Microbial consciousness, plausible?

In summary, Lynn Margulis argues that humans are not as special or unique as they believe, as evidenced by the possibility of microbial consciousness. She believes that everything, including consciousness, can be reduced to chemical reactions and responses to stimuli. Margulis also questions the definition of consciousness and how it applies to different organisms. She suggests that consciousness is an emergent property of the physical and chemical architecture of the brain.
  • #1
PIT2
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Everyone here knows that science has not figured out how the hell the brain does it, or even if it does it. Some scientists think microbes are conscious, that that they experience something. Here are two quotes from Lynn Margulis:

Of course, "bacterial awareness is more limited than that of a human mind," she says. "I don't want to seem simpleminded." Nonetheless, Margulis thinks all organisms, especially microscopic ones, deserve billing on the marquee of consciousness. "I've watched conscious bacteria for hours," she enthused recently, "seeing things about which everyone would scream if they saw them. Unbelievable diversity! A microscopic theater with thousands of beings all interacting, dying, killing, feeding, excreting, and sexually provoking each other--all activities most people think are so specifically human." Gazing at that scene, she says, "The idea that only people are conscious makes me laugh."
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1430/is_n1_v16/ai_14372875

The evolutionary antecedent of the nervous system is "microbial consciousness." In my description of the origin of the eukaryotic cell via bacterial cell merger, the components fused via symbiogenesis are already "conscious" entities. I have reconstructed an aspect of the origin of the neurotubule system by a hypothesis that can be directly tested. The idea is that the system of microtubules that became neurotubules has as its origin once-independent eubacteria of a very specific kind. Nothing, I claim, has ever been lost without a trace in evolution. The remains of the evolutionary process, the sequence that occurred that produced Cajal's neuron and other cells, live today.
http://www.annalsnyas.org/cgi/content/abstract/929/1/55

Most peoples first reaction at this idea will be something like shock and ridicule. After all, microbes are so different from humans. Humans read books and do math, microbes dont. Thinking that microbes are conscious is to attribute human traits to non-human organisms, and this surely is a serious mistake (also known as anthropomorphism).

But, there is a flip-side to the coin, because if we say that consciousness is a purely human or human-like phenomenom, then we are projecting human traits to consciousness. This is like projecting human traits to 'life', believing that if something doesn't have 2 legs, 2 arms, etc. then that something isn't alive. Or projecting human traits to 'communication', believing that if something doesn't use english words, then it doesn't communicate.

Or as Margulis would put it:
"The idea that only humans are alive, makes me laugh."
"The idea that only humans communicate, makes me laugh."

But what about consciousness?

Here are some more links about margulis her ideas:
http://www.edge.org/q2006/q06_7.html#margulis
http://www.astrobio.net/news/article2111.html
http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC34/Margulis.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Margulis
 
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  • #2
I am interested in any and all theories regarding consciousness. If microbes are conscious, wouldn't consciousness then reduce into either chemical interactions and the reactions they produce or quantum effects? I have never been able to grasp the concept that phenomonalogical consciousness is the product of organized patterns of neurons or electrons in any capacity.

Also, we might want to define consciousness. It is not the qualities of thought, memory, communication, etc. that defines our consciousness.

It is the experience itself!

Since microbes don't have conventional brains, what purpose is our brain in generating consciousness? Perhaps consciousness is a purely subjective experience, belonging exclusively to the specific architecture and engineering present in the organism, one which we can not transcend to postulate other types of consciousness. For instance, humans share similar conscious experiences because we are physically, essentially identical in our architecture. Whales experience a specific type of consciousness, exclusive to their architecture, etc.

Another question which I am always interested in, is how a non-sentient universe is able to dynamically evolve towards an engineering of conscious, sentient entities, like ourselves. This would indicate that the universe is encoded for consciousness!

It is an abstraction but valid none-the-less.
 
