Hi Nick,

One of the problems in discussing consciousness is that it seems very hard to 
break it down into simpler concepts. There are what might be called 
"high-level" words such as "inner life", "awareness", "apprehension", which 
suggest consciousness but only to someone who already ha a sense of what 
consciousness is.  Whereas low level words, which refer to things that can be 
readily measured do not seem adequate to get at the real meaning of 
consciousness. So we are left with metaphors. When I use words such as "access" 
and "inner life" they suggest a container but they are not necessarily used to 
denote an actual container but to describe a situation which has some of the 
properties of a container.

However, there does seem to be a real container that describes the information 
I have access to.  I get raw information from my body. This is not to say that 
my consciousness is located in my body, but that what I know about the outside 
world starts with how my body senses the outside world. These senses are then 
processed or contemplated somehow and this results in what I think I know about 
the world. There is no way that "I can see exactly what you see" because what 
you see comes from your body and what I see comes from my body. If we literally 
mean "see" then what you see is what enters your eyes and what I see is what 
enters my eyes. You might tell me about what you see, but that is not the same 
as seeing what you see because what you have seen has been processed by you 
then reformulated in terms of speech, which is then processed by me.  Even if 
we witnessed the same event, we would have slightly different viewpoints, and 
our eyes are different, and, in any case, we would start 
 interpreting the incoming rays of light as soon as they started to enter our 
respective eyes.

You also gave examples in which I might infer what you saw. This seems to 
presuppose I have a theory of what Nick is all about or some means of making 
inferences. (I don't have a well-articulated theory of Nick, but I do arrive at 
conclusions about what to make of you. I'm not certain how I do this, but I am 
certain that I do it all the time, quite effortlessly and almost 
automatically.) At any rate this drawing of inferences does not seem to be 
seeing exactly what you see, but a way (not necessarily very accurate) of 
getting a rough approximation of what you saw.

--John   

________________________________________
From: Friam [[email protected]] on behalf of Nick Thompson 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 9:07 PM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] BBC News - Ant     colony  'personalities' shaped  by      
environment

John,

        Ok.  I am in.  But we have to go slowly, because, as somebody
famously said, "In philosophy, if you are not moving slowly, you aren't
moving."   Not clear where to start.  I don't want to try to defend my
"insight" that our vernacular understanding of consciousness  arises not
because it is accurate but because it makes society possible. I will say  in
its defense only that the McNauton Rule which  forms the basis for our
notion of legal responsibility, states that I can only be considered
criminally responsible If I know the nature and quality of my own acts.
This phrase, "knowing nature and quality of one's acts" sounds a heckuva lot
like a definition of [self] consciousness to me.

        I thought we perhaps could start with unpacking "interior", since it
appears in both of your messages ("access").  What does it mean to say that
my thoughts  are "inside" me.  It ought to mean, if we play the language
game of "inside" by the rules, that there is some sort of container that my
thoughts are enclosed within.   The use of the word, "access", would seem to
suggest that I have ways of getting at the insides of the "box" to "see" my
thoughts that you do not have.  Perhaps the box is a 5-sided box, and it's
open side faces me, so I can see inside and you cannot?   If that is how the
metaphor works, then you should be able to come around  to my side of the
box and look in examine its contents with me.  Or, if my access is provided
by a key, you should be able to use that key to get inside my box.  In other
words, there should be some set of conditions under which you can see
exactly what I see.  Since this entailment of the box metaphor undermines
the essential privacy of mind, I assume that you would rule it out by, say,
asserting that only I have the key to my box, and I cannot loan it to you.


But now we encounter another problem.  I think you would agree that you do
have some access to the inside of my box, beyond the access that I might
provide you by telling you what is inside it.   Certainly, if I wrote you
now the words, "I really have no interest in issues in the philosophy of
mind," you would have every reason to assert that I had misrepresented the
contents of my box to you.  So, to make the metaphor work, we would have to
imagine that, perhaps it's sides are not entirely opaque, or not opaque all
the time.  Perhaps they are sometimes translucent?

How about a different metaphor altogether?  How about the metaphor of "point
of view"?  My consciousness is just that what is seen from the  point of
view on the world from where I stand.  It is mine only in the sense that it
is indexed to me, not in the sense that I own it or that it is in me.  For
example, there is a cup on my desk whose inscription is turned toward me so
that if you were sitting across my desk from me right now, you would not
"have access to it".   The inscription is, "ONLY MUGS PAY POLL TAX."   I am
conscious of it in the sense that my behavior points to it.  From your point
of view, my consciousness is just all that my behavior designates.   When
your behavior designates the relations between me and some of the objects in
your environment, you become conscious of what I am conscious.  When my
behavior designates those same relations,  I become self-conscious.  I think
"self-consciousness is what we are principally arguing about, here.

I hope this answer is somewhat satisfying.  Thanks for running me around the
track.  I am trying to write some on this subject this summer.  I really
need the exercise.

Best,

Nick




Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Kennison
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 12:52 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] BBC News - Ant colony 'personalities' shaped by
environment

Hi Nick,

I certainly don't think of what you said as "rude"  --in fact I asked you to
tell what errors you might see in what I said.
And in any case, I am very glad to agree that we are old friends and can, if
necessary, forgive what might appear as rudeness.

