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Is the Sun Conscious? (2021) [pdf]

189 points7 dayssheldrake.org
namaria7 days ago

What we get from the sun is low entropy, since all the energy that gets to Earth has to be irradiated away, else we'd cook quickly.

If this low entropy carried by energy flows makes life possible, and life is how I get my consciousness. I'd say in a way my consciousness comes from the sun. The warmth of my skin and the qualia of my thoughts are movement perpetrated on Earth by the sun.

woopsn7 days ago

Consider https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergodicity

Edit -- also, earth due to its internal heat, and perhaps fossilized remains of those organisms that benefited from geothermal heat/vents/etc during its time (nuclear power), will one day do our work on the sun

nebben646 days ago

I discovered this phenomenon on my own - that you can deduce everything about a system from a single transitionary step.

heresie-dabord6 days ago

> I'd say in a way my consciousness comes from the sun.

Our star is the major, "central" (chuckle) factor in our Goldilocks existence, but Anthropomorphism is an anthropocentric game. [1]

Cyanobacteria [2] , flowering plants and pollinators would also be part of our complex Goldilocks consciousness.

Our awareness of this fragile existence should encourage us to be the best version of ourselves and enjoy every moment.

[1] _ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropic_principle

[2] _ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Oxidation_Event

namaria6 days ago

> Anthropomorphism

I don't think the article or I have made any references to anthropomorphism.

heresie-dabord6 days ago

Title of the article: Is the Sun Conscious?

In the article: "Therefore anyone who supposes that the sun is conscious is making a childish error, projecting anthropomorphic illusions onto inanimate nature."

namaria6 days ago

Fair, the article made a reference to it. In the first paragraph where the author is clearly making a representation of a contrary argument.

A paragraph that starts "s the sun conscious? Obviously not, from the point of view of mechanistic materialism or physicalism".

So I see now why you'd raise that point. Still, it is a minor throwaway figure of speech that doesn't really encapsulate what the author is discussing further in the article.

visarga6 days ago

When you pray to the sun god it won't hear for 8 minutes, and then you need to wait for another 8 minutes for the response. Just basic physics. If it's an emergency the sun can't help you, better luck praying to the moon.

kouru2256 days ago

This makes me think of a concept for a story: It’s the end of a dark age and science is becoming popular again. They’re in a constant battle between the religious forces but at least they have unity and political power of some kind for the first in known human history. However, they keep coming up with solutions to problems that seem to line up perfectly with the strange little details of religious superstition in a way that just doesn’t make any sense. Things exactly like “it takes 8 minutes for the sun god to hear you.” As the battle between the religious forces begins to get worse and worse, they realize the obvious conclusion: there used to be scientists that discovered all this before, but they all “died out.” In fact, this cycle has happened many many times over

logicprog6 days ago

This is actually similar to the lore in Raised By Wolves — there's a war between the Mithraic (dominant religion on their planet) and the atheist faction, and the Mithraic are actually far more technologically advanced because their scriptures mysteriously contain precise instructions for wildly advanced technology. Of course that only makes the Mithraic more advanced in the few areas their scriptures happen to talk about, and far less advanced in other areas, because they don't understand the principles and so can't apply them elsewhere, and they don't even know how their own tech works really, so it's an interesting conflict. The whole show is extremely interesting — I really should finish it sometime.

ImPostingOnHN5 days ago

> The whole show is extremely interesting — I really should finish it sometime.

Unfortunately, even the show won't be finishing the show. Every episode kept adding more "mysteries" and ending on increasingly ridiculous cliffhangers until it got cancelled without explaining anything.

It definitely had promise, but I'm disappointed in Ridley Scott for not putting together a coherent, self-contained narrative, and I'm a fan of all his previous works. I guess he (wrongly) gambled that if he left enough unanswered, they wouldn't dare cancel it.

logicprog5 days ago

> Every episode kept adding more "mysteries" and ending on increasingly ridiculous cliffhangers until it got cancelled without explaining anything.

While also getting more and more slow and labored. That's why I stopped, yeah. But I'm also a completionist.

pavel_lishin5 days ago

Something similar happens in Larry Niven's "Footfall", though I won't say what to avoid spoilers.

iamthepieman6 days ago

A Canticle for Lebowitz has many of the themes you mentioned.

kouru2256 days ago

Huh seems kinda interesting

claytonwramsey6 days ago

In addition to the other comments, "Nightfall" by Isaac Asimov also covers a similar topic, especially in the full-length novel (though I prefer the short story).

Buttons8405 days ago

You mean, in your story religion is based on objective science, but people have forgotten the scientific reasons behind the beliefs?

shaka-bear-tree6 days ago

Near-death experiencers almost always describe a bright light. The sun is a bright light. The math checks out. Sun is God.

swader9996 days ago

Rookie move. My prayers with the sun are entangled.

cauefcr6 days ago

Entanglement happens at the speed of light though.

swader9996 days ago

Thow of little faith. But yeah, relevant discussion: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chadorzel/2016/05/04/the-real-r...

taskforcegemini6 days ago

that doesn't sound plausible?

dexwiz6 days ago

Because the version of entanglement in general knowledge is a fantasy popularized by sci-fi.

hoosieree6 days ago

High Frequency Theology

vpribish6 days ago

sun-moon carry trade is an old theorbitrageur trick, nothing new here.

jakupovic6 days ago

Given current understanding of physics, which has evolved over time. My favorite idea is that to travel faster than light one could, theoretically, bring the other side closer and then "step over". Food for thought.

gorkish6 days ago

The only problem with the wormhole (Kerr metric) travel thing that scifi seems to ignore is that once you go in, the only theoretical path out is to traverse around the end of time and emerge through a white hole into a completely separate universe. So although you could theoretically enjoin information across vast, perhaps casually disconnected distances in a wormhole, you can't take the result back to your original origin. You became causally disconnected from your original universe as soon as you crossed the event horizon of the wormhole.

jakupovic6 days ago

Could you create another wormhole to come back?

gorkish4 days ago

There’s no “through” a wormhole in the sense that you might immediately assume. The entrances are event horizons just as with a black hole; in fact it may be useful to think of a wormhole as more or less a black hole that appears in more than one place in the universe. To the extent that black holes and wormholes have an “exit” it would always be though another event horizon into another new causally disconnected space. As to if you could come “back” presumably no, or at least we lack the math to describe how going “through the looking glass” so to speak is anything other than a one way trip.

rad_gruchalski6 days ago

He won’t see for 8 minutes, he will never hear because the sound doesn’t travel through vacuum. Even if it did, it would take nearly 14 years:

> The speed of sound is 767 miles per hour, and that the distance to the Sun is 92,960,000 miles away. Divide 121,199.478 by 24 to get the number in days to the Sun. The answer is 5,049.98 Days to the Sun.

zaphod4206 days ago

what if praying uses spooky action at a distance and isn't bound by the speed of light?

flqn6 days ago

It still can't communicate information faster than light and the sun god can't know your prayers earlier than 8min after you made them

blooalien6 days ago

Note that if this particular "theory" pans out to be true, any response will require a round-trip, thus making it more like 16 minutes to even matter. Any prayer during an emergency had best take that delay into account.

EarthLaunch6 days ago

What if it's obvious ahead of time what the prayers will be? I know a thrown ball will return to the ground before it happens. So it can just "answer" them 8 minutes ahead of time.

ratg136 days ago

If the particles we are made of came from the sun, perhaps we are quantum entangled with it as well.

lifeline825 days ago

[dead]

theptip6 days ago

People tend to have strong opinions about this sort of thing, but the fact of the matter is there’s no way (currently) to know. (But also, it’s effectively metaphysics as it makes no testable/falsifiable predictions.)

We could in principle discover a physical process that causes subjective experience, and a detector for same (say, it’s a particular string vibration in one of the coiled up dimensions).

But it’s also possible that a physics-based explanation is forever out of our reach, and this remains armchair philosophy.

An interesting experiment when we have AGI would be to evolve a new mind from sensory data, but carefully omitting any human dialog about subjective experience, and observe if such an intelligence also makes reference to those things. Not a knock-out experiment either way, but could be fun nonetheless.

avvvv5 days ago

I have a strong opinion, yes, and I'd argue the opposite. We won't be able to 'discover' a physical process for consciousness because it's nothing like a process. There is no logical reasoning as to how any process creates consciousness, neither could such phenomena be confirmed given our understanding of logic. I mean, it's entirely unintelligible how the brain, or any other mass, with the usage of a set of rules (the rules here being physics), can give birth to a 'being' which can observe the rules and the change over time, nor how that 'being' can use the state of that process to form a reality of it's own. Mathematically speaking, one shouldn't be able to 'observe' time at all, but here we are. Speaking of a 'physics-based explanation' is nonsense when we consider that the subject at hand is undeniably a paradox.

permo-w6 days ago

probably the most likely and feasible way to detect such consciousness would be if it were to try to contact us. the bandwidth is obviously there. now this of course would be somewhat analogous to the likelihood of us trying to contact microbes on the moon, but you never know. has anyone tried to decode sunlight?

interestica6 days ago

It's on an 11-year cycle so the data rate to us is really really slow.

chaosbolt6 days ago

We have neurons and other cells doing their jobs and working with each other and the emergent system from this are humans, a different structure creates a different animal. We have circuits and 1s and 0s (which is as dumb as simolifying a human to atoms) and programs and structuring those in a certain way creates an emergent system of a computer with a language model installed on it. Would it be far fetched to say that a system of humans working with one another and following rules could form an emergent system that is conscient? I don't think so, and I consider earth as a more advanced system of the sort, animals, nature, humans, internet, air, water etc. are all forming a conscient being, us being aware of it is as unlikely as a neuron being awarz of us... And if such a system could exist, then why wouldn't the Sun which is a bigger entity than earth (not that bigger is better here, because a 1cubic meter rock is bigger than a man but not visibly more conscious) be itself conscious, I doubt that because it seemingly lacks sub entities (say organs, and cells, etc.) but wtf do I know? if the earth is conscious then the solar system can only be more conscious no?

I just wrote this to write it, I agree with what you said, and I believe it'll always be out of reach unless we study it on a smaller scale and just assume it works the same way on the bigger scale... mathematically I find it difficult to describe complex numbers in the real numbers set (without adding dimensions of course), since the real numbers set is a subset of the complex numbers set. I use the same argument for God, scientifically we can't know, but hey if believing in God makes your life easier then you can't say he doesn't exist, you really need complew numbers to make certain parts of physics easier to model, we wouldn't have impedance (RLC circuits, excuse my mistakes it's been ages since my physics classes, and it was in french) without complex numbers, sure we could use 2 dimensions but it'd make it hardzr to understand, so God for me is like the imaginary number i (i*i = -1) or even pi so that sure who knows but using the concept can make understanding certain patterns of nature a lot easier than if you did it otherwise... anyways I'm a lot more forgiving to metaphysics now than I was when I was younger, maybe it's because we are sometimes biologically wired to view patterns where there are none, or maybe because we always seem to need an axiom since we live in a reality where each thing has a container and we just assume we need a container for our reality, etc. so now we stop at the big bang, and if we figure that out we'll explain until we can't, and when we explain everything we will still have the question of what's outside everything we can explain, etc. life is just too short lol

figassis6 days ago

I once had a discussion with a friend where we hypothesized that the universe is God, discovering Him/Itself through the experiences of its constituent systems, like atoms, cells, humans, solar systems, galaxies, etc. it’s all one consciousness, and it’s omnipresent because it is literally existence, all knowing because it’s knowledge is the sum of all other knowledge. So religious people aren’t wrong, but neither is everyone else.

s1artibartfast6 days ago

I've thought about emergent consciousness a lot over the years.

One area I would question is what the appropriate/relevant measures are for complexity and consciousness.

Is the earth really more complex than a human mind, in the ways that matter?

Presumably consciousness arises from more than the amount of "stuff" in the system.