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  • #3
PIT2 said:
Everyone here knows that science has not figured out how the hell the brain does it, or even if it does it. Some scientists think microbes are conscious, that that they experience something. Here are two quotes from Lynn Margulis:

You've misinterpeted her statements. She's not arguing that microbes have consciousness, but that humans aren't in any way special. In other words, that everything still boils down to chemical reactions and responses to stimuli.
 
  • #4
Moonbear said:
You've misinterpeted her statements. She's not arguing that microbes have consciousness, but that humans aren't in any way special. In other words, that everything still boils down to chemical reactions and responses to stimuli.

That is the impression that I received after reading the paper but I was reserving judgment until the OP explained his position more clearly.
 
  • #5
Moonbear said:
You've misinterpeted her statements. She's not arguing that microbes have consciousness, but that humans aren't in any way special. In other words, that everything still boils down to chemical reactions and responses to stimuli.
Do u have a source to show this?
I agree that the natural implication of microbial consciousness is that humans arent as special/unique as they think they are.
 
  • #6
We can model memory, aspects of simple cognition, basic language and communication, problem solving, etc. in Newtonian Neural Networks of Consciousness, however, we are unable to model phenomeonalogical consciousness, or experience.

For instance, humans experience numbers, symbols, letters, concepts, colors, memories, perceptions, ideas, etc. in a unique and subjective way.

I am sure you are familiar with Church-Turing machines and algorithms. We can program and model algorithms which ensures the machine will arrive at a specific conclusion, however, the machine does not actually understand the algorithm itself.

It is this property of consciousness, the actual experience, that is unique to sentient organisms.

I am still of the impression that consciousness is an emergent property of the physical and chemical architecture of the brain. When one considers water and it's property of wetness, one does not separate 'wetness' from water. Instead, one speaks of wetness as a property of water.

This is how I view consciousness, an emergent property of the brain's architecture. I do not see the reason to separate consciousness and the brain into two separate substances as they are appear as both aspects of the same thing.
 
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  • #7
complexPHILOSOPHY said:
Since microbes don't have conventional brains, what purpose is our brain in generating consciousness?
Thats a good question. If we can deduce the function of subjective experiences in organisms, we could use this logically to determine if it is required in microbes.

Perhaps consciousness is a purely subjective experience, belonging exclusively to the specific architecture and engineering present in the organism, one which we can not transcend to postulate other types of consciousness.
What do u mean with this?
 
  • #8
PIT2 said:
Thats a good question. If we can deduce the function of subjective experiences in organisms, we could use this logically to determine if it is required in microbes.

Well, we can't deduce anything because the premises do not necessarily contain the conclusion. However, we can induce a causal relationship from observation.

What do u mean with this?

We experience consciousness and assume that our experience can and should be applied universally, across macroscopic wholes. For instance, consider the ant and the human, permitting anthropomorphism for demonstrative purposes:

The ants demonstrate social order, communication, hierarchy of social status, war, slavery (they enslave aphids and give them different roles such as cattle, workers), etc.

The humans demonstrate similar characteristics (historically, we fought in the same fashion the ants fight, lines of soldiers marching towards battle) and various other characteristics.

Naturally, we assume our conscious experience should be applied to the ants and since we can assume they have no knowledge of mathematics or physics, that they are not conscious or are chemical machines.

However, what I am postulating is that if consciousness is a purely physical phenomena, one that emerges out of the physical and chemical architecture of the organism's brain, then perhaps each conscious experience is causally related to that architecture. We assume the qualities of our experience constitutes consciousness when each organism could experience an entirely different mode of consciousness, which because of our subjectivity, we can not transcend to explore.

I have always wondered if we do not have the perceptual skills or awareness to identify qualities of consciousness in other organisms because consciousness is so unique to the physical architecture.

While humans all experience reality differently, we all have a similar experience because our brains and bodies are relatively the same. Whales are the same, ants are the same, etc. Since we share similarities, we share similar conscious experiences but it is a non sequitur to assume all qualities are the same because of this.

