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> If all you knew about anything was what you read in the papers, and the libraries,
> and you were asked about your consciousness you'd find what you'd read about consciousness and use it to reply.
> And who wrote that stuff about consciousness...people who were conscious.
> I don't see any indication of self-consciousness.
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On Wed, Nov 26, 2025 at 7:37 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
> If all you knew about anything was what you read in the papers, and the libraries,
And all the videos on YouTube, and everything else on the Internet.
> and you were asked about your consciousness you'd find what you'd read about consciousness and use it to reply.
So would a human being, although a human's knowledge base would be far far smaller.
> And who wrote that stuff about consciousness...people who were conscious.
You take that as a given, but why? Because it took intelligence to write that stuff about consciousness and you implicitly assume that intelligence implies consciousness.
That's why you don't believe in solipsism, that's why you believe your fellow human beings are conscious, except when they're sleeping, or under anesthesia, or dead, because when they are in those states they are not behaving intelligently.
> I don't see any indication of self-consciousness.
What exactly would an AI need to say for you to think there were indications of self-consciousness? Do you see any indications of self-consciousness in this email that I have written? Do you see any indications that I am not an AI?
>>> and you were asked about your consciousness you'd find what you'd read about consciousness and use it to reply.
>>So would a human being, although a human's knowledge base would be far far smaller.
> Smaller, but also including direct knowledge of consciousness.
>>> And who wrote that stuff about consciousness...people who were conscious.
>> You take that as a given, but why? Because it took intelligence to write that stuff about consciousness and you implicitly assume that intelligence implies consciousness.
> No, you assume that. But you wouldn't if you reflected on how the LLM seems intelligent
> In part I believe my fellow human beings are conscious because the are physically like me and I'm conscious.
> You seem to think intelligence is the end all and be all of consciousness.
> I think my dog is conscious, even though he's not very intelligent.
> What exactly would an AI need to say for you to think there were indications of self-consciousness? Do you see any indications of self-consciousness in this email that I have written? Do you see any indications that I am not an AI?
> I'd like it to tell me where it was located,
>>> and you were asked about your consciousness you'd find what you'd read about consciousness and use it to reply.>>So would a human being, although a human's knowledge base would be far far smaller.
> Smaller, but also including direct knowledge of consciousness.
I have direct knowledge of my own consciousness but not of yours
>>> And who wrote that stuff about consciousness...people who were conscious.
>> You take that as a given, but why?
Because it took intelligence to write that stuff about consciousness and you implicitly assume that intelligence implies consciousness.> No, you assume that. But you wouldn't if you reflected on how the LLM seems intelligentYou assumed the people that wrote those books about consciousness were themselves conscious, but why did you make that assumption?
> In part I believe my fellow human beings are conscious because the are physically like me and I'm conscious.
Physically like you?
> You seem to think intelligence is the end all and be all of consciousness.
I do. If it were otherwise, if consciousness wasn't an inevitable byproduct of intelligence
> I think my dog is conscious, even though he's not very intelligent.
You're never going to be able to teach General Relativity to your dog, but your dog is a lot more intelligent than a rock, and correspondingly is a lot more conscious than a rock.
> What exactly would an AI need to say
for you to think there were indications of self-consciousness? Do you see any indications of self-consciousness in this email that I have written? Do you see any indications that I am not an AI?
> I'd like it to tell me where it was located,
Asking where consciousness is located is like asking where the integer 4 is located. I don't believe your consciousness is inside a container made of bone for the simple reason that you are not conscious of it being there. When you're repairing a watch with your hands where is your consciousness? The least bad answer would be at the tip of your fingers. When your brain and body is in Seattle and you're watching a football game on TV from Atlanta but you're thinking about the Great Wall Of China, where is your consciousness? The least bad answer would be China.
>> I have direct knowledge of my own consciousness but not of yours
> Which was my point. You know something about consciousness
> that the knowledge base of an LLM doesn't contain.
> You take it as an axiom that intelligent behavior implies consciousness, yet at the same time you recognize that consciousness is "easier" than intelligence.
> So you're now assuming a starfish moving toward food isn't intelligent but may be conscious. Well a starfish will react to a touch.
> The point is that it was not written by an AI, which is a historical fact.
>>> And who wrote that stuff about consciousness...people who were conscious.
>> You take that as a given, but why?
> Yes. Capable of movement, speech, directed action.>>> In part I believe my fellow human beings are conscious because the are physically like me and I'm conscious.
> Physically like you?
>But you make the inference the other way. You assume intelligence implies consciousness,>>> You seem to think intelligence is the end all and be all of consciousness.
