put simply, material elements react - they do not perceive.
Put even more simply, that’s just your repeated empty assertion. So far at least you’ve offered no argument at all to demonstrate it – let alone an argument for why you think self-awareness is “physically impossible” as you put it.
Why not?
As previously explained - conscious awareness is an internal property, not an externally observed emerging pattern or functionality.
You’ve explained nothing. “Conscious awareness” matches the characteristics of any other emergent property – individually “stupid” components (birds, neurons etc) interacting, (via senses, synapses etc) to produce emergent properties (flocking, consciousness etc) with no centralised control necessary. Whether consciousness is an internal state of mind and flocking birds are externally “out there” makes no difference at all to that basic paradigm. It’s still aligned to the characteristics of emergence.
We know gravity exists because of what it does, and we do not know how it does it, so we call it gravity, or "that phenomenon by which all things with mass are brought toward one another"
Now type that again only swap “consciousness” for “gravity”. We know a lot about gravity, but the “understanding and definition” as you put it is incomplete. Exactly the same is true of consciousness. So what?
Similarly we know the soul exists because of what it does, and we do not know how it does it, so we call it a soul, or "that which consciously perceives and implements acts of conscious will".
Utter bollocks. There’s no “similarly” about that at all. “Soul” is just a theological term for which there no “understanding and definition”
at all, no logically cogent rationale, no evidence, no
anything to suggest that it exists. It’s a place marker for “here’s some stuff we can’t explain, at least not yet so we’ll make up a name for the knowledge gap and call it an explanation”. It’s just desperately, desperately bad thinking.
Our scientific knowledge provides some pieces of the jig saw of reality, but we should not make the mistake of presuming to know the nature and source of the missing pieces, or indeed the sheer quantity of missing pieces. I do know that reality must comprise much more than we currently know through scientific knowledge, and we may never see the big picture via science alone.
Which has nothing at all to do with the question, namely: which is more likely to give you a more functionally useful picture – a jig-saw with some pieces or a jig-saw with no pieces? Go ahead, you can answer. A half missing jig-saw is clearly a better option than a completely missing jig-saw right? Right.
So here’s your problem: our understanding of consciousness may well be a half-missing jig-saw, but your conjectures about “soul” etc have
all the pieces missing. There’s not one piece. The box is empty. Completely empty. There’s nothing whatever you can tell us about these conjectures that’s coherent or investigable by any known method. Nothing. Zip. Zilch.
Where does that leave you do you think?
But I can logically deduce that conscious awareness is not merely a material property.
Of course you can’t. To do that first you’d have to show
even that there’s such a thing as the non-material – something which, so far as I can tell, until now you’ve only ever asserted to be the case. Only then would you be in a position at least (finally) to attempt an argument to show that consciousness occupies that "space".
I have put forward many logical arguments.
That’s flatly untrue and you know it. Every argument you’ve attempted has been
illogical,
un-reasoned,
irrational, fallacious. That’s why when they collapse you fall back on, “but all I know is….” assertion.
Why are you even pretending otherwise?
See above.
I have. You haven’t even tried to answer it. Here it is again then: on what basis do you make your claim that it’s “physically impossible” for a sufficiently complex computational entity to be self-aware?
Look, if that basis continues to be, “I just assert it because it suits my religious beliefs to do so” then just say so and we can move on. We both know that that’s the case anyway don’t we, so why even bother pretending you have a cogent or even a coherent argument to support you?
Seriously though, why?