It's purely conjectural, nothing unique and very obvious. I am just rambling. If I were asked to formulate a logically rigorous argument in support of this, I might not be as inclined to provide this answer. :P

I am bored at work and trying to type in a rush so I hope that is coherent, if not i'll rephrase it later.
 
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  • #9
complexPHILOSOPHY said:
However, what I am postulating is that if consciousness is a purely physical phenomena, one that emerges out of the physical and chemical architecture of the organism's brain, then perhaps each conscious experience is causally related to that architecture. We assume the qualities of our experience constitutes consciousness when each organism could experience an entirely different mode of consciousness, which because of our subjectivity, we can not transcend to explore.
U mention that it emerges out of brains, so that would rule out microbes, but i wonder what is unique about brains. Brains have neural networks and microbes have metabolic networks.

I have always wondered if we do not have the perceptual skills or awareness to identify qualities of consciousness in other organisms because consciousness is so unique to the physical architecture.

There is a part of our brain called the reptillian complex:

The R-complex is named for the most advanced part of the brain higher mammals shared with reptiles. It is responsible for rage, xenophobia, basic survival fight-or-flight responses, territoriality, social hierarchy, and the desire to follow leaders blindly.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reptilian_brain

So ur idea is not strange and makes sense, there is a physical structure that resembles that of other organisms, and this goes down not just to parts of our brains, but right to the scale of our cells. So as far as reductive materialism is concerned, i am puzzled why it would (paradoxically) reject reduction beyond the brain.
 
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  • #10
Well, if they're conscious, then I guess I should feel worse about incinerating them at the end of a wire loop or tossing them into a phenolic solution at the end of a plastic loop.
 
  • #11
Hi Pit, thanks for all the references. Interesting post.

From reading the references it sounds to me like Lynn Margulis is using the term "consciousness" to mean phenomenal consciousness as opposed to simple behaviourism. Would you agree?

Computationalism generally suggests that p-consciousness is an emergent property of the entire brain, which conflicts with any suggestion that microbes have some form of p-consciousness. However, there are some that have already proposed that p-consciousness is a property of a single cell (ie: neuron). Steven Sevush wrote an interesting paper about this here:
http://cogprints.org/4432/01/single%5Fneuron%5Ftheory.htm
 
  • #12
Q_Goest said:
From reading the references it sounds to me like Lynn Margulis is using the term "consciousness" to mean phenomenal consciousness as opposed to simple behaviourism. Would you agree?
I agree.

Computationalism generally suggests that p-consciousness is an emergent property of the entire brain, which conflicts with any suggestion that microbes have some form of p-consciousness. However, there are some that have already proposed that p-consciousness is a property of a single cell (ie: neuron). Steven Sevush wrote an interesting paper about this here:
http://cogprints.org/4432/01/single%5Fneuron%5Ftheory.htm
Interesting theory, i will have a look at it. I had some thoughts about microbial mind earlier today like that. I thought perhaps, if each microbe is conscious, then the more they communicate with each other by sending signals back and forth, then eventually they become so interdependent that not only do their physical structures 'merge', but also their consciousness(think of a bacterial colony that behaves as a whole). I know Dennett and others have no problem splitting mind over different parts of the brain, and these ideas by splitting them over different neurons or even different microbes go along with this reductionism.

Talking about computationalism, there are many links about bacterial computation in google.
 
  • #13
PIT2 said:
Do u have a source to show this?
I agree that the natural implication of microbial consciousness is that humans arent as special/unique as they think they are.

It's in your source. It's pretty clear from her statements in that article.

PIT2 said:
U mention that it emerges out of brains, so that would rule out microbes, but i wonder what is unique about brains. Brains have neural networks and microbes have metabolic networks.

Complexity. Brains also have metabolic functions, but have more layers of complexity beyond that. Note that microbes don't have to communicate with each other, just react to chemical or photic stimuli in their environment.

