So your position would be that what is missing from the non-living materials is a "property"? Like flammability, solidity or durability? Does that sort of thing sound even vaguely like a tidy parallel for "sentience"?Terrapin Station wrote:Different materials, in different structures, undergoing different processes, have different properties.
But I think that you see that it does not, and so you add...
So far, so good: but then I wonder why you mentioned it at all, if it wasn't an answer you expected to be plausible.Coming back to mind/body now, that doesn't mean that you have to accept that "mind" is a property that some materials,...
Yes. It would make sense to account for it, and to start with at least an analogy that had some chance of being in the ballpark. So we're back to the question: "how do we account for this 'thing'," to which we can now add, "which is not a 'property'?"... in some structures, undergoing some processes has, but it wouldn't make sense to treat the idea that different materials (etc.) have different properties as something with no justification, something out of left field, etc.
And we can ask this: "what makes some materials capable of x, and other materials not at all" about every single property that matter has.
But as you point out, sentience isn't a "property" of the materials. You can have all of the "materials" (as in a dead body) and none of the sentience. That's a very interesting differentiator.
Here you seem to go back to the "properties" explanation, which is really no explanation at all: for "properties" just means "material dynamics a thing has." Essentially, your explanation amounts to, "Some things are sentient because things with the property of sentience are sentient."Some materials, in some structures and processes have that property. Some do not. The difference appears to be just what we keep saying--the materials, structures and processes. That's what properties ARE after all. So difference is difference.
Whereas we can identify, measure, test and reproduce things like flammability, solidity, liquidity, and so forth, or processes like transpiration or sublimation, good luck trying it with sentience. It doesn't behave like any "property" we currently know. In fact, it does not seem to yield to material analyses at all.
If you think otherwise, please expatiate as necessary.