JK,
How does that contradict what I said. This Johnson guys is just too stupid to see the energy being put in by the ideas of the individuals. If they don't have the ideas in the first place nothing gets built. Some cultures in the past have just got stuck and not developed and so just reiterated that they have done for centuries. Others have grown in their technical know how. Homo Erectus effectively only knapped flint for 2 million years. We have what we have in say 20,000 years. A threshold and 'energy' has to go into the system to produce something and that system has to have the potential in the first place because ex nihilo. The book sounds like kindergarten stuff.
You fundamentally misunderstand what emergence entails, and you underestimate Johnson’s intelligence too. This isn’t about whether something or nothing gets built, but rather it’s about the
pattern of the businesses that
emerge. Types of business tend to cluster, and they can do so in quite subtle ways without a city planner making it so. Where demand for the goods or services is high (eg Chinese restaurants in a populous city), the clustering is close because the benefit of attracting customers to the area outweighs the disbenefit of proximate competition. Over time, other business too – like specialist food suppliers or transport links – will tend to build around the clusters of alike businesses, creating a positive feedback loop for new Chinese restaurants to come in.
Conversely, when demand is low (eg Chinese restaurants in sparsely populated conurbations, or occasional purchase shops like wine merchants) the clustering will be more disparate because a competitor next door would make either or both uneconomic.
Over time these patterns become embedded – the silk merchants of Florence is a good example – not because of the “ideas of the individuals” but because market forces have dictated the patterns that cause some businesses to fail and others to flourish. It’s not somehow inherent in the nature of Chinese restaurants though that, say, bus stops are positioned close to them.
As oppose your personal opinion. It is only relative - your word against mine.
Only if you think storks vs natural childbirth is your word against mine. Consciousness is a complex system that happens in nature. We have robust models for the emergence of complex systems in nature, and we have no reason to think that consciousness should be treated as if it must be subject to other rules and principles. Therefore emergence provides the working hypothesis pending further and better particulars. If you want to argue against that, the onus is on you to make a case for the exceptionalism.
So what you are saying is that you think you're a robot. A robot that thinks but by definition robots don't think. I think you have a problem - I wonder if you can't think that one through?
More than you have it seems. I wouldn’t use the term “robot”, but I see no inherent reason for material systems not to be capable of self-awareness given enough complexity, and for that complexity to have emerged as it does elsewhere in nature with no top down designer being required.
Other than your personal disdain, what argument do you even think you have to rebut this position?