What this discussion really is touching upon, but not directly addressing, is the age-old mind-brain dualism debate among philosophers. To biologists (neuroscientists), consciousness is just a manifestation of the complex chemical reactions and neuronal networks within the brain. There are philosophers, however, who instead argue that the "mind" (and consciousness) is distinct from the brain. This is the context of the comments made in the opening post...to a scientist, consciousness is just another set of chemical reactions occurring within the brain. It's only the philosophers who put a different spin on it.
 
  • #14
Moonbear said:
It's in your source. It's pretty clear from her statements in that article.
Lets just let margulis speak for herself:

The evolutionary antecedent of the nervous system is "microbial consciousness." In my description of the origin of the eukaryotic cell via bacterial cell merger, the components fused via symbiogenesis are already "conscious" entities.
...
"The idea that only people are conscious makes me laugh."
...
Acknowledging that our ancestors are bacteria is humbling and has disturbing implications ... it challenges the alleged uniqueness of human intelligent consciousness.
...
Well, you can show that microorganisms, or bacteria, are certainly conscious ... there's every bit of evidence that intelligence is a property of life from the very beginning. It's been modified, of course, and changed and amplified, even, but it's an intrinsic property of cells.
...
we would be forced to admit that bacteria are conscious, that they are sensitive to stimuli in their environment and behave accordingly.
So that's enough about her.

Complexity. Brains also have metabolic functions, but have more layers of complexity beyond that.
What is it about that particular complexity that would form consciousness, whereas the also complex functioning of microbes would not?

Note that microbes don't have to communicate with each other, just react to chemical or photic stimuli in their environment.
The same can be/is said about neurons, that they just react to chemical reactions in the brain. A lot of scientists would love to be able to describe the brain completely in physical terms, but they can't because we all know from experience that there is more to it. There is the question of why an organism would need any subjectivity to be able to function - couldn't physical reactions just do what they seem to be doing without it? The answer to that is most likely, i think u would agree, 'no' (if it were 'yes', it would rob consciousness of any evolutionary use).

Also here are some links about bacterial communication:
http://star.tau.ac.il/~eshel/papers/Trends-published.pdf
http://star.tau.ac.il/~eshel/bacterial_linguistic.html
http://www.basic.northwestern.edu/g-buehler/cellint0.htm

What this discussion really is touching upon, but not directly addressing, is the age-old mind-brain dualism debate among philosophers. To biologists (neuroscientists), consciousness is just a manifestation of the complex chemical reactions and neuronal networks within the brain. There are philosophers, however, who instead argue that the "mind" (and consciousness) is distinct from the brain.
Since we are still talking about physical structures as the basis of consciousness here, there is no need for dualism to consider microbes being conscious. Margulis, and also Hameroff, think that microtubules may be responsible for the computation that produces consciousness.

Shapiro is another scientist who thinks bacteria are sentient:

40 years experience as a bacterial geneticist have taught me that bacteria
possess many cognitive, computational and evolutionary capabilities unimaginable in the
first six decades of the 20th Century. Analysis of cellular processes such as metabolism,
regulation of protein synthesis, and DNA repair established that bacteria continually
monitor their external and internal environments and compute functional outputs based on
information provided by their sensory apparatus. Studies of genetic recombination,
lysogeny, antibiotic resistance and my own work on transposable elements revealed
multiple widespread bacterial systems for mobilizing and engineering DNA molecules.
Examination of colony development and organization led me to appreciate how extensive
multicellular collaboration is among the majority of bacterial species. Contemporary
research in many laboratories on cell-cell signaling, symbiosis and pathogenesis show that
bacteria utilize sophisticated mechanisms for intercellular communication and even have
the ability to commandeer the basic cell biology of “higher” plants and animals to meet
their own needs. This remarkable series of observations requires us to revise basic ideas
about biological information processing and recognize that even the smallest cells are
sentient beings.
http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/2006.ExeterMeeting.pdf
http://shapiro.bsd.uchicago.edu/bacteria.html [Broken]
 
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  • #15
PIT said: Since we are still talking about physical structures as the basis of consciousness here, there is no need for dualism to consider microbes being conscious.
agree. Isn't it really the philosophers that support computationalism? I'm not aware of any recent philosophers of mind that support any kind of dualism, and generally they support computationalism. Searle, Putnam, Harnad and a few others stand out as those that don't support computationalism, but they don't support any kind of dualistic approach either.