One person is conscious, but do two people form a collective consciousness? If not, why? They have more links, rules, states, and everything else that a single person would have.

barfbagginus7 days ago

If the sun is conscious, that could explain why humanity believes in a powerful god that can, eg, send floods.

Perhaps the flood was caused by a coronal mass ejection that boiled a section of the ocean, causing extreme rains in a valley region.

Let's imagine that the consciousness field of the sun encompasses all of our minds.. so thinking about it might let us talk to it. So prayer could be real too. They can probably talk to us too, if they want to. A form of stellar transcranial magnetic simulation.

Pov: Sun Cults now have a scientific basis, baby! Let's try to make mental contact with the sun!

visarga7 days ago

This doesn't make sense. In the case of humans and animals, consciousness is a way to adapt to the environment to protect their lives, fulfill their needs and eventually reproduce. Consciousness is useful for life. But in the case of the sun, what is it adapting to, and what does it have to protect? Nothing.

The fact that consciousness appears always in populations might be essential. Consciousness was the result of self-replicator evolving to deal with limited resources. In the case of the sun, it is too far away and interacts very little with other celestial bodies, there can be no evolution for suns, they don't iterate fast enough and don't transmit their data into the future like DNA.

vik07 days ago

>In the case of humans and animals, consciousness is a way to adapt to the environment to protect their lives, fulfill their needs and eventually reproduce. Consciousness is useful for life. But in the case of the sun, what is it adapting to, and what does it have to protect? Nothing.

You sound overly confident with your statement about a topic that has eluded thinkers for millennia and (probably) millennia to come

smokel6 days ago

Evolution does not explain consciousness, but it does explain that the article we are discussing is rubbish.

+3
visarga6 days ago
Retric7 days ago

No reason to use the derogatory euphemism "thinkers." How about people chasing a dead end to nowhere.

+1
edgyquant6 days ago
lukan7 days ago

"Consciousness is useful for life. But in the case of the sun, what is it adapting to, and what does it have to protect? Nothing"

You don't know that. Maybe it is us, or other life in general it wants to sustain and protect. We know very little about consciousness or how life in general came to being.

Maybe it is connected to other suns and the black hole in the center of the milky way, to exchange ideas, philosophy, or just exitement about being alive. Or preparing something we know nothing about. A meeting of galaxies.

Now I surely don't claim I know what consciousness is and I certainly do not claim the sun is. I am just hesistant to make absolute judgements about systems, where I can only catch a glimpse from the outside.

layer86 days ago

"Want" is not a concept of evolution. Evolution is not a teleological mechanism. You'd have to argue how mutation and selection pressure works for stars, and how their traits would be passed from one star generation to the next, so that they would develop a consciousness with "wants". Given that the sun is a third the age of the universe, it seems unlikely that the sun is the evolutionary result of an ancestry of stars of any relevant length.

+1
lukan6 days ago
pxndx7 days ago

It's protecting us from advanced alien invasions, and doing a great job. Have you seen any recently?

exe347 days ago

We should throw a virgin into a volcano just to make sure though.

kseistrup7 days ago

The lifetime of the Sun is so much larger than that of a human being, that the latter would be unable to fathom the life of the Sun. At least this human doesn't.

If a human cell, say, had intelligence comparable to that of a human, would such a cell be able to fathom the life of its “host”? Hardly.

According to Earth science, the Andromeda Galaxy is scheduled to collide with the Milky Way in around 4.5 billion years. What if all they're really doing is dancing, or about to kiss?

simonh7 days ago

What if there are invisible fairies dancing on the heads of every pin? I’m not against speculation, it’s an essential part of the process of intellectual investigation, but the extent to which it is worth taking seriously needs to be associated with the chances of it having any consequences or chance of meaningful verification.

Imagining galaxies kissing seems utterly rooted in the biases of human experience (even other animals very close to us in evolutionary terms don’t kiss), and completely dissociated from anything we know about galaxy formation and dynamics.

+1
keybored7 days ago
evrimoztamur6 days ago

I guess there are invisible fairies dancing on the heads of every pin; or is that your point? Electrons as far as we can tell are pixies zipping around and dancing in a universal ballet.

RajT886 days ago

I just want to inject the observation somewhere in this thread that the human brain is estimated to have a similar order of magnitude number of Neurons as the Milky Way has stars. (The lower bound of stars is the accepted ballpark for neurons)

nimbleal7 days ago

I’m not sure this makes sense. Lots of phenomena — including those possessed by biological organisms — exist without there being any evolutionary imperative for their existence. For your argument to work, would you not have to demonstrate that consciousness is necessarily more like, say, animal fur than possessing mass or heat.

mannykannot7 days ago

> Lots of phenomena — including those possessed by biological organisms — exist without there being any evolutionary imperative for their existence.

There are certainly many things, such as the specific patterning of a moth's camouflage, where a certain amount of chance is involved, and there are Gould's "spandrels" - features that exist, not for themselves, but because constraints on what is possible require them - but anything significant that makes no sense in terms of evolution would be a matter of the greatest significance in biology.

But this is beside the point here, as there is no difficulty (except perhaps self-imposed ones) in seeing the utility of consciousness.

+1
kipchak6 days ago
asimovfan7 days ago

Can you give a few examples? I was of the impression that the idea was that there is an evolutionary explanation to everything, be it known or not. With biological organisms i mean.

barfbagginus6 days ago

Consciousness is really just useful for guarding gradients of entropy. There's some serious gradients of entropy inside the Sun and we don't know what kind of self-influencing processes might appear.

Let's imagine that there's some kind of competition between self-regulating magneto hydrodynamic processes inside the sun.

Well, eventually an overarching consciousness arises, controlling all of the degrees of freedom that it can and evolving into a mind that can perceive the rest of the universe.

The original survival context may have been persistently recurring structures in solar convection cells, but now the being is far beyond worrying about such little matters.

It is free to probe the minds of other beings, and perhaps to perceive the rest of the universe. Perhaps it is curious and peaceful. Perhaps it is paranoid and violent, ready to fight against other star beings, ready to kill us if we ever try to do stellar level engineering.

I bet it fears nothing and just exists, since it's so far outside of the survival context that it evolved for, and has no reason to care if it lives or dies.

Enginerrrd6 days ago

> In the case of the sun, it is too far away and interacts very little with other celestial bodies, there can be no evolution for suns, they don't iterate fast enough and don't transmit their data into the future like DNA.

I'm not sure I agree here.

For starters, for all we know there is a complicated underlying order and evolution of a population of self-replicating eddy currents in the magnetohydrodynamics of plasmas in the sun or something. It's probably unlikely due to the rapid thermalization of things with that much energy in one place, but I'm not sure we can rule it out entirely.

We shouldn't limit ourselves to the typical energy, length, and time scales that are familiar to us when trying to look for consciousness or life. (And certainly not to chemistry alone, let alone carbon chemistry at temperatures and pressures near STP) The universe contains an enormous range of orders of magnitude of interesting interactions that could perhaps have a sufficiently complicated state space to support some sort of self-replicating.

In general however, I do tend to agree that any consciousness is the result of evolving self-replication.

CuriouslyC6 days ago

What you're describing isn't consciousness, it's intelligence. Consciousness is how the universe decides to evolve one way as opposed to another.

bmitc6 days ago

> consciousness is a way to adapt to the environment to protect their lives, fulfill their needs and eventually reproduce

That is a very specific and narrow definition, biased by animal consciousness on Earth. While I am not personally aware of a definition of consciousness, I think of it as awareness and potentially some ability to act on that awareness by any method.

dsego7 days ago

I wonder why we’re not just automatons, behaving the same on the outside, but without the conscious experience.

jbeninger6 days ago

Wait, you have a conscious experience?

kaashif6 days ago

I'm with you. Not sure what they're taking about, I'm not conscious and I've never seen any evidence others are conscious.

layer86 days ago

How would you possibly behave the same without inner experience? There is a direct causal connection between inner experience and how one behaves. Your talking about inner experience just being one particularly obvious example.

grumpopotamus5 days ago

You could in theory behave in exactly the same way without inner subjective experience. The argument goes like your brain gets exactly the same signals and processes them in exactly the same way, and initiates exactly the same actions, except you are not experiencing anything. Imagine a robot that gets sensory inputs from the world and processes them in some giant neural network brain and behaves very similarly to a human, and even claims that it is feeling things. Is it really feeling anything? So far we have absolutely no way of answering that question.

dsego5 days ago

Not the same, but I can imagine a complex behavior patterns evolving, but without the living thing experiencing the same inner sensations. For example, psychopaths navigate the world and exhibit behaviors similar to typical people, but don't experience empathy or anxiety maybe. There are people who don't experience the same colors, or don't have an internal monologue. So maybe we can chip away at all other human experiences until behaviors are there, but void of any significant inner awareness, maybe just an internal model of the world, but without the qualitative sensation. Sort of like AI, a system of levers and pulleys that produces results, but isn't aware of it, like instincts on steroids.

edgyquant6 days ago

You do not need consciousness to adapt to your environment. That’s the result of simple decision trees.

smokel6 days ago

Men don't need nipples either.

PickledHotdog6 days ago

Speak for yourself

nkrisc7 days ago

Assuming the sun is conscious, why would that imply it has any awareness of us?

layer86 days ago

The paper has some handwaving about EM fields. It would have been nice if they did the math.

moffkalast7 days ago

Dark Souls was right, praise the sun!

qiine6 days ago

And engage in jolly co-operation!

echelon6 days ago

I love these wild flights of fancy.

Just today I was thinking that perhaps ADHD is noise caused by the reverse time simulation of your brain iterating, trying to get the right details. All of the "normal people" are already reconstituted -- or, if I might boast -- low resolution details relative to the important matters of inquiry. Not that a simulation should feel self-important.

JadeNB6 days ago

> Let's imagine that the consciousness field of the sun encompasses all of our minds.. so thinking about it might let us talk to it.

We can of course imagine whatever we want, but what does "consciousness field" mean? (Or perhaps we imagine consciousness fields in general before we imagine anything about the sun's?)

haswell6 days ago

Speaking only about human consciousness here, there’s a perspective that many people don’t contemplate. Most of us feel like we’re inside our heads. We’re looking out at the world “out there”, and our eyes are like windows to that outside world.

But it seems that instead everything we see is rooted in consciousness. A projection based on the combined raw inputs of our sense organs all made into this continuous experience by our brains. So when other phenomena “out there” occurs, it’s not just something we “see”, but it’s also something we are, e.g. a bird flying in the distance isn’t just “out there”, it’s rendered fully by our own minds, alongside the other processes of our brains and within the same conscious space that contains all other aspects of experience, both internal and “external”.

I’m not saying I believe the sun is conscious, but for sake of argument, let’s say it is. Whatever it means for the sun to be conscious, one could theoretically conclude that to whatever degree our thinking minds cause physically measurable phenomena, and to whatever extent that phenomena is “detectable” by or interacts with other conscious entities, some form of “communication” could occur.

But since we don’t know what consciousness is, and whether it is truly an emergent property or as some on the fringes believe, a more fundamental property of the universe, the term “consciousness field” seems mostly meaningless outside of our own first-hand subjective experience of being conscious of the world around us.

exe347 days ago

I've been chosen by the sun god, now you all have to obey me.

lukan7 days ago

That only works, if you wear something like this:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Cone_of_Ezelsdorf-Buc...

exe346 days ago

Aha a dunce cap.

lukan6 days ago

I see, we have a volunteer for the sacrifice ..

visarga7 days ago

I one upped you. I rigged a LLaMA to take its random number generation from the EM fluctuations of the sun. When I pray I just send my prayers in the prompt. I have direct line of access to god now. Very efficient, god loves it. He even rewrote the system prompt.

