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Animal consciousness

Sensible awareness, which may very well be found in animals, does not imply intellectual awareness. The latter is uniquely human (i.e. making judgments about reality, making (un)truth claims, making abstractions,...).

These are all traits i am confident animals exhibit..

But could you elaborate on the 3 parts of intellectual awareness.. imo hiding something from others is pretty much making an untruth claim when you are present for the search.. elephants feeling the bones of dead ones as they do and the reaction of chimps to dead clan members suggests they understand morality and with such understanding must arise judgements of reality and loads of animals must make abstractions.. otherwise how would animals use tools
 
Sorry for the late reply. I am very busy. I will make a better reply in 2-3 days. In the meantime, rick,

dog-training-18.jpg


Would you consider Pavlov's dog being consciousness of his environment? Is the dog aware that "this is food?"

I suspect that animal behavior is often based on: imitation and/or conditioning. And habitual (read: "intelligent") behavior does not entail consciousness per se.

p.s. I will reply on the previous posts later.
 
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The more people use the word consciousness the more I am repelled by the word. It's like 'god', everyone has a slightly different definition of the word and conceptual structure to support it. So difficult to compare notes when we're not even speaking the same language. Anyway,

I think we have more in common with animals than most would care to concede. Personally when I look at people walking around town buying shit, and then look at cows in a field chewing on grass, moving some more, chewing some more, I can only conclude that we're pretty fucking similar. Both massively robotic. We have layers more of complex behavior and routines, but I see the same thing when I look into a humans eyes and a cows eyes.. barely aware of anything besides what was programmed into them. I know I am no different too.

What sets us apart I think is our ability for self-reflective behavior, to go inwards and find that which see's, that which is aware. Other animals, even the highly intelligent ones like dolphins, don't possess this ability. Maybe they do, i haven't talked to one recently however. Their intelligence is incredible though, same with elephants. It's often said that one of our great abilities that animals don't have is future planning.. I think this could be debated with dolphins and elephants. They live in an environment/situation where it's not really needed in the same way it is for us.
 
Humans tend to assign consciousness and intelligence to things that reflect their own projections back at them in pleasant or relational ways. So the real question that's dancing around the edge of "consciousness" is whether or not animals are people, and I would say yes. They have different behaviors, inclinations, cultures, etc than we do, but that does not make them any less sentient.

Animals that learn some of our human culture and become more amiable to our lifestyles become members of the family, whereas wild animals or livestock are often just viewed as consumable resources.

There are handfuls of cases throughout the modern period of human children growing up in the wild, separate from human civilization. They usually can't be "rehabilitated". They can't learn human languages. Yet they can communicate with other animals and understand the subtle flow of nature better than other humans can. And we still consider these humans "conscious" even though they basically behave like other animals in the wild.

In a nutshell... I find this discussion arrogant. It doesn't matter how many experiments we do on animals, we will never have the first-person view of animal consciousness as we do our own. I don't think any human is qualified to pass judgment on the capacities of other species, especially given that many of those other species have abilities that we don't yet comprehend. Many of those abilities are sources of our own invention and creativity.

The only thing that makes humans right, it seems, is their might. *shrug*
 
My thoughts were that animals are keen to suffering just as much as we are. That makes me feel they are more conscious than we think. We think of animals as objects a lot but when I heard an owl croaking I revalized they must feel the same pain we do. Just chilling in the jungle smoking weed with my friend. The same need for food and survival. On an evolutionary, humans on an animalistic level.

I can see it in their eyes they are more aware than we think. My cat is unaware but that's because hes very spoiled. But I feel the fight for need and survival and feel pain makes you more aware than you think. Even an evolutionary behind animal. They don't fully understand life the same way we do, but they must ponder 'why am I here', at times, don't u think? Or no.
 
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Sorry for the late reply. I am very busy. I will make a better reply in 2-3 days. In the meantime, rick,

dog-training-18.jpg


Would you consider Pavlov's dog being consciousness of his environment? Is the dog aware that "this is food?"

I suspect that animal behavior is often based on: imitation and/or conditioning. And habitual (read: "intelligent") behavior does not entail consciousness per se.

p.s. I will reply on the previous posts later.

I see what you're saying but I'd say yeah a dog will know food is food.. not just from conditioning.. and if it isn't.. neither are we.

Pavlovian conditioning works in humans too. A persons blood vessels will dilate at the sound of a bell if conditioned to do so.

But at the same time I'd argue we are no more conscious than what you are proposing an animal to be..