Margulis, and also Hameroff, think that microtubules may be responsible for the computation that produces consciousness.
I was wondering if she supported some kind of quantum approach, but I wonder why microtubules. What other structures in a cell might be usefull?

Here's a thought experiment. Take a neuron out of a brain and put it into a special petri dish. This dish subjects the neuron to all the same exact stimuli it had in the brain, including synaptic actions, em fields, etc. We might for example take recordings of the interactions while the neuron was in the brain and duplicate a series of actions on the single neuron while it was in the dish. Would such a cell have p-consciousness? Obviously from the perspective of the single cell, it would by definition have no ability to discern whether or not it was inside the brain or in the petri dish.

Now take all the rest of the neurons in the brain and put them into similar petri dishes. If all these neurons have no way to distinguish whether or not they are inside a brain or inside a petri dish, how can any phenomenon created by those neurons be different? I don't think there is any way. They must create all the same phenomenon, including consciousness.

In the case of a single bacteria, the signals it gets from the environment are limited to the random noise of the environment. The signals a neuron in a brain or petri dish gets is different, it is highly coordinated input from other neurons. From that thought experiment, I wouldn't think a bacteria would have an experience anything like a neuron would, the experiences would be quite different. But large groups of bacteria signaling each other might also create a coordinated input, albeit nothing nearly as complex as a neuron in a brain.
 
  • #16
Q_Goest said:
This dish subjects the neuron to all the same exact stimuli it had in the brain, including synaptic actions, em fields, etc. We might for example take recordings of the interactions while the neuron was in the brain and duplicate a series of actions on the single neuron while it was in the dish.
Would this simulation in a dish include phenomenal stimuli?

Now take all the rest of the neurons in the brain and put them into similar petri dishes. If all these neurons have no way to distinguish whether or not they are inside a brain or inside a petri dish, how can any phenomenon created by those neurons be different? I don't think there is any way. They must create all the same phenomenon, including consciousness.
Wouldnt u end up with about 100 billion brains, one for each neuron? I am not sure i understand the point of ur thought experiment.

But let's suppose different types of cells/microbes, also produce different kinds of experiences(like our 5 senses do). If these different types start interacting witheachother in such a way that they form networks/colonies then, like in the brain, the phenomenal aspects would also start influencing each other, producing new kinds of experiences. Causality between experiences is something that may create something 'different'.

In the case of a single bacteria, the signals it gets from the environment are limited to the random noise of the environment. The signals a neuron in a brain or petri dish gets is different, it is highly coordinated input from other neurons. From that thought experiment, I wouldn't think a bacteria would have an experience anything like a neuron would, the experiences would be quite different. But large groups of bacteria signaling each other might also create a coordinated input, albeit nothing nearly as complex as a neuron in a brain.
Yes a single bacteria would have quite a different experience because of the type of information it receives. U might compare it to a person living on a deserted island and one living in an internet cafe.
 
  • #17
Would this simulation in a dish include phenomenal stimuli?
What is "phenomenal stimuli"? If we assume the only stimuli given to any cell is in the form of light or em fields, molecules interacting at the cell surface, etc… then all these stimuli are essentially classical in nature. I think we should steer clear of 'special signals' that include something above and beyond the interactions science presently looks to explain.

Wouldnt u end up with about 100 billion brains, one for each neuron?
Let's assume there are no 'special signals' such as "phenomenal stimuli". If every neuron is doing exactly what it was doing prior to being put into a petri dish, there's no way for any of the 100 billion neurons to distinguish between life in a petri dish and life in the brain.

Im not sure i understand the point of ur thought experiment.
If there's no difference between the petri dish brain and the connected brain (I'm suggesting there is no difference), then p-consciousness is a property of individual cells.