Obey my divine LLM!

forgotmyinfo6 days ago

It's funny, because a few thousand years ago, casting lots (like rolling dice) was considered a totally valid way of divining God's will. I guess this is a more elegant deity for a more... civilized age.

eql57 days ago

If you are interested in what the flood was really about, there is an interesting scientific theory about it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5Et2jvrY7Y

exe347 days ago

It works really well as sci-fi, but don't you think floods happen often enough that every culture will have a story of one?

shzhdbi09gv8ioi7 days ago

There's more reasonable and basic ideas in this field than the pseudoscientific ideas being put forward in that video.

Yes, I am calling it pseudo science on the basis that the author thinks that the biblical figure Noah lived to be more than 600 years old, near the time that god created the earth.

A better starting point would be https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood_myth

barfbagginus6 days ago

I am interested in annoying people who believe in the flood by providing intentionally wacky and untestable theories, as a joke.

I don't need a YouTube video to make that kind of joke, and I'm unkind to people who think those kinds of videos are anything more than jokes

Allow this thought into your head, dear chooms: The best scientific explanation for the flood, hands down, is the process of mythopoesis.

That's what the flood is quite likely all about, and it would be good to make peace with that. We have evidence that people tend to spread false stories over the generations, more so than they spread truth.

simonh7 days ago

It’s a lovely story, but given the pre-existing myth of Utnapishtim, the biblical account is basically Babylonian mythology fan fiction.

edgyquant6 days ago

What exactly is this suppose to change? I don’t think it really happened, myths are ways of encapsulating truths they aren’t historical events generally, but assuming it was real why would it being older than the Bible disprove that?

carlosjobim6 days ago

Why is it brought up as a bad thing that the myths are much older than the compilation book the Bible? That makes the myths more interesting and impressive.

cess117 days ago

Someone ought to trick analytic philosophers into taking some of the more popular psychoactive substances, so they finally discover how tightly coupled consciousness is to the matter in the nervous system and stop their embarrassing search for Holy Spirit.

Also, the sun is clearly an anus: "The simplest image of organic life united with rotation is the tide. From the movement of the sea, uniform coitus of the earth with the moon, comes the polymorphous and organic coitus of the earth with the sun."

https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/georges-bataille-the...

edgyquant6 days ago

I’d say most of them have and these substances prove nothing close to what you’re suggesting. Yes they hint that the whole universe, at least our ideas of it, being an illusion made up by your brain. This isn’t consciousness though, your awareness remains the same it is simply your perception that is changed by mind altering drugs and none of these philosophers would argue your perception isn’t a product of the body.

Awareness != perception. A lot of people itt are mixing up consciousness, experience, with brain activity like trains of thought or external perception. Try meditating for a bit and you see that these are not what you are, you are not your thoughts.

cess116 days ago

Aware is germanic, perceive is latin, it's the same concept. Maybe meditation doesn't have the results you think it has?

As for what drug experiences can tell us, I didn't claim they say anything about "the whole universe". They can however tell us other things. For one, LSD causes parts of the brain that usually work in a synchronised manner, like a system of cooperating parts, to loosen from each other, which is probably why one can experience a loss of coherence in perception of self and the immediate surroundings. At the very least it tells us that this molecule interacts with the biological foundation for experiencing the world as coherent, understandable, and when we're under its influence this experience is distorted or dissolved.

This tears into the feelings foundational to big religions, the perception of the universe as created, ordered, having a telos, can easily be temporarily disrupted, and hence we know that this 'wisdom' is contingent on us ignoring the possibility that it is a product of evolution rather than a divine gift or insight gained through spiritual exercise. You could of course project magical thinking onto such molecules and consider them demonic or whatever, but good luck keeping that up under capitalism without being victimised by conspiracy theory grifters, marketing specialists and so on.

edgyquant6 days ago

Your pedantic preaching about language is irrelevant to anything I said, nothing of which was invented by me it’s simply push back against uninformed things you said about others, thus I see no reason to engage with you any further.

cess116 days ago

I quipped about etymology as an invite for you to make it clearer what difference you were refering to.

If you find that so insensitive that you can't continue the conversation that's fine with me.

Workaccount26 days ago

Psychedelics are very likely the basis of many religions, including Christianity.

Having magical religious experiences on LSD is practically a meme, so I am not sure what would lead you to suggest otherwise.

+1
cess116 days ago
booleandilemma5 days ago

This comment made me nauseous.

taneq7 days ago

That's what put the final nail in my ability to accept Cartesian dualism. (Edit: The way psychoactives deeply affect the working of a mind, not the prospect of the sun being a butthole, of course.)

Psychoactives don't just filter your senses, they change reality (your own subjective reality, of course.)

cess117 days ago

There's still a lot to figure out but we can phenomenologically and cognitively grasp the structures of consciousness by the use of drugs and modern science, which leaves very little room for the remnants of christian dualism, whether as 'the hard problem', 'panpsychism' or the trans-/consubstantiation of the eucharist.

Maybe there is a demon in my head giving me the illusion of reality being perceived as a projection on the cerebral cortex, and it's reliable malleability under caffeine, MDMA, LSD, cannabis and so on. If so, I find this model of better utility than going with vibes and prayer and belief in eternity and so on that comes with the descendants of christian dualism in liberalism, 'panpsychism', analytic philosophy, &c.

Edit: Kierkegaard wrote quite interesting texts about the structures of consciousness, I'd recommend The Sickness unto Death as a start. It has some of his best jokes.

fylham6 days ago

You might be interested in this well-written paper on this subject: https://academic.oup.com/ijnp/article/24/8/615/6275567?login...

cess116 days ago

Thanks, a skim says it's a pretty good overview of where the lab folks are at. I'll read it more closely later.

Science moves very slowly and very fast in this area, slowly with regards to psychoactives due to stuff like politicians, fast in neuroscience where new technology has allowed leaps for decades, since the eighties or so.

knotthebest6 days ago

I’m not sure how this would solve the hard problem. Could you please elaborate on that?

taneq6 days ago

> Maybe there is a demon in my head giving me the illusion of reality

Me too! And yeah and if it weren't for that guy I could be a perfectly adequate automaton instead of dealing with this 'consciousness' nonsense. :P

IshKebab7 days ago

Yeah I would think anyone that has got drunk or experienced post-wank clarity should realise that consciousness isn't a separate thing to the brain's physical processes.

Still, consciousness definitely exists and is definitely weird. And I don't think it's futile to try and learn about it. It's just not going to be philosophers that give us any answers (as usual).

8338550bff966 days ago

Thinking science and philosophy are entirely separate misses the big picture. Look at it this way: all the science fields we study today, like physics and biology, grew from philosophical questions. What we’re doing when we dive into these subjects is exploring questions about the world, a task philosophy started.

Take chemistry and astrology as examples. Why do we consider chemistry more valid? It's not because chemistry steps outside of physics' boundaries; it's that it gives us useful answers based on physics. Anything in chemistry that doesn't fit with physics we see as a mistake. But this doesn't mean chemistry doesn't have its place. It tackles parts of the world physics covers in broad strokes, just as physics uses math to detail its findings. Saying physics could exist without math, or implying a problem in physics could be solved outside of math, goes against the whole idea of what physics is.

Saying 'philosophy is dead' ironically shows how successful philosophy has been. We don’t need to constantly refer back to philosophy for everyday scientific questions because those frameworks are already well-established. Philosophy comes into play when we’re faced with truly strange or new questions that challenge our current understanding.

I swear that the administrative convenience of treating domains of science as distinct subjects rather than subsets and supersets and entirely separate from philosophy in K-12 has caused confusion and dogmatic rigidity on a global scale.

IshKebab6 days ago

> all the science fields we study today, like physics and biology, grew from philosophical questions

No, they grew from experimental evidence. I'm not aware of any scientific knowledge that came from pure thought experiment without experimental validation. Pretty much the only thing you can use that for is maths.

You can say "but lots of discoveries came from medieval philosophers", but that's just because they didn't have a separate word for scientists. I'm using the modern definition of the word, which really makes my argument almost tautologically true. By the modern definition if any philosopher actually provided and answer to a question then people would call it science.

8338550bff963 days ago

What counts as evidence? Anwer without making epistemological statements.

hackable_sand6 days ago

You might enjoy Three Books of Occult Philosophy and The Kybalion.

To name a few, modern physics, chemistry, and psychology are rooted in alchemy and astrology.

A major problem is that people accept the literal interpretations of those practices to either discount or credit them. Ironically, this stems from the self-imprisonment in material existence, the bonds of which occult studies seek to cut.

cubefox6 days ago

> consciousness isn't a separate thing to the brain's physical processes.

That's ironic, because this is the most popular theory of consciousness among analytic philosophers: physicalism. It says that consciousness is identical to some physical process.

The problem with this theory is the knowledge argument. Mary grew up in a room without colors. Inside the room, she did learn everything about the brain. For example, she knows exactly what physical process is associated with the experience of "red". One day, she goes outside for the first time, and sees a rose. Does she learn something new? Something she didn't already know from knowing everything about the physical correlate of having experiences of red?

stevenhuang5 days ago

https://selfawarepatterns.com/2020/09/04/the-problem-with-ma...

> In other words, if physicalism is true, then Mary’s complete knowledge of all the physical facts will include knowledge of what it is like to experience color. When she does have the actual experience for the first time, there should be no surprises. If there are, then she didn’t really have all the physical facts.

edgyquant6 days ago

You are making an uneducated assumption here. This is not a thought lost on philosophy or theology, for instance in Dharmic religions it is believed you are attached to a brain and your perception and thoughts arise from the brain: your eternal self is the awareness. Your thoughts, your “post nut clarity,” does not require that awareness (or consciousness) to exist and if anything the two are at odds with one another more often than not.

cess116 days ago

The "Dharmic religions" don't agree on "eternal self", but they do generally agree that the immediate impression that feeling in the hand is consciousness _in the hand_ rather than a brittle illusion produced in a particular part of the central nervous system that can project a perception of the body to conscious areas of the brain.

This can easily be undermined, e.g. with strong psychedelic disassociatives such as salvinorins which can brutally alter this sense of self and bodily consciousness through very localised, very specific central receptor action. Another example could be the use of mirror images to treat phantom limbs in amputees.

To some it might be frightening to realise one has never been outside a very small part of the brain and never directly experienced anything but projections sent there from a collection of slimy mammal parts that aren't conscious at all.

edgyquant6 days ago

You are correct about the eternal self but it’s easier to make my point without getting into the weeds.

cess117 days ago

Not sure why you'd want answers, that's the domain of religion rather than philosophy.

I'd like to suggest comparing observations from Merleu-Ponty and late modern neuroscience, perhaps Bear et al, Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain (pick a previous edition to get it cheap).

IshKebab6 days ago

> Not sure why you'd want answers, that's the domain of religion

Ha perhaps I should have been more specific - I want correct answers!

And I want answers because a) I'm interested, and b) answers to scientific questions tend to let us make new cool things!

cess116 days ago

Are you familiar with the writings of Paul Feyerabend?

xotesos7 days ago

I think it is even beyond this.

Most of the time humans are talking about the wonders of polywater to each other.

A giant game of telephone telling each other complete nonsense.

"The soviets have found a new form of water that freezes at –40°F, pass it on!".

grishka6 days ago

> so they finally discover how tightly coupled consciousness is to the matter in the nervous system and stop their embarrassing search for Holy Spirit

How would that explain out-of-body/near-death experiences? They happen to people, it's a fact. Sometimes people gain new information during them that they couldn't have possibly hallucinated by themselves, like being able to repeat a conversation that took place in another room while they were clinically dead. Within the framework of the modern science, the experience itself can be explained by the dying brain hallucinating it; the obtaining of new information from physically inaccessible parts of the reality, however, can not.

Then there's also the phenomenon of people suddenly waking up, or having dreams about it, when someone close gets into an accident while they sleep. This can not be explained by modern science at all. It happens too often, to too many people, to be a simple coincidence.

Then there's the phenomenon of heart transplant recipients receiving the memories of, and sometimes the ability to communicate with, their donors. This can be explained by some memories being stored in the heart cells, or in its nervous tissues.