Actually you may be able to help me find more about the idea i mean;

We are nothing more than a machine wired to survive, learning almost everything from outside stimuli.. this database of the world around us that we have been exposed to is what leads to every thought, feeling, desire, dream, whatever you may have. But in essence.. Consciousness and free will are illusions that arise from the complexity of a brain being able to process and store so much information.

But going back to original post the way I see it.. there is no difference between the consciousness of a human and that of an animal (well, higher intelligence animals) aside from the level of which they are conscious. Taking great apes as an example.. they have just as much consciousness as a child, maybe a bit more maybe a bit less. They are capable of the same consciousness concepts whether or not they apply to them is another story (and if they did, how would we know?) .. Consciousness = Intelligence. If not the correlation is so tightly nit it may as well be causation.
 
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rick said:
the way I see it.. there is no difference between the consciousness of a human and that of an animal (well, higher intelligence animals) aside from the level of which they are conscious.

The way I see it, discussants in this thread are not actually in disagreement. I don't think that anyone's arguing that all non-human animals lack any sort of experience of the world. We're likely only in disagreement over at which points consciousness develops to what degree, and over what distinguishes human consciousness as unique (even those who argue that there is no qualitative break will have to concede that that the raw quantitative differences in informational processing will lead to at least minor qualitative phenomena).

I see what you're saying but I'd say yeah a dog will know food is food.. not just from conditioning.. and if it isn't.. neither are we.

You state this, but I don't think that you establish it through argument. What suggests that classical conditioning in dogs leads to particular subjective experiences (let alone those similar to humans')? While I would be very surprised if dogs lacked an experience of the world entirely, I would also be very surprised if it were remotely similar to ours. I think that your extension of the description of classical conditioning to humans is wrong-headed as well, as classical conditioning does not always produce subjective experience of this conditioning in humans. If you were to send me through the same training procedure linking the ringing of a bell to presentation of (desirable) food, it's likely that I would be unaware of subsequent salivation occurring in response to a ringed bell, let alone having an experience linking this salivation to the training entailed. So when looking for the conditions undergirding consciousness, we'll have to look beyond classical conditioning.


We are nothing more than a machine wired to survive, learning almost everything from outside stimuli.. this database of the world around us that we have been exposed to is what leads to every thought, feeling, desire, dream, whatever you may have.

Right, but different machines operate in different ways toward different ends, engaging different types of information, processing it in different ways. So we have to ask, what type of processing results in the emergence of consciousness of this processing and why?

A telling example might be the internet: as of now, the volume at which it processes information is roughly equivalent to or greater than that of the human brain (this is taking on assumption current theories about how the nervous system codes information). Would we expect the internet to possess consciousness? Why or why not?

Taking great apes as an example.. they have just as much consciousness as a child, maybe a bit more maybe a bit less.

How would we know? I find it a parsimonious hypothesis to expect apes trained in language to possess conscious states resembling that of humans with moderate developmental delay (remember, Koko's lexicon held a bit over a thousand signs, IIRC (lol, were her trainers even native-level proficient speakers of ASL? :P)), but this is an ape that has been socialized to become partly human--she had access to the wider social framework which plays a key role in imbuing us with human intelligence.

Foreigner said:
In a nutshell... I find this discussion arrogant. It doesn't matter how many experiments we do on animals, we will never have the first-person view of animal consciousness as we do our own.

True, but I also lack a first-person account of anyone's consciousness other than my own, yet is seems a bit odd to deem myself the only conscious being. So we have to again ask, what processes produce consciousness? In line with I said, I would be really surprised if consciousness arose in all life, as some beings (indeed, probably some beings with some degree of neural centralization) likely lack sufficient faculties of informational processing. At the same time, I would also be very surprised if consciousness only arose in humans, as some animals even posses sufficient cultural variation to produce what we would call meanings. Indeed, I'm certain enough in this assumption to have adopted vegetarianism out of ethical concerns.

GodAndLove said:
Who speaks like this in real life?

Indeed, I do.

What is the point of over complicating simple constructs?

Er...this is a rather complicated matter, to the point of precluding us to having come to any definitive conclusions in thousands of years of engaging the question.

ebola
 
True, but I also lack a first-person account of anyone's consciousness other than my own, yet is seems a bit odd to deem myself the only conscious being. So we have to again ask, what processes produce consciousness? In line with I said, I would be really surprised if consciousness arose in all life, as some beings (indeed, probably some beings with some degree of neural centralization) likely lack sufficient faculties of informational processing. At the same time, I would also be very surprised if consciousness only arose in humans, as some animals even posses sufficient cultural variation to produce what we would call meanings. Indeed, I'm certain enough in this assumption to have adopted vegetarianism out of ethical concerns.