>> I do. If it were otherwise, if consciousness wasn't an inevitable byproduct of intelligence
>> You're never going to be able to teach General Relativity to your dog, but your dog is a lot more intelligent than a rock, and correspondingly is a lot more conscious than a rock.
> But the correspondence is not that his intelligence made him conscious. Evolutionarily it's the other way around; sensors develop and drove reaction. Intelligence inserted something more complicated than "drove".
> There are more possible actions than "say".>> What exactly would an AI need to say
> You keep using "AI" instead of LLM. That's not what an LLM would do to try to shift the argument.>> for you to think there were indications of self-consciousness? Do you see any indications of self-consciousness in this email that I have written? Do you see any indications that I am not an AI?
> You lose consciousness when you're hit in the head, not on the tip of your finger.>>> I'd like it to tell me where it was located,
>> Asking where consciousness is located is like asking where the integer 4 is located. I don't believe your consciousness is inside a container made of bone for the simple reason that you are not conscious of it being there. When you're repairing a watch with your hands where is your consciousness? The least bad answer would be at the tip of your fingers. When your brain and body is in Seattle and you're watching a football game on TV from Atlanta but you're thinking about the Great Wall Of China, where is your consciousness? The least bad answer would be China.
On Fri, Nov 28, 2025 at 2:53 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I have direct knowledge of my own consciousness but not of yours> Which was my point. You know something about consciousness
Yes.
> that the knowledge base of an LLM doesn't contain.
You are assuming what you are trying to prove. How do you know that the LLM does not have knowledge of its own consciousness? Maybe the LLM is conscious, but maybe it isn't.
And maybe you're conscious, but maybe you're a philosophical zombie. But I doubt it.
> You take it as an axiom that intelligent behavior implies consciousness, yet at the same time you recognize that consciousness is "easier" than intelligence.
Yes.> So you're now assuming a starfish moving toward food isn't intelligent but may be conscious. Well a starfish will react to a touch.
Evolution managed to produce emotions like pleasure and pain billions of years ago, microorganisms will move towards certain chemicals and away from others, and emotions like fear and anger as exemplified in the fight or flight response. But Evolution only figured out a few million years ago how to produce something we would call intelligent,
and our own species is less than half a million years old.> The point is that it was not written by an AI, which is a historical fact.
>>> And who wrote that stuff about consciousness...people who were conscious.
>> You take that as a given, but why?
You are avoiding the point.
Why do you believe that the PEOPLE who wrote those books about consciousness were themselves conscious? I believe they were conscious because the books were obviously written by an intelligent entity; but you think that is a poor reason so I want to know why you think they were conscious.
> Yes. Capable of movement, speech, directed action.>>> In part I believe my fellow human beings are conscious because the are physically like me and I'm conscious.
> Physically like you?
A machine can do all of those things.
>But you make the inference the other way. You assume intelligence implies consciousness,>>> You seem to think intelligence is the end all and be all of consciousness.
>> I do. If it were otherwise, if consciousness wasn't an inevitable byproduct of intelligence
Yes because that's the only way Darwinian natural selection could ever have produced consciousness, and I know for a fact that it did.
>> You're never going to be able to teach General Relativity to your dog, but your dog is a lot more intelligent than a rock, and correspondingly is a lot more conscious than a rock.> But the correspondence is not that his intelligence made him conscious. Evolutionarily it's the other way around; sensors develop and drove reaction. Intelligence inserted something more complicated than "drove".
I don't know what you mean by that.> There are more possible actions than "say".>> What exactly would an AI need to say
Not for us, we have talked with each other for over a decade but we have never met, all we have done is send words to each other over the Internet. Was that enough for you to determine if I am an intelligent entity or not? It was for me, I think you are an intelligent entity.
> You keep using "AI" instead of LLM. That's not what an LLM would do to try to shift the argument.>> for you to think there were indications of self-consciousness? Do you see any indications of self-consciousness in this email that I have written? Do you see any indications that I am not an AI?
OK. Do you see any indication that I am not a LLM
like Gemini or Claude, or any indication that I am? If so, what is it?>>> I'd like it to tell me where it was located,
>> Asking where consciousness is located is like asking where the integer 4 is located.
I don't believe your consciousness is inside a container made of bone for the simple reason that you are not conscious of it being there. When you're repairing a watch with your hands where is your consciousness? The least bad answer would be at the tip of your fingers.
> You lose consciousness when you're hit in the head, not on the tip of your finger.
You wouldn't lose consciousness if you had a back up brain running in parallel at a different location,
I think I already have redundant fingers, but not a redundant brain.