Now, I'm not really into pseudoscience and conspiracy theories, but because of how unexplained and under-researched the subject of nature of consciousness is, I try to keep an open mind. Those field theories in particular sound appealing. They haven't been proven, but they haven't been disproven either.

addaon6 days ago

> Then there's also the phenomenon of people suddenly waking up, or having dreams about it, when someone close gets into an accident while they sleep. This can not be explained by modern science at all. It happens too often, to too many people, to be a simple coincidence.

I'm curious how you would estimate the number of people it should happen to by simple coincidence. Is enough data about the rates of the major expected causes (false memory formation after the fact, selective memory of dreams conditioned by conditions of waking) to provide a reasonable baseline? I honestly have no intuition if I would expect this number to be 0% or 50%, since I have no self-measurements (by definition) of how often I have dreams that I forget, and what portion of those dreams can be interpreted to match an external event if remembered.

cess116 days ago

I'm not aware of any firmly documented such cases of OOBE gained knowledge. Can you point me to five such cases?

OOBE is a common side effect of dissociation. You can cause it through NMDA-antagonism, meditative practices and so on. If it was anything but a projection of perspective within the experiential system in the brain intelligence services and military would use it, and the lack of people in vegetative states around embassies tells us they don't.

amatic6 days ago

I don't think it was ever proven in an experiment that an out of body experience or an NDE got some information from the real world, as opposed to information originating in the person's "brain". I don't know, but before there is confirmation in a controlled experiment, I just don't believe them. Much more likely is that their information is imagined and their certainty is a feeling they should not trust.

plokiju6 days ago

you say gaining new information from out of body experiences are a fact. what's your evidence to back it up?

I treat those kinds of stories the same way I'd treat an alien abduction or bigfoot story. humans are unreliable narrators. have there been any successful reproducible experiments on it?

grishka6 days ago

No, there were no scientific experiments to prove it. However, in absence of concrete proofs of either theory, both are equally probable to be true. The theory that consciousness arises from brain activity alone is just an assumption based on other research. It has never been properly proven or disproven either.

nprateem6 days ago

I'm pretty open minded about this stuff, but I recall reading Robert Monroe (author of several books) tried to prove to himself his OBEs were real by having his wife place an object in a box downstairs without his knowledge and trying to find out what it was.

IIRC he said he invariably got sidetracked between leaving his body and going downstairs, or would be attacked by entities of some kind. He suggested perhaps some kind of subconscious resistance to the experiment.

He listed several times where he claimed to have gained knowledge without trying to while OBE but I wasn't entirely convinced by any of them, so who knows.

The fact he claims to have had hundreds of OBEs and couldn't conclusively prove he could gain knowledge makes me sceptical that he wasn't just in a replica of reality generated by his mind. Anyway, they sound fun/scary/ real to the experiencer.

amatic6 days ago

Well, it is not "brain activity alone", there are always light waves, forces, chemicals, and a lot of other things, acting on the brain from "outside" of the body, through some very strange receptor routs, but the "information" somehow travels. And we know 100% that for a lot of receptors, the firing rates depend on the intensity of the stimulus. So, we can see a direct correlation between, say, an applied force and golgi tendon organ firing. And at the same time, we discovered some types of radiation that we cannot see, and yet they can influence distant objects. I think that is pretty weird. So, we found a lot of direct correlations between brain activity and the outside world. Is there some need for an additional invisible field, not covered in current physics?

strogonoff7 days ago

The tragedy (depending on how you look at it) with discussions about consciousness is that any possible consciousness we envision is inevitably human-like. We wouldn’t see it as “consciousness” even if it was only somewhat different from ours (animals); a consciousness that is really different may look to us like any natural process.

A question of “is X conscious?” has no meaning if you remove that constraint of “human-like”. Like with any question we ask, we cannot remove ourselves from this one.

mannykannot7 days ago

Human consciousness is an important thing that we do not understand, and therefore well worth studying in itself.

Anyone who can get some sort of handle on other forms of consciousness is encouraged to investigate further, but that might not be possible until we have a better understanding of human consciousness.

One of the overlooked features of the so-called scientific revolution is that it shifted focus from "big" questions to questions of a more constrained scope, but that are amenable to investigation. This turned out to be much more effective than those preoccupied with the "big" questions might have imagined.

theptip6 days ago

I think you can envision “non-human-like”. Eg we already imagine animals can be conscious.

Conscious just means an intelligence that is self-aware and has subjective experience. If you define that as human-like then your point stands tautologically. But I think there is a very wide space of conscious possible-minds.

Simple examples would be hive-minds, faster minds, slower minds, distributed minds, quantum minds, it’s really quite easy to imagine conscious non-human minds.

strogonoff6 days ago

An animal’s consciousness is not exactly human-like, but close enough. Envision something on completely foreign time & space scales and it might be indistinguishable from, say, a weather system.

Jensson7 days ago

> We wouldn’t see it as “consciousness” even if it was only somewhat different from ours (animals);

Most humans see animals as having a consciousness with feelings and dreams like us. Why would you think otherwise? Why else would it be illegal to torture animals? That we even call it "torture" means we think the animals suffers from it, we don't say we torture a rock when we crack it, that means we see them as having a consciousness.

mtlmtlmtlmtl7 days ago

(Many, but not all) Animals do in fact have consciousness, emotions, and dreams(the kind that happens during sleep that is). It's not just human projection.

Most animals don't have self-awareness, though some even have that, like great apes, certain cetaceans, elephants, and possibly even some birds.

The only things that seem to be uniquely human are complex language, cultural evolution and prolonged neuroplasticity during childhood and early adulthood.

xcode426 days ago

> (Many, but not all) Animals do in fact have consciousness, emotions, and dreams(the kind that happens during sleep that is). It's not just human projection.

Maybe we are defining consciousness differently but how do you know? how do you prove that? Don't get me wrong I too believe that animals have consciousness, but I think humans other than me have consciousness too and I can't prove that either. That's a big part of the whole issue particularly in regards to whether the current ai of the week is conscious or not.

You can demonstrate that animal and human brains achieve similar brain states given similar stimuli but how do you demonstrate that those brain states are sufficient for/require consciousness? for all we know every animal is a philosophical zombie and we can't prove otherwise.

qayxc7 days ago

I think the main issue is that far too many people think of consciousness in terms of a binary state (i.e. consciousness is present or not) instead of a spectrum.

Even in humans the state of being animals that possess consciousness varies over the course of time: new-born infants are in a different state of consciousness than 4 year old children, for example. Not to mention our regular fading in- and out and transitioning between various states of consciousness during our sleep cycle.

The first important step towards a better understanding that would allow proper assessment would be to develop a sound metric to allow qualifying consciousness. Doesn't have to be precise, but a scale from say 0 (non-conscious) to 100 (awake neuro-typical sober human adult) would be a great step forward IMHO.

strogonoff6 days ago

Most humans eat animals and indirectly participate in animal torture by eating meat of animals who spend their lives from birth to death in conditions indistinguishable from torture. There may be a stated belief in animal consciousness, but revealed preferences show otherwise.

card_zero7 days ago

The human anxiety about animal suffering needs arguments to support it. You can't argue from it to support something else. It's already a weak position that we just go along with because of feels.

simonh7 days ago

I think animals having conscious experience seems a reasonable opinion. Many animals display a lot of behaviours we have in common with them, they have similar senses, similar emotional responses, similar social behaviours, even similar reasoning abilities in a lot of contexts. Tye brain regions with activity associated with these behaviours correspond to equivalent regions in our brains.

Its true we have additional brain structures responsible for higher reasoning and linguistic abilities that other animals don’t share, but it seems likely that these features are layered on top of those other capabilities we inherited from our common ancestors with other mammals.

In support of this, there are some behaviours we share with other animals that are not conscious, or at least that are so automatic that we are essentially mere observers of our own behaviour. This includes many instinctive behaviours, and these are often shared with lower order animals that do not display sophisticated awareness of their own existence and that of others. It seems reasonable that we inherited those behaviours from common ancestors with such animals (lizards, frogs, etc) before self consciousness evolved.

Jensson7 days ago

> The human anxiety about animal suffering needs arguments to support it

You want arguments supporting that humans dislike seeing animals suffer? To most people that would be obvious, I'm not sure what to say.

+1
card_zero7 days ago
lukan7 days ago

I am not so sure about it. The question is, whether consciousness also leads to changing behavior. Say we try to communicate with method X and the sun answers with a flare, would probably be proof.

But it could also be, it has consciousness, but simply would not care much about and ignore us.

strogonoff7 days ago

“Answers” is a word that hints that you are still thinking of it as human-like consciousness.

A valid point could be that our consciousness is social (“answering” is a thing), and by extension any alien consciousness we expect would also have to be social as one of the constraints that make it sufficiently human-like.

lukan7 days ago

That is a good point. I need to clarify my consciousness about it.

In general I don't think a consciousness needs to be social to react to other consciousness. They might pose a threat or benefit. Say we want to build a dyson sphere and that would disrupt the suns ability to communicate with other suns (also social I know). I try to find better examples ..

colordrops7 days ago

Is there any other definition of consciousness than one of a subjective experience that observes and reacts to its environment?

strogonoff6 days ago

I would say there is no working definition of consciousness at all—and potentially there can’t be a complete and provably correct one, if we assume Gödel’s incompleteness theorem is true. The reason is that our arguments about consciousness originate from consciousness itself, we are building a model of the system while being inside of it. The only definitive statement that can be made, I guess, is that consciousness exists.

As far as consciousness that doesn’t react, there are materialist/behaviourist/illusionist views that hold that only observed behaviour matters and anything else may well not exist, but I personally am not convinced by them.

+1
chongli7 days ago
ajmurmann6 days ago

Even that wouldn't indicate the sun is conscious. Your computer responds when you press a key, is that proof it's conscious?

(I don't think it's impossible that computers are conscious, but I cannot even proof that humans other than me possess a consciousness)

peter_d_sherman7 days ago

Maybe a better question would be something similar to the following:

Is a Self-Organizing System -- Conscious?

Or perhaps an even better question (for research) might be something as follows:

If some Self-Organizing Systems are conscious and some are not -- then which are and why, and which are not -- and why not?

?

Also:

Is a Self-Organizing System -- the definition of Consciousness, or is Consciousness the definition of a Self-Organizing System?

That is, could one term be used to substitute the other with equal clarity, or are there differences, and if so, what, precisely?

Is a Self-Organizing System a superset of Consciousness, or is Consciousness a superset of a Self-Organizing System?

You know, the superset/subset relationship... if A is a superset of B, then B is a subset of A...

Or vice-versa, as the case may be...

Anyway, I think it's interesting that the concept of "Self-Organizing System" occurs with relatively high frequency and adjacency to the concept of "Consciousness".

Perhaps they will ultimately be proven to be the same thing, the same underlying phenomena...

And then again, perhaps not...

Whatever the case, I'm sure there will be some interesting and lively discussions about the subject in the future! :-) <g> :-)

thatjoeoverthr7 days ago

Wow that's fun. Stirs the imagination. Suppose the Sun is "alive". It's entirely probably that it isn't aware of us. Suppose we found evidence of interstellar communications, and attempted to signal the the Sun --- and, like some startled scorpion, it reacts at once by hitting us with its hardest CME.

cat_plus_plus6 days ago

It would be very odd for large mammals to be the only things in universe exhibiting self awareness. Usually when something exists in nature, it's everywhere - gravity, radiation, nuclear forces. Self awareness is probably just another one of these things. Rock is self aware of being a rock, sun is self aware of being a star, human is self aware of being a human, humanity as a whole is self aware of being humanity.

Now, obviously experiences of being a star are totally different from experiences of being a human and one can not will them/itself into being the other. Things are happening to each according to laws of physics and self awareness is just along for the ride.

fragsworth6 days ago

> Rock is self aware of being a rock

But how did you define the rock? Are you saying every set of particles is self aware of being that set of particles?

cat_plus_plus6 days ago

Probably? At small enough scale there might be elementary particles like there are for other things. We should probably solve quantum gravity before worrying about such details.

allemagne6 days ago

If there's really a "recent panpsychist turn in philosophy", then my first thought wouldn't be that philosophers spent a long time thinking about it so maybe the sun really is alive, it's that maybe the institution we call "philosophy" is slipping away from credibility.

