| Let's say a genie hands you a magic wand. The genie says "you can flick this wand at anything in the universe and - for 30 seconds - you will swap places with what you point it at." "You mean that if I flick it at my partner then I will 'be' her for 30 seconds and experience exactly how she feels and what she thinks??" "Yes", the genie responds. "And when I go back to my own body I will remember what it felt like?" "Absolutely." "Awesome! I'm going to try it on my dog first. It won't hurt her, will it?" "No, but I'd be careful if I were you", the genie replies solemnly. "Why?" "Because if you flick the magic wand at anything that isn't sentient, you will vanish." "Vanish?! Where?" you reply incredulously. "I'm not sure. Probably nowhere. Where do you vanish to when you die? You'll go wherever that is. So yeah. You probably die." So: what - if anything - do you point the wand at? A fly? Your best friend? A chair? Literally anyone? (If no, congratulations! You're a genuine solipsist.) Everything and anything? (Whoa... a genuine panpsychist!) Probably your dog, though. Surely she IS a good girl and feels like one. Whatever property you've decided that some things in the universe have and other things do not such that you "know" what you can flick your magic wand at and still live... That's phenomenal consciousness. That's the hard problem. Everything else? "Mere" engineering. |