'observing' is not necessarily 'experiencing qualia', it could be obtaining information about events. In the latter case the brain is observer of body and world. It learns generalised patterns and responds to them when they occur. Some of the patterns are stimulated internally and some are initiated by the world. None of this requires a metaphysical 'subjectivity'.LaMont Cranston wrote:GrahamH, If I understand where you are trying to get to, I disagree with where you are going. The experiencer and the observer of the experience are one and the same. Observing, in and of itself, is an experience...unless you can demonstrate that it is some other way...or you know of some why to have experiencing and observing to be two different things.
More than that, it appears that the act of observing determines how we judge the experience. That's on us, and we make decisions based on how we observe and judge. On that other thread, I asked when something becomes a thought. If we don't think it, is it a thought? I get it that there are all kinds of things going on in our bodies, and we are not aware of what is happening with every muscle, blood cell, nerve ending, etc. We are aware of whatever it is we are aware of, and we have that experience in present time.
There is this idea that are brain is segmented into parts that don't communicate with each other. Freud didn't invent this idea, but he had a great deal to do with popularizing it, and, ever since Sigmund, most others who have tried to describe how we function have had some version of that model. In case I've missed it, just where does our awareness/consciousness fit into all of this?
If the brain observes how the person it controls behaves, and classifies that behaviour as <person inside having subjective experiences> it will respond to that pattern, as it does to the world, as factual information determining behaviour. If a brain can generate language to communicate about trees it can do the same about it's 'subjective observer' or 'I'. If the brain uses language to 'think about my mind' it ends up philosophising about how special subjective experience is, without there necessarily being anything different to other cognitive brain functions going on.
'Awareness / consciousness' fits in as labels for some of the things brains do in gathering and responding to the world. They are couched in the terms of the fictional subjective observer. That is, they are supposed properties of this fictional construct that represent a small part of what the brain does. More or less 'awareness' relates to an attentional loop activity where the brain amplifies or reinforces its responses to certain stimuli. SoS refers to this as standing waves and can probably provide some neuroscience references to back it up.
A robot analogy might clarify what I mean, perhaps. Imagine a robot that is pre-programmed (c.f. evolved) with capability to learn models of the world, but without information about what it is or how it works. Imagine that it has the ability to detect objects and learn the behaviour patterns of those objects. This might equate to pre-human social animals learning the behaviour of others of their kind.
If the robot is good enough at this task it is likely to apply it to itself. It isn't 'conscious' and there is no knowing homunculus inside intentionaly driving this process. The mechanism learns patterns and responds to the patterns. The learned patterns are objects and behaviours. One of the objects it learns the behaviour of is itself. The learned model predicts how the robot itself will behave. This model informs the behaviour of the robot in interactions with others. The model amounts to <robot inside>, but there is no <robot inside> it is all <robot>.