There's value in considering these kinds of things, but maybe only a little more than exploring the lore of a fantasy novel. Maybe elves really are related to dragons but it feels safe to assume the universe where that question is relevant is far away from us and I'm not invested at all in the speculation.

bbor6 days ago

Luckily, “philosophy” is about as monolithic as “the tech industry”. To briefly defend this discourse, even though I don’t find it helpful: the point isn’t that the sun is like a person, the point is that people are objects. AKA this essay is about ChatGPT’s ability to have rights, ultimately.

winter-day6 days ago

I'm an extremely strong believer that the sun has consciousness. I think there exists quantum processes that causes consciousness and that suns, gravitons, etc. all have it. I likely won't be alive to ever find out, but if someone does discover it, I hope a historian finds this thread :)

visarga6 days ago

I am a strong believer that consciousness has a purpose. It is related to self-replication because consciousness necessitates evolution to come about, and evolution necessitates consciousness to keep the organism alive. They need each other. Evolution is the outer process, consciousness the inner process.

Celestial bodies lack the reason & means. Not to mention the slowness of light at cosmic distance. Any consciousness would need to be within a small light cone to operate at normal speeds.

https://mindmachina.wixsite.com/ai-blog/post/the-emergence-o...

zaphod4206 days ago

I am a strong believer that humans only experience a limited amount of the full experience that is available with consciousness. We have no idea what perceived sensations a start might have. Maybe stars operate on a quantum level that we don't understand yet.

gamepsys6 days ago

I am extremely skeptical about all things regarding consciousness, and nothing stated in this thread has done anything to reduce my skepticism. We barely know anything about human consciousness, I feel we are under qualified to speak with conviction about anything else's level of consciousness.

EMM_3866 days ago

> I feel we are under qualified to speak with conviction about anything else's level of consciousness

You don't need to feel that ... that's the truth!

There is not a human being alive on the planet at the moment who can explain consciousness.

Not even Chalmers.

"David Chalmers - Is Consciousness Fundamental? - Closer To Truth"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDHN6A8y6qY

altruios6 days ago

Who says things need to operate on our timeframe?

grantcas5 days ago

[dead]

proc06 days ago

Pan-psychism does not work because so far everything we know that for sure has C also has some form of information processing. We know the brain is doing information processing, and living beings with brains that do this complex computations are the ones with C. While it might still not be a definitive proof or cause, it is a strong correlation, and there is no reason to think anything that is not doing complex computation is conscious.

Zambyte6 days ago

What is consciousness to you?

Simon_ORourke6 days ago

You missed out the bit about crystals, and how our vibrations influence our aura.

mcswell6 days ago

In C.S. Lewis' book The Voyage of the Dawn Treader", the travelers meet a "retired" star, Ramandu:

"In our world," said Eustace, "a star is a huge ball of flaming gas."

"Even in your world, my son, that is not what a star is, only what it is made of. And in this world you have already met a star, for I think you have been with Coriakin." [said Ramandu]

dandanua7 days ago

Everything is conscious, according to panpsychism, even a rock. You start believing it once you realize that some people are actually stupider than a rock.

dpq7 days ago

I think the author took Pohl's Starchild (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starchild_Trilogy) books too seriously.

sam_lowry_7 days ago

Or Solaris by Stanislav Lem.

fractallyte7 days ago

Or Whipping Star by Frank Herbert (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whipping_Star)

chrz7 days ago

*Stanislaw :)

sam_lowry_7 days ago

OK, Stanisław ;-)

thoughtpalette6 days ago

Or The Fifth Element Movie?

drojas6 days ago

I think panpsychism might be explained as an observation of prevalence of goal-oriented behavior [1]. In a nutshell, as M. Levine said (paraphrasing) "evolution doesn't create solutions but rather it creates problem solving machines", so it is natural (to me) that we can expect evolutionary systems that are old enough (biological lineages, and star systems) to accumulate behaviors that we now see as "goal-oriented" where the goal is perceived by us as a problem to be solved or a set of problems to be solved, in a particular way that is related and explained by the evolutionary trajectory of the system being studied but might not be "justified" outside of this particular historical frame.

1. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2021.7206...

trashtensor7 days ago

> Most researchers agree that consciousness is somehow related to the electrical activity of brains. Some go further and propose that brains’ electromagnetic fields actually are conscious.

I am not knowledgeable at all here so I'm just going to talk out of my butt for a second but this seems testable. Does disrupting the electromagnetic fields in the brain disrupt consciousness?

lukan7 days ago

Well, if you disrupt it enough, to produce a current in the brain, you surely get an effect.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcranial_magnetic_stimul...

odyssey77 days ago

I like the angle and skepticism, but the experiment would still need to overcome the challenge that the philosophically rigorous way to confirm a consciousness is to be that consciousness.

strogonoff7 days ago

> Does disrupting the electromagnetic fields in the brain disrupt consciousness?

Or, is consciousness A interacting with consciousness B in a certain way observed by both as “disrupting electromagnetic fields in the brain”?

That is to say: the experiment does not demonstrate causal directionality.

ComplexSystems7 days ago

Yes - isn't that what anesthesia does?

x86x876 days ago

Most researchers cannot agree on what consciousness is. If we cannot even get a straight, agreed upon answer on what consciousness is how can we actually make these sorts of claims?

carlosjobim6 days ago

Electrical shocks have been used for a long time and are still used to treat mental illness.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroconvulsive_therapy

CyberDildonics7 days ago

I think that's enough hacker news for today.

mattmaroon7 days ago

Ha!

Now “is the universe conscious” is a real question.

alex_c7 days ago

“We are the universe experiencing itself”… so technically, yes?

odyssey77 days ago

Cogito, ergo sum.

baxtr7 days ago

Can there be enough HN for a day?

ncclporterror6 days ago

I believe Newton's flaming laser sword applies, so I would ask:

"What set of observations do you consider would establish the truth of your claim?"

From https://philosophynow.org/issues/46/Newtons_Flaming_Laser_Sw... >>> Newton made his philosophical method quite clear. If Newton made a statement, it was always going to be something which could be tested, either directly or by examining its logical consequences and testing them. If there was no way of deciding on the truth of a proposition except by interminable argument and then only to the satisfaction of the arguer, then he wasn’t going to devote any time to it. In order to derive logical consequences that could be tested, it was necessary to frame his statements with a very high degree of clarity, preferably in algebra, and failing that Latin. Nowadays we drop the Latin option.

In choosing to exclude all propositions which could be argued about but not decided by a combination of logic and observation, Newton changed, quite deliberately, the rules of the game. An argument about, for example, whether cats or rocks have rights, the same as people do, would not be entered into until some clarification has been obtained. <<<

electrosphere7 days ago

This is topical for me since I came back from a two week vacation from Tenerife.

While there I tried to find Masca's Solar Station, an artifact created by the indigenous people of the island. They say it was probably to ask the sun god for help in times of drought.

https://second.wiki/wiki/estacic3b3n_solar_de_masca

camillomiller7 days ago

Is it inside the (stunning) Barranco de Masca? I loved it

electrosphere2 days ago

No it's on a mountain ridge on Pico Yeje, the trail begins from the Mirador de cruz Hilda nearby.

I went there twice to find it, looking for something on a vertical rock. I found out later that it's actually carved into some rock on the ground.

morpheos1375 days ago

Consciousness is ill defined in humans or anything else. To me a more interesting question would be "Does the Sun contain exotic life?" E.g. as plasma life forms.

Life can be defined as simply as a self-sustaining, localized, organized structure that uses energy and information to reverse the natural flow of increasing in the environment. The sun has ample supply of energy and information bandwidth (physical phase space) so I personally would not be at all surprised if plasma life forms have evolved in it.

Perhaps this is where certain UFOs come from, our own Sun...

See for example 2001 Space Odyssey for a similar take.

FrustratedMonky7 days ago

I'm sympathetic to this view.

But this paper relies heavily on IIT, and I thought there was some posts on HN recently from Scott Aaronson that had disproven IIT?

I checked Aaronson's web site and can't find the paper on discussing why IIT wont work.

Edit: Found it https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=1799

lukasb7 days ago

actually the paper turns away from IIT - the latter part of section 5 decides that “the electrical and magnetic fields within and around the sun seem a more promising starting point for a discussion of solar consciousness than IIT in its present forms”

FrustratedMonky7 days ago

Thank You. I didn't get that far. Since they discuss some other methods, i'll go back.

Do you think they touch on something potentially not 'woo', as others say.

lukasb6 days ago

No, the whole thing is very woo. It's fun though.

If you want something similar but non-woo read about bacterial chemotaxis.

sandspar7 days ago

There's a kind of woo for everybody. Dumb people have favored woo, smart people have favored woo. Woo cuts across boundaries.

fractallyte7 days ago

Sheldrake also studied a well-known phenomenon in dogs ['Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home']: https://www.sheldrake.org/books-by-rupert-sheldrake/dogs-tha...

I personally witnessed this! https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33295560

It is incredible (in the literal sense), and I don't expect anyone to simply believe me. What is one to do after experiencing something (literally) unbelievable?

I'm scientifically qualified (degree in Theoretical Physics). I can see flaws in the linked article, in regards to self-organization and emergence (which I studied).

But I know there's more to physics and Science - an entire field which lies unexplored, with vast implications...

lukan7 days ago

I am open for alternative explanations, but the smell theory, combined with subtle changes with you, as you spot your friend, are the more likely explanation. Dogs can easily pick up scents 100 m away (my sister trained rescue dogs).

"I can see flaws in the linked article, in regards to self-organization and emergence"

Can you share what you perceive as flaws?

fractallyte7 days ago

Erwin Schrödinger's famous book, What Is Life? begins with a simple question: "Why are the atoms so small?"

It subsequently turns this question around: "Why must our bodies be so large compared with the atom?"

The point is that a brain (a 'thinking' system) must consist of an enormous number of atoms. Magnitude is only part of the answer; the other essential quality is that of organization.

There was a recent article on HN: "Is the emergence of life an expected phase transition in the evolving universe?" (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39103419)

Stars are chemically relatively simple (for example: Introduction to Astrochemistry: Chemical Evolution from Interstellar Clouds to Star and Planet Formation by Satoshi Yamamoto).

It takes a lot of evolution to arrive at even a simple cell. Early Evolution: From the appearance of the first cell to the first modern organisms by Martino Rizzotti, begins with this sentence: "It is now accepted that the first cells derived from simpler 'objects', and that their descendants became more and more complicated and ordered until their evolutionary transformation into modern cells..."

Brain Evolution by Design: From Neural Origin to Cognitive Architecture edited by Shuichi Shigeno, Yasunori Murakami, and Tadashi Nomura discusses how brains have been shaped by simple evolutionary processes.

Computation in Living Cells: Gene Assembly in Ciliates by Andrzej Ehrenfeucht Tero Harju, Ion Petre David M. Prescott, and Grzegorz Rozenberg, goes further to discuss natural computing, which requires (as per What Is Life?) a certain level of biology.

The key point in these studies is that evolution seems to imply increasing complexity.

John W Campbell summarized it nicely in an editorial in Astounding Science Fiction, December 1955, Necessary Isn't Sufficient:

"A vast mass of gas in interstellar space is perfectly stable as it drifts idly around. Organize it a little, and a chain-reaction of increasing complexities is initiated; organization breeds organization, seemingly. The gas, once it is organized above a certain critical level, begins to fall together by mutual gravitation. If the organization is large enough and the necessary intensity of organization is achieved, the deuterium-deuterium reaction begins, and the gas mass is no longer stable. A star begins to glow.