Human labels of sentience are species-centric, in that we assign intelligence values to creatures that can project our qualities back at us. That's why you feel strange saying you're the only conscious being... because other humans reflect yourself back at you. Animals can do this better than others gain our favour, which is why I find the whole debate arrogant.

I would prefer to assume that animals are all intelligent than not. Just because they aren't relational, or relational in the way humans appreciate, doesn't mean they aren't conscious of certain things.

I guess I'm less hung up on meaning than others are. I find all of nature incredibly intelligent... the way everything interconnects and works seamlessly together.
 
I'm going to put forth that one can have systems can exhibit dynamics that function with 'intelligence' without sentience. We need only look at ourselves. The vast majority of processing that occurs in the brain never crosses the threshold of awareness, and the functioning of processing in the CNS depends on dynamic calibration to organizing dynamics in our non-nervous systemic body and surrounding environment.

Human labels of sentience are species-centric

Maybe in practice, but need this be the case in principle? I would qualify sentience as the emergence of awareness, nothing more, and nothing less. And it doesn't necessarily follow that systems that produce more intelligent behavior somehow produce quantitatively 'more' consciousness. While there may be a wider range of discernible conscious experiences available to more intelligent entities, this doesn't entail that they have 'more' consciousness at any given moment (this is sort of punting the problem of comparison between disparate states of awareness of each individual, wholly qualitatively distinct moment).

I would prefer to assume that animals are all intelligent than not. Just because they aren't relational, or relational in the way humans appreciate, doesn't mean they aren't conscious of certain things.

But this still raises the key questions of why all animals would be conscious and why we should stop at animals.

ebola
 
What of dolphins, elephants and great apes?

How would we get over the language barrier when asking such abstract things such as "do you understand truth?"

I do not think we can. Animals, even the ones taught sign language or other forms of communication, never ask us questions. They very well may be able to understand our questions, as well as be able to communicate what they observe, but they cannot ask us why am I here? or what is that thing?.
 
Koko is able to ask questions (at least to facilitate making requests) or to point out something as deceptive. No, she probably does not ask, "Why do I exist?" or, "What are the fundamental properties of being?" but this is setting the bar for sentience WAY too high.

ebola
 
I did not mean "why do I exist", I meant "why am I in this particular location". Take an ape to the vet and they may instinctively act out aggressively but will not ask why am I going. A child will still act out but question why he must be there in the first place. As far as I can tell, even the experts on these matters agree. I also do not believe facilitating a request and asking a question are the same thing. My dog will scratch at me in order to get me to pet her, much in the same way these apes use sign language or pictograms to facilitate their requests. I see it more as "I want food" than "what is there to eat".
 
How would you explain Koko's use of the signs "to ask" or "fake" in behaviorist terms? What about her rudimentary use of grammar? She also desires to have a child.

ebola
 
I am not sure why having a baby has anything to do with it. That is just instinct. Does she really use grammar? Look up Herbert Terrace and Nim Chimpsky. He pretty much disproves this. (me eat and eat me are the same, the longer the sentence the less sense it makes and most importantly that chimps and apes only seem to sign in response to their handlers.) Ask means to request, not just to inquire. American Sign Language even has two separate signs. So, assuming Koko knows sign language, of which I personally do not believe, her ask is more of a symbol of requesting than of true inquiry.
 
You don't believe Koko knows sign language? Umm.. What do you believe she is doing then?
 
Kanzi is the most interesting case. He absolutely seems to understand what is being said but other animals can be trained to respond to human voices too. I would be interested to know if they gave him a synonym of a word that he was unfamiliar with would he inquire as to what it meant, as a human would.
 
Quite possibly.. but even if she didn't this may be down to a lack of understanding of that part of the human language and it's concept.

There are many reasons why Kanzi may not have asked questions but i bet it comes down to never being taught how to.

When studying apes in captivity we have to remember that, to the animal, it will be a master / pet kinda roll.. Me boss, you do as I say.

The language barrier exists, obviously, and it's massive.

I know may cat wonders what he's going to have for dinner because when i make the noise for food time, he comes running and he'll be trying to see in the bag.. if i pull out a tin he loses almost all interest whereas if i pull out a pouch he's loving it..
 
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