I am willing to accept your conclusion that the words "inner subjective
life" are not really very useful and do no contribute much to my idea of
what consciousness is. I don't think I claimed that they are either of these
things.

I am having difficulty seeing the connection between these words and a
quasi-legal understanding that I and only I get to speak for myself.
I guess I would say that my sense of what my consciousness is all about
will be different from yours because I have access to my thoughts and vague
feelings etc. that differs from the kind of access you have. It's okay with
me if you speak for myself (so to speak)  --and I imagine you will, perhaps
over the previous sentence.  I invite and will (I think) welcome your
analysis.

--John

________________________________________
From: Friam [[email protected]] on behalf of Nick Thompson
[[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 11:38 AM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'
Cc: James Laird
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] BBC News - Ant colony      'personalities' shaped  by
environment

Hi, John,

Nothing like a sober, quiet, good question to knock an old warrior off his
high horse.

Ok.  Now that I am standing on the ground ...

First, let us stipulate, we are talking about self-consciousness, here, ...
something beyond sentience, right?  If so, then I think your question is a
wonderful example of a "mystery", like we talked about yesterday.  A mystery
is a state of pleasurable confusion generated by using words outside their
realm of usefulness.  So, I would predict that if we sat down and unpacked
"inner", "subjective", and "life" we would discover that these words have
really nothing to contribute beyond the assertion that "I, and only I, get
to speak for me."  In other words, under your use of "consciousness",  it is
really a quasi-legal understanding central to human interaction that, in the
absence of a legal certification of incompetence, our assertions about our
own needs, wants, thoughts, etc., are to be taken as definitive.   So, for
instance, what I just said -- that your view of consciousness is not quite
what you think it is -- would be (may be) seen as RUDE, in polite society,
because, on your own understanding of consciousness, you and only you get to
say what you think it is.  Because we have been friends for more than 40
years, I hoping you will let that rudeness pass.

On my account, an entity is conscious of something when it acts with respect
to it, and SELF-conscious, when it acts with reference to itself.  On that
account, a simple thermostat is clearly conscious, but not self-conscious.
A more complicated thermostat, which calibrates its own sensitivity (which
most modern thermostats do), would probably have to be admitted as
self-conscious.

Nick
Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Kennison
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 11:00 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] BBC News - Ant colony 'personalities' shaped by
environment

Nick,

I guess my criterion for consciousness would be something like "has an inner
subjective life". It's not something that I can measure and it has the
problem of circularity  --if you ask me what I mean by an "inner subjective
life" I will soon be making a circular definition. I am willing to concede
that I don't have a suitable definition for a scientific study of
consciousness. Still the question of whether a thermostat has consciousness
seems meaningful to me. (I don't have an answer --other than "I doubt it". )
Perhaps, I am making some kind of error. If so, could you explain what my
mistake is.

--John
________________________________________
From: Friam [[email protected]] on behalf of Nick Thompson
[[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 10:20 AM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] BBC News - Ant colony 'personalities' shaped       by
environment

So, I looked up David Chalmers .  Yeh, I know:  I shouldn't have HAD  to
look up David Chalmers.   Here from Philosophy Index

A potential problem with this speculation, which Chalmers acknowledges, is
that it may imply the consciousness of things that we would not normally
consider to have consciousness at all. For instance, Chalmers wonders if
this means that a thermostat may have some experiential properties, even if
they are especially dull. He does not commit to the notion that they do, but
the possibility remains in the more speculative area of his thought.

This is one of those "TED" insights, to which the only rational response is,
"Duh!"  Why exactly is that a problem?  What exactly would it have meant to
say that "humans are conscious" if it were not possible to discover that (1)
things other than humans are conscious and/or that humans are not, in fact,
conscious.  Either we have a criterion for consciousness or we don't; once
we have a criterion, we either apply it rigorously or . we are dishonest.
It's really quite simple, actually.


N

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Smith
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 9:45 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] BBC News - Ant colony 'personalities' shaped by
environment

Quick, somebody call David Chalmers!


On Aug 15, 2014, at 9:25 AM, Eric Charles wrote:


Weird that they want to call it "personality" instead of more simply saying
that ant colonies seem to adapt to their local environment. Of course, the
flashiness of the claim is the only reason it is being covered on the BBC,
so I guess it isn't that weird after all.


-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Lab Manager
Center for Teaching, Research, and Learning American University, Hurst Hall
Room 203A
4400 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20016
phone: (202) 885-3867   fax: (202) 885-1190
email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

On Fri, Aug 8, 2014 at 3:57 PM, Gillian Densmore
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
A few swarm inteligence from the 90s described that.  Scott Kelly's "Fast
Cheap and Out of Controll"  touched on that. In his case they knew ants (and
often uncles) could pass around experience- and displayed something simillar
to hummans sense of experience they didn't have a explination. Then again
his forray into science was from the 90s.

On Fri, Aug 8, 2014 at 9:01 AM, Tom Johnson
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

So who is going to integrate this into the sugar model?

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-28658268

===================================
Tom Johnson - Inst. for Analytic Journalism Santa Fe, NM
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.
505-473-9646<tel:505-473-9646>
===================================

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