>> You are assuming what you are trying to prove. How do you know that the LLM does not have knowledge of its own consciousness? Maybe the LLM is conscious, but maybe it isn't.
> Have you asked it?
>> Evolution managed to produce emotions like pleasure and pain billions of years ago, microorganisms will move towards certain chemicals and away from others, and emotions like fear and anger as exemplified in the fight or flight response. But Evolution only figured out a few million years ago how to produce something we would call intelligent,
> That's where we disagree. Intelligence includes following a chemical gradient to food. Bacteria can do it. You seem to move you definition of intelligent around to suit your thesis that it entails consciousness.
> Do you have a definition?
> The stuff that an LLM "knows" was all written by people.
> Sophistry. You know damn well what physical likeness means.>>> Yes. Capable of movement, speech, directed action.>>>>> In part I believe my fellow human beings are conscious because the are physically like me and I'm conscious.
>>>>Physically like you?
>>A machine can do all of those things.
>>>But you make the inference the other way. You assume intelligence implies consciousness,
>>Yes because that's the only way Darwinian natural selection could ever have produced consciousness, and I know for a fact that it did.
> You can't even get your inferences consistent.
>> Asking where consciousness is located is like asking where the integer 4 is located.
> An evasive answer,
On Fri, Nov 28, 2025 at 9:36 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> You are assuming what you are trying to prove. How do you know that the LLM does not have knowledge of its own consciousness? Maybe the LLM is conscious, but maybe it isn't.> Have you asked it?
Yes certainly. I've asked the question "are you conscious" to every LLM I can find and every one of them insists that it is not conscious, which didn't surprise me one bit. AI companies do not want their customers to have an existential crisis, therefore they do their best to hardwire an unequivocal "NO" response to any question of that sort.
>> Evolution managed to produce emotions like pleasure and pain billions of years ago, microorganisms will move towards certain chemicals and away from others, and emotions like fear and anger as exemplified in the fight or flight response. But Evolution only figured out a few million years ago how to produce something we would call intelligent,
> That's where we disagree. Intelligence includes following a chemical gradient to food. Bacteria can do it. You seem to move you definition of intelligent around to suit your thesis that it entails consciousness.
I don't believe there is a sharp dividing line between something that is intelligent and something that is not, instead there is a continuum. And I don't believe there is a sharp dividing line between fat and skinny either, nevertheless an 80 pound man is unequivocally skinny, and an 800 pound man is unequivocally fat.
> Do you have a definition?
I'm not going to give you a definition because any definition I give you would be made of words, and I have no doubt you would demand a further definition of at least one of those words, and round and round we'd go. But there is something much better than a definition, an example; a rock is not intelligent, Albert Einstein was, and a bacteria is somewhere between those two extremes.
> The stuff that an LLM "knows" was all written by people.
The millions of protein structures that Alphafold deduced and that had puzzled humans for decades sure as hell were NOT written by people.
> Sophistry. You know damn well what physical likeness means.>>> Yes. Capable of movement, speech, directed action.>>>>> In part I believe my fellow human beings are conscious because the are physically like me and I'm conscious.
>>>>Physically like you?
>>A machine can do all of those things.
No, I do not know what "physical likeness" means, at least not the way you seem to be using the term. Please enlighten me.
>>>But you make the inference the other way. You assume intelligence implies consciousness,>>Yes because that's the only way Darwinian natural selection could ever have produced consciousness, and I know for a fact that it did.
> You can't even get your inferences consistent.
Please point out my error.
>> Asking where consciousness is located is like asking where the integer 4 is located.> An evasive answer,
I'm not being evasive at all, I sincerely believe it is nonsense to try to specify where a mind is located because that can only be done with a noun, and you are not a noun, you are an adjective, you are the way that matter behaves when it is organized in a Brentmeekerian way. Right now there is only one chunk of matter in the observable universe that is organized in that way, but that need not always be the case.
Asking where a mind is located is like asking where yellow or fast or big is located.
> do you have a sharp dividing line between conscious and unconscious?
>> I'm not going to give you a definition because any definition I give you would be made of words, and I have no doubt you would demand a further definition of at least one of those words, and round and round we'd go. But there is something much better than a definition, an example; a rock is not intelligent, Albert Einstein was, and a bacteria is somewhere between those two extremes.
> And doesn't exactly the same assertion serve as an example of consciousness?
> yet intelligence and consciousness aren't the same thing.
>> I do not know what "physical likeness" means, at least not the way you seem to be using the term. Please enlighten me.
> Better I'll give you and example. Albert Einstein was physically like me and a rock is not.