"The gas-and-dust mass has, meanwhile, been undergoing sub-organization that produces planets circling the star. What happens on the planets, we certainly are not yet competent to define - but we know with absolute certainty that, in some instances, a higher-order organizational complexity called Life arises. And that this organization breeds further and higher-order organization."

Stars lack this essential complexity. So, in my opinion, it's silly to suggest that they may be 'conscious'.

aydyn7 days ago

I'm surprised no one offered yet another plausible explanation that the dog picked up on something else (bird! squirrel! another dog!) that just so happened at the same time as your friend leaving the building. Coincidences occur all the time.

fractallyte7 days ago

It was a car park, near to other stores, and (I think) a highway.

The pup was too small to see out of the car windows.

It was more than a coincidence: it was a distinct change in behavior.

YeGoblynQueenne6 days ago

>> But I know there's more to physics and Science - an entire field which lies unexplored, with vast implications...

... and so it makes sense for dogs to have ESP?

TriNetra6 days ago

This universe is an imagination of the cosmic mind behind which there is immutable conscious just like our dreams are imagination of our mind. Just like our dream, the universe is simulated inside the cosmic mind only.

At the subtlest level, we're one with that cosmic consciousness. Realization is experiencing that oneness (aham brahmasmi).

Just like in lucid dreams, we become aware that we're inside a dream and not a reality. upon awakening, one realizes the dream-like nature of this world. Then only, one becomes free from suffering which is caused by identification (attachment) to false (imagined) entities.

Only with experience the realization dawns and the mind is freed from its ignorance; intellectual understanding can neither brings such experience nor can break the ignorance of the mind.

VHRanger7 days ago

> Alfred Rupert Sheldrake (born 28 June 1942) is an English author and parapsychology researcher. He proposed the concept of morphic resonance,[2][3] a conjecture that lacks mainstream acceptance and has been widely criticized as pseudoscience.

ted_bunny7 days ago

He's a trained scientist. His arguments are conjectural but sound. He's far from a kook.

mtlmtlmtlmtl7 days ago

He's a trained biochemist. Doesn't make him an expert on consciousness, psychology, cosmology, or any of the other things his crazy theories are about.

I've engaged with his ideas in depth, mostly because I find crackpot science interesting even if I don't buy it. There's nothing there. Morphic resonance is a non-theory. It's so vague as to easily be morphed to explain any counterargument, it's not falsifiable and it's not supported by any evidence other than the evidence he wilfully misinterprets as supporting his theory.

Sheldrake is very intelligent. But something happened to him in the late 60s that caused him to abandon his biochem research and go into increasingly kooky stuff.

YeGoblynQueenne7 days ago

If it was in the late '60s and he got into parapsychology and wondering if the sun is conscious, that's a very big hint of what "happened" to him. That generation is probably still pissing off all the drugs it took to roll back that high and beautiful wave [1].

This is not just a glib comment btw. I have some history with that kind of thing. When I was just small I discovered my mother's library, that happened to be full of New Age books that were popular with her and her friends as she was growing up, I guess: yoga, reiki, orientalism, astrology, Arthur Koestler, Wilhelm Reich, Aldus Huxley and Carlos Castaneda... I am a voracious reader, and I read them voraciously. I had the luxury of reading them in an age that was too young for the psychedelic drugs praised by some of them (Huxley and Castaneda, mainly, who were also the best writers of the bunch) and so managed to read them critically, I guess, and recognise their deep flaws [2]. I can imagine how hard it would have been to think critically if I had read those books under the influence of the kind of drugs people took in the '60s.

And later. Growing up I had a friend who would regularly smoke hash and sit down and read the bible. He was at least half mad. A dear friend, but half mad. Drugs aren't good for criticial thinking.

I think our man, Sheldrake, he fried his brain on drugs and that's how he can now think that the sun might be conscious, and that people can tell when someone's staring at them. I have another friend who smokes a lot of hash and is at least half mad and he's a big fan of Sheldrake. This friend is convinced that people can hear his thoughts. I think he believes he's telepathic and he is inadvertently projecting his thoughts into peoples' heads.

Sometimes I think of all the people I know who go about their lives with their heads full of beliefs that never need touch reality, and it weirds me out a bit. Think of how many people believe in gods, or in aliens, or in reincarnation. I cross paths with those people everyday, we occupy the same physical space, but they live in a different world that I can't see or feel. That a guy trained in biochemistry (and who probably was a bit too friendly with chemistry for his own good) has made a whole world model out of nothing more than his imagination is not a big surprise.

________________

[1] https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/1074-strange-memories-on-th...

[2] Take astrology, for instance. My mother had a 13-tome opus, with one tome on each sign, plus one for the general stuff. I read my own sign's tome first and I was inspired: everything in there described me so perfectly! Then I read the tome for another sign; and that, too, described me perfectly. So did the next, and the next. Soon I realised that the "perfect descriptions" of my personality were doing nothing more than flattering me, for having aspects to my personality that basically everyone has. They were just trying to get me hooked by telling me how cool I really am, because I'm an X sign.

+1
dpig_6 days ago
+1
VHRanger6 days ago
afarviral7 days ago

Being a kook and holding degrees in science are not mutually exclusive. His theories are intriguing nonsense in the sense that they have little to no evidence to support them. Their deeply conjectural nature is what defines them as kooky.

titzer7 days ago

I've seen him give a talk. He continues to persist with pseudo-scientific theories that posit forces for which there are no evidence that purport to explain phenomenon that we have completely adequate scientific explanations for. His theories routinely fail Occam's razor, his experimental design is garbage, and he is never skeptical of his own conclusions. He's a kook.

afarviral6 days ago

> purport to explain phenomenon that we have completely adequate scientific explanations for

Exactly! I think he is just lining his pockets on this stuff as all the many other pseudoscience and snake oil salesman before him.

titzer6 days ago

Just what exactly is sound about positing "magic fields" that have shoddy experimental evidence[1], predict nothing (or if they do, predict obvious things which we have completely adequate explanations for), and are totally unfalsifiable?

[1] Like his kooky "dogs know when owners are coming home" experiment (https://www.sheldrake.org/books-by-rupert-sheldrake/dogs-tha...). Like somehow dogs getting increasingly agitated the longer their owners are away is fucking mysterious to him. Also, apparently dogs cannot hear or smell, tell time, or remember patterns of behavior...at all. Such a kook.

fractallyte6 days ago

I witnessed this phenomenon myself, and I'm decidedly not a kook.

I don't have a satisfactory explanation, despite some rather interesting contributions from HN readers.

My comment in this discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39861066

My original observation: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33295560

VHRanger6 days ago

Ah yes the "smart in one thing - smart in all the other things" fallacy

hardlianotion7 days ago

Too many words chasing too few ideas.

antihipocrat7 days ago

He offers a few testable hypotheses. The one suggesting that a conscious star would direct CMEs in order to remain in orbit around the galactic centre (or intercept another star) is intriguing and entirely falsifiable.

toast07 days ago

And if you only knew / Just how much the sun needs you / to help him light the skies / You would be surprised ...

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xPDVdCPGh6M

benreesman7 days ago

Apologies if this is a dumb question or a taboo question or both, but what the does “conscious” mean?

We know about lots of complex systems, and systems that exhibit “emergent” behaviors seeming much more complex and goal-directed than the components of the system (the glider gun, that thing with the computer-modeled birds with like 3 simple rules but then the whole flock does complicated, creative stuff, long list).

Because I don’t think I’ve ever heard someone call a virus conscious, or a fire (until this submission I guess) and both of those things consume energy in one way or another, reproduce, avoid obstacles, adapt to situations to reproduce more.

Ok so maybe it’s bacteria, or maybe it’s spiders, or maybe it’s dolphins, or maybe it’s primates, and then abruptly it’s “yup, humans for sure, that’s the one thing everyone agrees on, humans are conscious”.

But is a fertilized human egg conscious, or a fetus at one trimester, or two, or three, or birth? That seems pretty controversial.

Doesn’t this all seem a bit pre-Copernican? It’s like the “Copenhagen Interpretation” of wave function “collapse” via Born amplitudes: if you just give up on trying to force subjective human experience onto hard data and sound math, abruptly there’s nothing really very controversial going on other than some deep, personal introspection about subjective experience.

I regard myself as a spiritual person in the sense that I wonder about my own subjective experience and the existence of some greater plane of reality and the possibility of a creator or deity, that seems to be a fairly common if not borderline ubiquitous thing people describe, but it’s not transferable, and it feels like the goalposts on consciousness are just a bunch of post-facto efforts to rationalize why this observable trait of other people likewise describing some subjective experience into science.

If describing a subjective experience in compelling natural language is an indicator of consciousness then my MacBook is conscious.

I feel like I’m missing something here.

roenxi7 days ago

You've hit on the root of the debate, but you might have missed it. The debate is to define the meaning of consciousness.

We've got a general problem of not knowing what consciousness is, if it actually exists, how many people have it, if it is exclusive to humans and not really having a good philosophical grounding for (assuming multiple separate consciousnesses could exist) whether in practice that is the case of if the universe only have one big super-contagiousness that happens to be well partitioned. Also what is the nature of time as a bonus, because that one is quite gnarly and has lots of implications for the other questions - there arer lots of things about time that could be true but we would be unable to perceive.

Once you have answered all those questions to taste, you are now prepared to engage in unending argument with people who picked any alternate combination of answers.

singularity20017 days ago

Consciousness, at its simplest, is awareness of internal and external existence. In the past, it was one's "inner life", the world of introspection, of private thought, imagination and volition. Today, it often includes any kind of cognition, experience, feeling or perception. It may be awareness, awareness of awareness, or self-awareness either continuously changing or not.

amelius7 days ago

> if it actually exists

It seems likely that it exists, because why would we discuss it? (Occam's razor) Also consciousness has an effect on physics for the same reason.

roenxi6 days ago

> Also consciousness has an effect on physics for the same reason.

I don't think that is correct. If physicists are alleging that physics works differently when we literally turn our back then that is something they should spend more time publicising.

What I assume you are referring to is that, in practice, to observe something experimentally we have to interact with it (eg, to record the velocity of an object a laser or something has to bounce off it). Ie, it is impossible to do an experiment without interacting with the subject of the experiment.

The physics doesn't change based on consciousness, it is just a comment on the limits of what experiment is capable of.

> It seems likely that it exists, because why would we discuss it?

We discuss lots of things that don't actually exist. Most mathematical objects don't exist as far as we can tell, and even if the universe is infinite it is almost certainly not big enough to contain the bigger infinities the mathematicians can dream up unless there is a lot going on that we aren't getting hints of in our observations.

And we won't ever settle the question of whether randomness exists. It isn't possible to rule out the theory that the universe is all just a simulation and built off a pseudo-random function. Theoretical random processes are still a foundation of modern society.

Something not existing doesn't stop us from theorising how things would work if it did exist. The question really comes down to whether it is a quirk of evolution that results in a convincing illusion or an actual thing.

amelius6 days ago

> If physicists are alleging that physics works differently when we literally turn our back then that is something they should spend more time publicising.

What I'm referring to is that talking is a physical activity. And since we talk about consciousness, physics must be influenced by consciousness.

(An explanation could be that physics is an emergent property of consciousness. Note that people often assume that the converse is true, but I think that is wrong for the aforementioned reasons.)

smokel6 days ago

People have discussed various deities for centuries, and most of those don't seem to mind whether they exist or not.

Also, many concepts have wildly varying ways of "existing".

As a random example, a Mandelbrot fractal exists as a simple algorithm, but also as a concept related to (possibly beautiful) images. Which of these two is the proper or fundamental perspective to "understand" fractals better? Would studying the images be helpful to derive the algorithm if you lost its description? It's probably more helpful to study something else entirely to understand fractals better. And fractals are probably child's play compared to consciousness.

benreesman7 days ago

Is there some particular reason why this debate isn’t squarely in the spiritual/religious/personal/subjective building on campus and zero in the science building?

