Article:
Another reason:
Electrons and other elementary particles don't have the informational substructure (bit-holders) needed to take in and process the information needed for consciousness. In other words, they don't have any sort of brain whatsoever. At least living cells have a rudimentary ability to sense and respond to their environment, undoubtedly traceable to complex subcellular organelle-like structures.
(This post was last modified: 2019-03-13, 03:54 PM by nbtruthman.)
Quote:"....several philosophers have suggested panpsychism as a solution to the mind–body problem.....Their view is not entirely crazy, or at least it’s a bit less crazy than materialism.
However:
Consciousness always has an object, something to which it points. Thoughts are always about something. Thinking things (animals, humans) have the power to think about things. This property of “aboutness,” called intentionality by philosophers, is the hallmark of consciousness. Inanimate things have no inherent power of intentionality; they are never about anything. They merely exist.
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...(Thus) to have a mind, an object must have sense organs. Animals with eyes and ears can grasp forms and think about them. Objects without sense organs have no access to forms and thus cannot think. Interestingly, this implies that living things with rudimentary sensation (photoreceptors on plants, chemoreceptors on bacteria) do have the potential for rudimentary thought.
That raises interesting questions about the nature and quality of thought in lower forms of life. But it is at least reasonable to infer that thought is possible for any living thing that has the ability to sense the environment. In fact, “sensation” implies experience of some sort, however rudimentary. So particles like electrons and larger inanimate things aren’t conscious because they have no sense organs, and thus have no access to forms external to themselves. They cannot think about anything because they cannot sense their environment and cannot access information external to them. Consciousness presupposes content and subatomic particles, like all inanimate things, lack access to content."
Another reason:
Electrons and other elementary particles don't have the informational substructure (bit-holders) needed to take in and process the information needed for consciousness. In other words, they don't have any sort of brain whatsoever. At least living cells have a rudimentary ability to sense and respond to their environment, undoubtedly traceable to complex subcellular organelle-like structures.