bahman wrote:Materialism is a system of belief which claims that everything is constituted of matter and any motion of matter can be described by laws of nature. In close form, S'=L(S), where S is the initial state, S' is final state and L is laws of nature. There is however an anomaly in this system of view so called consciousness, C, which is simply the awareness of surrounding. C is simply the expectation of what S' should be. Materialist believe that C can be derived from S by the following equation C=P(S) where P is the act of experience. There is however no reason to believe that there exist a relation between C and S' in this framework. We however always observe a fantastic correlation between what we expect to happen, C, and what happens, S'. This means that we are dealing with a logically impossible situation since C could be anything.
Your thought?
I think you're onto something here. How does consciousness emerge out of inert matter? How can a non-living entity suddenly become conscious? It's very weird.
Let's take the evolutionary story. Once upon a time, there was nothing in this universe that had any life. Somehow, chemicals appeared, such as hydrogen and helium. Maybe quark-gluon plasma, too. Anyway, for some reason, they exploded, producing a thing we call "The Big Bang." But there's no life. None. Zero. Just chemicals and random energy. Nothing is conscious.
So when did the consciousness bit begin? It can't have been prior to the coming together of amino acids, because they're the basic building blocks of life. But even amino acids are not life, and are not conscious. They're just "building blocks," so to speak. Still no consciousness exist.
Somehow the amino acids got together and had an amino acid party, forming a single-celled animal. Was that when consciousness appeared? If so, how did it suddenly appear? What material quantity or chemical process transformed totally inert chemicals and energy into an aware being? And if the jump to consciousness came later, when and why did it happen? What was its real cause?
Nobody knows, at present. And in fact, the desire to know is a later product of this strange thing we call "consciousness," for which we have no account.
At one time the universe was as dead as a rock. Later, it was filled with conscious beings. Now, if I started to claim I had a rock that had suddenly become aware of its existence, people would call me completely batty. And yet that's how the story seems to go.
How?