I mean, these are all fascinating questions in a “let’s smoke a joint and talk about the meaning of life” sense, I’ve had many such conversations (both with and without the joint) and enjoyed all of them that were of that tenor.

And I can see there being a building on campus between the other two where the topic is ethics and morality: how rigorous can we be about what constitutes acceptable behavior, compassionate behavior, empathetic behavior, kindness and decency. Those things seem much more amenable to some level of rigor: I certainly hope that some version of those ideas can be rigorous enough to admit a consensus, but that seems like a way more realistic goal than defining consciousness. It still poses hard questions: is it ok to eat animals? That’s controversial but seems at least in principle amenable to scientific study of apparent pain or suffering and strategies for minimizing or eliminating it entirely.

I have a sinking suspicion that the real definition of “conscious” is “seems a lot like me”.

GMoromisato7 days ago

I'm not sure if you're dunking on "spiritual/religious/personal/subjective" stuff, but the hard question of consciousness is, in some ways, the most important question of all. Far more important than "science" questions like "what is dark matter?"

Literally our entire civilization is built on the idea that humans have qualia and therefore causing harm to humans is often unethical. If we were to somehow come to believe that consciousness is just an illusion--no more than a biochemical phenomenon, and no more special than transistor switching--then we would usher in a dystopia in which any horror inflicted on people is potentially justifiable and even necessary.

The rise of LLMs is forcing us to confront this head-on. LLMs can't be conscious--they are literally just matrix multiplication. But if LLMs can act like humans and not be conscious, then maybe humans aren't really conscious either.

hazbot7 days ago

>>> If we were to somehow come to believe that consciousness is just an illusion--no more than a biochemical phenomenon, and no more special than transistor switching.

I believe this and yet I personally seek to inflict as little horror as possible, and am moderately restrained in the amount of force I believe the state should use.

+2
card_zero7 days ago
+1
knightoffaith7 days ago
Vecr7 days ago

Why does ethics need to be based on consciousness anyway? Can't you just stipulate your baseline requirements and then enforce them by any means necessary? Are the aesthetics not "cosmopolitan" enough?

knightoffaith7 days ago

You might be being facetious, but just in case - academic philosophers generally aren't in the business of smoking joints while talking about the meaning of life, or anything like this (even without the joint). They're generally focused on making principled arguments for views, including views on consciousness.

And the debate is primarily a philosophical debate, not a scientific debate, if that's what you're asking.

And I'm not sure that ethics is particularly more "scientific" than philosophy of mind. There's a case to be made that scientific study of pain is relevant to the morality of eating animals, yes, but there's also a case to be made that science is relevant to consciousness, e.g. the science related to IIT. And in both cases, the science is relevant but doesn't even come close to solving the issue.

roenxi7 days ago

Science generally maintains silence in these sort of discussion in my experience, there isn't a lot it has to say and I don't think any of the facts are controversial. There aren't really any questions here about observable phenomenon. But scientists also enjoy philosophy and it is an easy topic to have an opinion on. And arguing is fun for its own sake, although some people seem to be motivated by fear of their perception of reality being challenged.

ninetyninenine7 days ago

Yeah. The biggest thing most people miss is that the question your asking is in No way at all profound. You are asking an extremely mundane question that only appears profound as an illusion.

What you are dealing with here is in actuality a language problem. You are contemplating and asking about the intricacies of a specific vocabulary word. It is an arbitrary sounding word with a simply arbitrarily vague definition surrounding it. Who cares? This is a linguistic problem not a philosophy problem.

You think you're asking about something metaphysical or philosophical? No. It is a language quirk that's actually a trap. When you debate with someone about what is "consciousness" you have fallen into this trap. You believe you're discussing something profound, but no. What you are doing is debating about some arbitrary definition of some arbitrary word. When it goes into the details it's all about delineating what group of traits is conscious and what group of traits isn't conscious and this is not at all interesting.

I think in reality this concept doesn't exist. We think it exists because the word exists. When you read this sentence you really need to think deeply about what I'm saying here. A lot of people miss it when I say the concept doesn't exist without the word. In fact, the word is so ingrained with their psyche they can't differentiate the two.

paulrudy7 days ago

This point of view could be applied to any word, and the extreme result is that you'd negate meaningful or useful communication, or that someone would have to be the arbiter of what is a legitimate concept or not.

Between vocabulary, commonly understood meaning, possible meaning, and actual personal experience, there are many detours and jumps. "Dog" as a word, concept/meaning, and experience, has these issues. What's not a dog, which dog are you thinking about, and does this apply to "dog" or just those specific dogs you've experienced? Etc.

Words like "consciousness", for less concrete experiences than "dog", tend to have more fog in the gaps between word and shared meaning, and between those and individual experience.

It seems like you're trying to flatten a person's curiosity about the implications of a shared concept or experience into a "mundane" phantasm about a word whose referent is either nonsensical or nonexistent to you.

I think that the gaps between word, concept, and experience, while confusing and difficult, are worthy of more respect and wonder than to just flatten them as though their existence didn't imply something potentially important and essential is happening there. Language arose because we have actual experience to share, however tricky it can be to verbalize. It doesn't work perfectly, and leads to confusion, but here we are, reading and writing.

"Consciousness" may be a word for a slippery concept/experience, but that doesn't equate to questions about consciousness being inherently semantic.

ninetyninenine7 days ago

>This point of view could be applied to any word, and the extreme result is that you'd negate meaningful or useful communication, or that someone would have to be the arbiter of what is a legitimate concept or not.

False. <- see? There's a word that doesn't apply. But you're not wrong. This POV does apply to MANY words. It just goes to show how MANY debates are traps. You think you're discussing something profound but it's just vocabulary.

>Between vocabulary, commonly understood meaning, possible meaning, and actual personal experience, there are many detours and jumps. "Dog" as a word, concept/meaning, and experience, has these issues. What's not a dog, which dog are you thinking about, and does this apply to "dog" or just those specific dogs you've experienced? Etc.

Right. So your example illustrates my point. Is it profound and meaningful to spend So much time discussing what is a dog and what isn't a dog? What is the definition of the word dog? No. It's not. Same. With. Consciousness. It's not profound to discuss vocabulary.

>It seems like you're trying to flatten a person's curiosity about the implications of a shared concept or experience into a "mundane" phantasm about a word whose referent is either nonsensical or nonexistent to you.

No I'm just stating reality as it is observed. The essence of a debate about consciousness is rationally and logically speaking entirely a vocabulary problem. This isn't even an attempt to "bend" anything to lean my way. The ultimate logical interpretation of any situation involving a debate on what is consciousness and what is not conscious is a vocabulary problem. Literally. Read the last sentence.

>I think that the gaps between word, concept, and experience, while confusing and difficult, are worthy of more respect and wonder than to just flatten them as though their existence didn't imply something potentially important and essential is happening there. Language arose because we have actual experience to share, however tricky it can be to verbalize. It doesn't work perfectly, and leads to confusion, but here we are, reading and writing.

Made up concepts also arise from words. Gods, goddesses, spirit, monster, hell, dryad, minitour, Cerberus. The existence of made up concepts logically speaking means that it's possible "consciousness" is a made up concept.

>"Consciousness" may be a word for a slippery concept/experience, but that doesn't equate to questions about consciousness being inherently semantic.

It does. Each question about consciousness is inherently relating the word to another semantic word. This is literally what's going on.

+1
mionhe7 days ago
knightoffaith7 days ago

Daniel Dennett holds a view somewhat along these lines. See his famous paper, Quining Qualia: https://web-archive.southampton.ac.uk/cogprints.org/254/1/qu...

tasuki7 days ago

> I think in reality this concept doesn't exist.

Do you not think that you are conscious? Don't you have subjective experience?

smokel6 days ago

This assumes that language is fundamental to all understanding. May well be true, and it probably is according to Wittgenstein, but it is just one of many perspectives, and I'm not convinced.

ninetyninenine6 days ago

No, I don't assume this. Concepts and understanding can exist independent of language. But sometimes concepts and understanding arise ONLY because of language. I am saying "consciousness" is a specific case of the later.

+1
smokel6 days ago
roywiggins7 days ago

> Because I don’t think I’ve ever heard someone call a virus conscious

Panpsychism posits that all matter is conscious, and perhaps consciousness is more fundamental than matter.

I don't find it particularly persuasive, but it's a real philosophical position: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/panpsychism/

__MatrixMan__7 days ago

Panpsychist here, much of the time at least. It sort of sneaked up on me.

It was initially a physics inquiry. I was playing with the idea that there is not "the" arrow of time, but instead "my" arrow of time, something arising from my biochemistry maybe.

Under this lens, the obvious candidates for consciousness are the ones whose arrows of time are all pointing in the same direction--because I can communicate with them (this is why most humans believe that humans are conscious).

The things that seem not to be conscious: lightning strikes, rocks, etc. these may just be the machinations of someone whose arrow of time is orthogonal to my own. Their future is my... left, or whatever (btw if you think this is a fun concept, you might enjoy the book "A Clockwork Rocket," which is about time and space, not consciousness).

I have no evidence that these things in fact are conscious, but I also have no evidence that they are not. But it's not just academic, I'll behave differently depending on how I chose:

- On the one hand you've got kooky behavior like listening to a waterfall and wondering what it's thinking.

- On the other hand you've got this loneliness and the idea that it can be solved with rocket ships or telescopes and the possibility that you'll overlook life right under your nose because you're too busy looking for something that looks like yourself.

Me? I'll take the waterfall.

DEADMINCE7 days ago

> I was playing with the idea that there is not "the" arrow of time, but instead "my" arrow of time, something arising from my biochemistry maybe.

> Under this lens, the obvious candidates for consciousness are the ones whose arrows of time are all pointing in the same direction--because I can communicate with them (this is why most humans believe that humans are conscious).

None of this follows for me. If a being has its own arrow of time surely it would be based on decisions it would make, and conscious beings would not all have their time arrows pointed in the same direction simply because they were conscious.

+1
__MatrixMan__7 days ago
baxtr7 days ago

I thought the definition given in a sibling comment was interesting:

> Consciousness is the constellation of your past experiences transforming reality into your next experience.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39860879

DEADMINCE7 days ago

> I feel like I’m missing something here.

Maybe just overcomplicating things.

Being 'conscious' really just means being sentient, having some sort of awareness and ability to sense and react to things.

Then there is having a 'consciousness', which is more than just being conscious and generally refers to having some degree of self-awareness.

Your macbook doesn't fit into either of these categories, and certainly isn't conscious. Nor is fire, or a virus.

mdavidn7 days ago

Sam Harris likes to say that consciousness is “what it’s like to be.” This has always seemed to me a pointless tautology.

binary1326 days ago

Sounds like a super reductive panpsychism

I think we can all agree that rocks don’t have subjective aesthesia

luqtas7 days ago

[dead]

mjcohen7 days ago

Made me think of Star Maker by Olaf Stapledon.

baxtr7 days ago

Intuitively, to me at least, it makes much more sense to assert that Earth is conscious. Humans are the neurons.

ompogUe6 days ago

Remember talking to some "commune hippies" in the '80's, and part of their meta-physics was that the souls of the dead are reincarnated as sunshine.

Always thought it was interesting, if anything.

omoikane7 days ago

I was expecting a reference to "The Truth" by Stanisław Lem.

https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-truth-by-stanislaw-le...

louky7 days ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_at_the_End_of_Time

Is a great read, Star based plasma intelligence and the travel to the heat death of the universe.

chimen6 days ago

Is a single cell conscious? What if the sun, planets or galaxies are just cells forming another being?

jrflowers6 days ago

Of course it is. Why would all of those people online be doing perineum sunning if it weren’t?

qwertyuiop_6 days ago

So is the Cow and Monkey, thats why they are worshipped as Gods in certain parts of the world.

nabla97 days ago

Rupert Sheldrake is self deceiving pseudoscientist and parapsychology researcher. I don't call him fraud, because he deceives himself and seems to believe everything he does and writes.

moomoo117 days ago

The Sun is the OG sky daddy.