I'm not suggesting how a single, unified experience might come about from the interaction of neurons, I'm only suggesting (and agreeing with the OP) that consciousness is a property of single cells. Note that Sevush addresses this issue to a degree in his paper. I'll have to reread his paper again, it's been quite a while since I read it. But he takes up the challange of how numerous individually conscious cells within a person's brain might create the single unified experience.
 
  • #18
Q_Goest said:
What is "phenomenal stimuli"? If we assume the only stimuli given to any cell is in the form of light or em fields, molecules interacting at the cell surface, etc… then all these stimuli are essentially classical in nature. I think we should steer clear of 'special signals' that include something above and beyond the interactions science presently looks to explain.
Phenomenal stimuli are experiences that influence the neurons. Do u mean to say that the physical stimuli also contain the phenomenal ones because they are the same?

If there's no difference between the petri dish brain and the connected brain (I'm suggesting there is no difference), then p-consciousness is a property of individual cells.
But there are technical difficulties in how u would reproduce all the stimuli without using a neural-like network or any other structure. If u did use any structure, consciousness could still be a property of that structure as a whole.

*Nevermind i get it now. If the structure surrounding the neuron was different, yet the stimuli it sends to the neuron the same, then a different experience would imply that the experience is generated by more than the neuron and its impulses.
 
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  • #19
If a microbe has a reaction on it's environment, for example it moves acc. to light conditions or other conditions, then in some sense the microbe is "aware" of light. But then this "awareness" is not to be confused with consciousness, since then everything is consciousness. There is of course no well-defined border between the non-living material world and the living material world, and consciousness and unconsciosness. Is a virus living?
 
  • #20
heusdens said:
But then this "awareness" is not to be confused with consciousness,

That, in my view, is the key point.
 
  • #21
heusdens said:
If a microbe has a reaction on it's environment, for example it moves acc. to light conditions or other conditions, then in some sense the microbe is "aware" of light. But then this "awareness" is not to be confused with consciousness, since then everything is consciousness.
If something acts like it can sense the environment and respond to it in such a way that allows it and its counterparts to survive, why would it be confusion to think that it actually does sense something?
 
  • #22
I would be careful with your use of the word 'sense' as it seems to be different in reference to microbes than to humans. While humans do 'sense' mechanical and physical energy, we have an extra element of perception.

Simply responding to a stimuli doesn't imply perception, unless as already mentioned you want to classify a virus as living.

Also, the simple axiom of 'reaction or sense' to stimuli that you seem to establish, essentially describes everything as conscious. I guess plants are conscious because they demonstrate reactive responses to stimuli?

I can program a robot to respond to specific stimuli, this doesn't mean it's conscious. Atoms chemically respond to one another in a reactive fashion, does this constitue consciousness?

Perhaps I am misunderstanding? Probably.
 
  • #23
complexPHILOSOPHY said:
Simply responding to a stimuli doesn't imply perception, unless as already mentioned you want to classify a virus as living.
But there is no difference visible in humans. When u look at our brains, u can just as well say that our neurons 'simply respond to stimuli'. The sensing aspect of it is invisible whether its a microbe or human brain. A virus could also have some experiencing aspect. Certainly, experience and the resulting 'guided' behaviour would fit perfectly into the process of abiogenesis, which is still a mystery. Though let's stick to microbes in this topic and assume that the subjectivity breaks down when the complexities of microbes degrade into that of their nonliving ancestors.

Also, the simple axiom of 'reaction or sense' to stimuli that you seem to establish, essentially describes everything as conscious. I guess plants are conscious because they demonstrate reactive responses to stimuli?
From the fact that our brains possesses subjectivity, it is only logical to think that everything else might also (our brains are after all made from the same stuff as the rest of the universe). So this is not unique to considering microbes as conscious.
 
