| There is no absolute way, hence solipsism, but in practical terms, I expect that you are instantiating consciousness because we share a common ancestor. My consciousness is a direct result of my parent's teaching + the 2 languages spoken. It isn't spontaneous. Also, the structure of our brains are largely similar so I would assume you are conscious in a similar way, occupying a subset of valid qualia space. My brain is nothing like silicon. The expectation that a very complicated piece of metal is somehow exploiting a physical phenomenon that is present in a human brain is non sensical imo. The reason why I posted is because at some point I was also misled about singularity discussions. That computers have existential value because of complexity. They do not. They are not observers of the universe. I believe that conciousness operates at a quantum level and is an electro magnetic field. Effectively it is a field created by the deterministic structure of the brain, as constructed by genes. Like water running through a cave. Calculations (logic, emotions) are particular paths through the quantum vector field space. Essentially the performance of 1+1=2 in a human brain, is a an electron or a set of bounded electrons or whatever sub-deterministic molecules, going through an established arithmetic cave structure. Not understanding that 1+1=2 occurs when the cave structure that is required sends the electron into a non-valid (as per the definition of the universe) path in the quantum field vector space. The universe does not recognize this quantum field vector space as valid knowing, and there is no instance of conciousness that is equivalent to the knowledge that 1+1=2. This may occur in a brain that is not familiar with arithmetic or the brain structure that is required to construct a conforming electron path is destroyed. Free will is exercised, in the sense that it is performed at the non-determinstic level (quantum size) by the choice of calculations to perform (and act on). The field must also alter the deterministic structure. |