Mikhail_K6 days ago

To save you a long read - there is not a slightest bit of evidence to suggest that Sun can possibly be conscious. The argument is essentially religious.

whythre6 days ago

The amount of woo in this comment section is just plain baffling. ‘How do you know the Sun isn’t a self aware super genius? And maybe galaxies are people too!’

Yeah, I mean, maybe. If that’s what you want to believe, I can’t stop you- but it all seems pretty silly to speculate about. Seems like there is more compelling evidence for consciousness in manta rays than in a big prolonged nuclear explosion.

andsoitis7 days ago

> self-organizing systems at all levels of complexity, including stars and galaxies, might have experience, awareness, or consciousness.

It must be terrifying if you're a galactic entity and have experience, awareness, and consciousness, but no autonomy w.r.t. movement, trapped in a trillion-year path that you cannot escape.

mortenjorck7 days ago

You would never have known anything else. If you realized you were self-aware, say, sometime around reaching hydrostatic equilibrium, what would you even compare the experience to? Would the very concept of autonomy have any meaning to you? As a solipsistic consciousness, would you have an ontology into which to place such a concept?

(Apologies for the Socratic barrage, but this line of inquiry triggered my inner first-year philosophy student.)

lakeshastina7 days ago

Without the concept of free will in humans, which many now accept as a possibility, what would be the fundamental difference between an entity such as the sun, a plant and a human? None, except the lifespan.

prng20217 days ago

You think that human free will is the defining factor of whether all things in the universe are the same or not?

lukan7 days ago

I don't think that was implied, but rather the sun does, what the sun does and we do, what we do. If we do not have free will, but every action, every thought is a determined reaction of the state of things, than we would also be "trapped". But we do not (normally) perceive it as such. We experience our lives and we live it. We act. Even though our actions might come from a deep automatism. For the sun it might be the same, just on a whole different level.

noduerme7 days ago

Does a person completely immobilized but awake lack free will? Maybe free will isn't the right measurement of consciousness or intelligence.

dumbo-octopus7 days ago

"Other than that indefinable quality that distinguishes us from other things, how are we different from other things?"

trescenzi7 days ago

I think the point is a bit more interesting than that. If you instead suppose we don't have free will, and there is no indefinable quality, then suddenly it’s not anymore scary to be a conscious galaxy than it is to be a human.

dumbo-octopus7 days ago

Right, but you're supposing away the entire essence of the discussion. If you take for granted we have no free will, our indistinguishability from anything else in the universe is an immediately obvious logical consequence.

TMWNN7 days ago

> It must be terrifying if you're a galactic entity and have experience, awareness, and consciousness, but no autonomy w.r.t. movement, trapped in a trillion-year path that you cannot escape.

Surely such an entity would not see itself being trapped at all, any more than a tree does. It is what it is.

On the contrary, it probably pities humans, asteroids, comets, moons, planets, and everything and anything else that is smaller, younger, with a shorter lifespan, or less energetic.

elevaet7 days ago

That analogy really cracked me up since we have no idea what it's like to be a tree either.

noduerme7 days ago

FWIW, we humans also have no autonomy w.r.t. our habitable orbit path, but we find plenty of internal shit to keep ourselves busy.

keybored7 days ago

Because you perceive the galaxy as being on a railroad? Why? Doesn’t Stan look railroaded the way he drives to work, eats lunch, drives home, mows the lawn? Maybe the galaxy, like us,[1] experiences itself as doing things with volition. Which might seem weird given the sheer scale and timespan of a galaxy. But:

> Assuming that the galactic mind works in and through electromagnetic fields, then its thoughts and perceptions must be very slow indeed, by our standards. The radius of the Milky Way is about 50,000 light years, so it would take at least this length of time for the galactic centre to perceive what is happening at the periphery, and as long again for it to act on star systems at the edge.

Instead of having a consciousness that has to wait 50,000 years for some input, it makes more sense for a consciousness to experience time on a scale where input happen in (say) 100ms consciouss-perceived time or so. So what looks like 500,000 years for us is a second to a galaxy.

[1] The HN philosophers can argue about free will or not but here only the feeling of having it is relevant

Pompidou7 days ago

Our 75 years long self-declared free-will narrative is maybe more terrifying.

bamboozled7 days ago

I thought the exact same thing. We can feel pain and suffer on levels that I doubt the Sun would ever be capable of.

saulpw7 days ago

But at least there's no one else around to bother you.

pharrington7 days ago

Why would it be terrified? It doesn't have an amygdala.

andsoitis5 days ago

> Why would it be terrified? It doesn't have an amygdala.

because your intellect would grasp the immense heaviness to realize you're mortal, that your ego will end.

pharrington2 days ago

I get that it would understand mortality and all. What I mean is, terror is a very specific, mammalian response to a perceived threat. There are unimaginably more possible responses to that realization than terror. Terror makes sense for immediate, fleeting threats, but I doubt a galactic scale awareness would develop that specific mechanism.

ChaitanyaSai7 days ago

Consciousness is the constellation of your past experiences transforming reality into your next experience.

Every major consciousness theory out there fails because it does not account for how a consciously experiencing self is created. You cannot explain away consciousness without explaining the self.

And there is a theory that offers a model for both (not my own!). Our book Journey of the Mind discusses this. Here's a blog post discussing both https://saigaddam.medium.com/conscious-is-simple-and-ai-can-...

ganzuul7 days ago

A constellation is a fitting description for the ego.

andrewstuart7 days ago

An old friend came to believe this when he was in a state of bipolar delusion.

exe347 days ago

Misread this as "Is the sun couscous?", but to be fair, it's probably just as reasonable a question to ask.

lisper6 days ago

TL;DR: No.

> In almost all other societies and civilizations, including medieval Europe, the sun and other heavenly bodies were thought to be alive and intelligent.

It was also thought that the stars were fixed to a celestial sphere. Just because a lot of ancient civilizations adhered to an idea doesn't necessarily mean that idea has any merit.

mo_427 days ago

Tl;dr We shouldn't care.

Is my partner conscious? My dog? Actually, I don't know. I can say that I experience myself as conscious.

In our daily interactions we never ask such questions. Last week, I hired a new programmer. We checked the CV and the code challenge. We invited the candidate to see how they get around with the team etc. At no point, we asked if they're conscious.

I think our brains are machines for predicting what happens next. Therefore, a large brain makes sense because it can simulate the world more precisely and make better predictions. One mistake of this simulation is that the brain simulates us as a conscious agent who can make their own decisions and act in the world. In contrast, we are just machines who operate by the laws of quantum mechanics.

Maybe evolution set up this illusion on purpose so that we don't get depressed and kill ourselves.

keybored7 days ago

> I think our brains are machines for predicting what happens next.

Technologist thinks that humans are machines (breaking news)

> Therefore, a large brain makes sense because it can simulate the world more precisely and make better predictions.

Whence consciousness?

> One mistake of this simulation is that the brain simulates us as a conscious agent who can make their own decisions and act in the world.

A mistake? Like a random mutation (consciousness) which just persisted because there was no evolutionary pressure to get rid of it?

Or did it persist in everyone? Maybe half of humanity is conscious while the other half is not? They operate exactly the same except the conscious half wastes some kilojoules fretting over awareness.

A machine doesn’t need to simulate being aware of decision-making. That’s cruft. Wasted cycles.

Maybe you’re reasoning backwards from the human-centric idea that “making decisions” requires awareness. But then you incoherently assert that humans are machines, and machines don’t need consciousness to make decisions.

> Maybe evolution set up this illusion on purpose so that we don't get depressed and kill ourselves.

So (if I am understanding correctly), consciousness was a random mutation of a complex organism. Of course someone can be conscious and not feel like they have free will. Like they are just along for the ride. But this is “depressing” somehow.[1] So now a free will illusion mutation has to occur in order to protect the machine from self-killing.

Seems convoluted.

[1] But why? 80% of the HN philosophers seem fine with it.

bmitc6 days ago

>> I think our brains are machines for predicting what happens next.

> Technologist thinks that humans are machines (breaking news)

While I also dismiss or at least be careful of the inherent biases of technocratic viewpoints, humans and life in general are very much made of many types of machines.

Take a look at these videos:

https://youtu.be/wJyUtbn0O5Y

https://youtu.be/7Hk9jct2ozY

I.e., life is insane and bewildering.

keybored6 days ago

Well actually :nerd_face: technocracy is a completely different thing (the belief that the educated specialists should rule society)

datascienced7 days ago

The only career where you are concerned about if someone is conscious is boxing.

inatreecrown27 days ago

maybe doctors and nurses are too, if they are concerned for the live of you?

datascienced7 days ago

true. maybe stage hypnotists too

binary1326 days ago

just what a philosophical zombie would say

carabiner7 days ago

Absolutely, yes.

lupire6 days ago

The book (now a major motion picture) Solaris, one of many excellent Stanislaw Lem books, explores this idea.

kelseyfrog7 days ago

Obviously, just look at it. How could it not be? That's just how things are.

Nevermark3 days ago

> The possibility that the sun is conscious expands the scope of our thinking.

As would the possibility that cheese sandwiches are our creators.

No study of the sun ever produced a clue that it was conscious. There is no explanatory power regarding the sun, or us, that comes from assuming the sun is conscious.

That isn't science. Or even rational.

--

If consciousness means anything, surely it means self-awareness, encompassing a level of self-awareness of one's own self-awareness.

Self-awareness requires a few things. An ability to sense oneself and one's context, some memory of that sensory information, an ability to develop understanding and application of that information with a learned model of oneself, second level sensory access to some of those internal activities creating self-awareness, and a richness of modeling and self-awareness to allow for clear recognition, consideration, and exploration of the state of being self-aware of one's own self-awareness.

So consciousness at a minimum, is a gradation based on the product of those features.

--

Explanations of consciousness as resulting from some level of particles consciousness would be the materialistic constructive explanation.

In contrast, consciousness based on the attributes above is an information organization and flow explanation. Which in the end can be divorced from any particular material substrate.

Self-awareness of self-awareness requires a rich second or third order loop in information flow, reflectively about that information flow and the system doing the information flow.

Just as a recursive function can't be explained by the non-recursive functions that it is composed of. Only by the entire loop organization.

--

Also, there needs to be a plausible mechanism of creation or development.

In our case, we see the path evolution took over aeons to develop the components of consciousness listed above. The result are brains whose activity enhances the gathering of energy and resources required to allow those brains time to grow, and the energy budget to operate.

--

The only part of consciousness that is "mysterious" is the qualia aspect. The strange and seeming inexplicable experience of being conscious. But that is largely mysterious for the same reason as other mysteries. We are missing information. We can't yet access most of our brains activities, just some of them.

So our consciousness seems to float above other things we sense. There is a self-modeling/awareness gap there.

Which we are closing over time with science and technology.

Being which can access their own behavior at all levels will be more conscious

bobmcnamara7 days ago

Accidentally zoomed in slightly so my phone wouldn't advance pages. I thought it ended after "The very question is ridiculous"!

andrewp1237 days ago

You’re definitely onto something. The author starts a sentence with the words “In so far as”.

helpfulContrib7 days ago

[dead]

daedlanth7 days ago

[dead]

iwontberude6 days ago

tl;dr: “Obviously not”

barfbagginus7 days ago

If the sun is conscious, that could explain why humanity believes in a powerful god that can, eg, send floods.

Perhaps the flood was caused by a coronal mass ejection that boiled a section of the ocean, causing extreme rains in a valley region.

Let's imagine that the consciousness field of the sun encompasses all of our minds.. so thinking about it might let us talk to it. So prayer could be real too. They can probably talk to us too, if they want to. A form of stellar transcranial magnetic simulation.

Pov: Sun Cults now have a scientific basis, baby! Let's try to make mental contact with the sun!

avvvv5 days ago

Scientific basis is far fetched. Might as well say unicorns are real and call it scientific because there is nothing stopping it from being true