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  • #24
In the first reference from the OP:
When Margulis presented her view two years ago at the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the audience seemed skeptical. One man pointed out a balloon bobbing against the ceiling, "responding to gravity. Is this consciousness?" he challenged. But the balloon wasn't alive, Margulis pointed out. "Conscious processes are associated with live beings." (She was annoyed when Science magazine wrongly reported that she had argued that the balloon was conscious, though not alive.)
Ref: http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1430/is_n1_v16/ai_14372875

The man in the audience was pointing out that the behavior of something (the balloon) does not equate to consciousness. Margulis obviously agrees with this, saying the balloon isn't alive. Behaviorism does not equate to consciousness. However, microbes seem to behave as if they are both alive (safe to say) and conscious (debatable).

The term "consciousness" here is being used to indicate experience in the sense of phenomenal consciousness. Whether or not a microbe has any kind of experience at all is questionable. It would seem they have little or no capacity to remember, but at least if they are alive we might say there is some form of experience that is had by the microbe, regardlesss of how exceedingly slight it may be.

I think you have to ask if this phenomena that allows something to have an experience is a property of something or not. I don't think it's correct to say a rock can have this property of consciousness even in some exceedingly slight amount. Computationalists might argue with this. But I think it's safe to say that this phenomenon of experiencing something is a property of living cells and then recognize that some cells (ie: microbes) have very little ability to interpret their environment while humans have considerable ability to interpret their environment. That ability increases the phenomena considerably as we can see from the more complex behavior.
 
  • #25
Q_Goest said:
I think you have to ask if this phenomena that allows something to have an experience is a property of something or not.
What does it mean to be a property of something?
 
  • #26
PIT2 said:
If something acts like it can sense the environment and respond to it in such a way that allows it and its counterparts to survive, why would it be confusion to think that it actually does sense something?

Because then in this sense, anything is aware. Water is aware of temperature, since it transforms into gas at 100 degrees. But is the water aware/consciousness?
Is any kind of material interaction awareness? And is all awareness consciousness?

The line between these things is like I said never a strict line, material interactions form the basis on which living complex molecule formations interact with the environment in increasing complex ways as the organism becomes more complex.
 
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  • #27
heusdens said:
Because then in this sense, anything is aware. Water is aware of temperature, since it transforms into gas at 100 degrees. But is the water aware/consciousness?
Is any kind of material interaction awareness? And is all awareness consciousness?
The level of complexity between microbes and water is enormous, which means u can pick any level of complexity inbetween as a minimal requirement for consciousness. The brain has in the past been selected as such a requirement and even though there is no strict line seperating the evolutionary ancestor of the brain and the brain itself, many people were happy to consider water as non-conscious.
 
  • #28
If experts in the AI field managed to create robots that behaved like bacteria, would those robots be considered intelligent?
 

1. Is it possible for microbes to have consciousness?

The concept of consciousness in microbes is still a topic of debate in the scientific community. While there is evidence that some microbes can exhibit behaviors that may be considered conscious, such as decision-making and communication, it is still unclear if they possess true consciousness.

2. How would we define consciousness in microbes?

Defining consciousness in any organism, including microbes, is a complex task. Some theories suggest that consciousness is a spectrum, and the level of consciousness in microbes may be different from that of humans. It is also important to consider the limitations of our current understanding and technology when defining consciousness in any organism.

3. What role do microbes play in the environment and how does consciousness play a part?

Microbes are essential to the functioning of ecosystems and play a crucial role in nutrient cycling, decomposition, and maintaining the health of other organisms. While the idea of microbial consciousness is still being explored, it is possible that their behaviors and decision-making abilities may influence their interactions with other organisms and their environment.

4. How could the concept of microbial consciousness impact our understanding of life on Earth?

If it is proven that microbes do possess consciousness, it could have significant implications for our understanding of life on Earth. It could challenge our current definition of what it means to be alive and potentially change the way we view and interact with these tiny organisms.

5. Are there any ethical considerations to be aware of regarding microbial consciousness?

The concept of consciousness in any organism raises ethical questions, including in microbes. If we were to determine that microbes do have consciousness, it may lead to discussions about the treatment and responsibility we have towards these organisms. It is important to approach this topic with caution and continue to gather more evidence and understanding before making any conclusions.

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