>>>> that's the only way Darwinian natural selection could ever have produced consciousness, and I know for a fact that it did.
>>> You can't even get your inferences consistent.> Here's the Venn diagram (conscious (intelligence)) of "...intelligence implies consciousness (3 lines above). Yes,..." But earlier (line 5, 11/28/2025 1326) you wrote, "...if consciousness wasn't an inevitable byproduct of intelligence..." implying the Venn diagram (intelligence (consciousness)). To believe both is to assert they are identical, which I doubt.>>Please point out my error.
>> I sincerely believe it is nonsense to try to specify where a mind is located because that can only be done with a noun, and you are not a noun, you are an adjective, you are the way that matter behaves when it is organized in a Brentmeekerian way. Right now there is only one chunk of matter in the observable universe that is organized in that way, but that need not always be the case.
> So you think the same mind can be located two different places at the same time.
> Can it be thinking two different thoughts?
> your thought is localized in your brain
>> Asking where a mind is located is like asking where yellow or fast or big is located.
> Those are attributes of things,
On Sat, Nov 29, 2025 at 5:42 PM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:
> do you have a sharp dividing line between conscious and unconscious?
No, that's why I can't remember my exact instant of consciousness before I fell asleep last night.
>> I'm not going to give you a definition because any definition I give you would be made of words, and I have no doubt you would demand a further definition of at least one of those words, and round and round we'd go. But there is something much better than a definition, an example; a rock is not intelligent, Albert Einstein was, and a bacteria is somewhere between those two extremes.> And doesn't exactly the same assertion serve as an example of consciousness?
Yes.> yet intelligence and consciousness aren't the same thing.
But you can't have one without the other.... probably. You definitely can't have intelligence without consciousness,
maybe you could have consciousness without intelligence, but I doubt it.
>> I do not know what "physical likeness" means, at least not the way you seem to be using the term. Please enlighten me.
> Better I'll give you and example. Albert Einstein was physically like me and a rock is not.
I agree that physically you're more like Einstein than you are to a rock, but most rocks contain all the elements that your body contains, so you are not completely dissimilar. And the genome of a banana is 60% like your genome, does that mean a banana is 60% as conscious as you are? Maybe, but I doubt it, and it certainly is not 60% as intelligent.
>>>> that's the only way Darwinian natural selection could ever have produced consciousness, and I know for a fact that it did.
>>> You can't even get your inferences consistent.> Here's the Venn diagram (conscious (intelligence)) of "...intelligence implies consciousness (3 lines above). Yes,..." But earlier (line 5, 11/28/2025 1326) you wrote, "...if consciousness wasn't an inevitable byproduct of intelligence..." implying the Venn diagram (intelligence (consciousness)). To believe both is to assert they are identical, which I doubt.>>Please point out my error.
First of all, when I say "intelligent" I mean "intelligent behavior" because behavior is the only way we can judge if something is intelligent or not. Maybe rocks are smarter than Einstein but are shy and don't like to brag so they stay quiet, but I doubt it. And I insist that intelligence implies consciousness
but I don't insist that consciousness implies intelligence, although I think it very likely. And if X implies Y and Y implies X then X and Y may not be identical but they are logically equivalent.>> I sincerely believe it is nonsense to try to specify where a mind is located because that can only be done with a noun, and you are not a noun, you are an adjective, you are the way that matter behaves when it is organized in a Brentmeekerian way. Right now there is only one chunk of matter in the observable universe that is organized in that way, but that need not always be the case.> So you think the same mind can be located two different places at the same time.
I think that a brain always has a definite position but a mind does not, and a mind is what a brain does so it doesn't even make sense to ask where a mind is located. It would be like asking, where is the location of "rapid"? And if 2 brains are identical then there is only one mind.
> Can it be thinking two different thoughts?
I don't know what the referrent to the pronoun "it"
in the above is but if 2 brains are thinking different thoughts then they are no longer identical, and so there are 2 minds.
> your thought is localized in your brainIt is an undisputed fact that your brain is localized inside of a box made of bone, but do you THINK that THOUGHT a lot?
For most of human history people didn't even THINK a brain had anything to do with THOUGHT, the ancient Egyptians carefully preserved every part of the body except for the brain, they THOUGHT it was just uninteresting goo and threw it away. If you THINK a THOUGHT is not in your brain then how can a THOUGHT that you're THINKING be in your brain?
>> Asking where a mind is located is like asking where yellow or fast or big is located.> Those are attributes of things,
Yes exactly, and mind is also the attribute of a thing, a brain. A mind is what a brain does