.It depends what you mean by awareness. It is not a natural faculty of inanimate matter, for sure.
No, not for sure, and here in the second sentence, you’ve already signaled the major conceptual errors you are laboring under, here. Awareness does indeed appear to a natural feature/behavior of matter in some configurations, configurations we are well aware of. Matter/energy, in some of the more exquisite configurations we find it, is aware of other matter/energy, “nature beholding itself” as I think Carl Sagan put it.
In any case, what you suppose is “for sure” is not “for sure” by any reasonable measure, and is fact manifestly false based on our natural knowledge.
We take it for granted that an amoeba is in some way aware but it has never been explained what that primitive awareness consists of.
But it has. If you go read a college level text book – or better, current research in the reviewed literature – you will find a robust account of what kinds of sensory (name removed by moderator)uts and processing an amoeba has to bring to bear on its surroundings. A jellyfish is a bit more complex than an amoeba, and yet conspicuously has no nervous system, even, but it does have (name removed by moderator)uts, processing and output actions that facilitate interaction with its environment in gene-propagating ways (survival + fecundity, that is).
Human beings are in another category altogether. Awareness of oneself is a remarkable phenomenon - which scientists have not even begun to understand. Nor for that matter the power of abstraction which enables us to have a concept of the self.
These two sentences refute themselves. Just by saying what you’ve said, you’ve demonstrated that man
is well begun in understanding this very problem. I think there is a whole body of knowledge and literature out there on this you just may not be aware of. Either that, or you are casting “that which doesn’t support my supernaturalism/theism” as an ipso fact sign of ignorance on the subject.
Why is a natural rendering not problematic?
Why, because it’s empirical, of course – it’s grounded in natural experience, and methodologically vetted by a community that is collaborating on that method, emphasizing objective and repeatedly performance of its renderings.
You need to explain how and why patterns in the brain have developed to grasp the** reasons** for the occurrence of events.
Why? This is a trick question. Any answer there is just fodder for the next level of regress. Why should
that explanation I provide be the case? What are strings in string theory made of? Oh, and then what is
that stuff made of? and
that stuff?
Over and over this we go. In order for you drop your irrational views you cherish – it’s not my goal to convince you to drop them, by the way; I’m really interested in getting atheist and theists alike talking honestly and in serious ways about knowledge, experience, method and epistemology – you want me to square a circle. You’re willing to listen, understand, if I can provide an infinite regress of detail for you. And your mind is shut and comfy with supernaturalism until then.
I know a fool’s errand when I see one. Pass. Supernaturalism is not the default answer, barring the furnishing of an infinite regress of explanations rendered in material terms.
Survival value seems a grossly inadequate cause. Animals associate certain situations with danger but they have no insight into general principles or rules. The fact that their language lacks syntax shows that it is one thing to have a map in the head but another to grasp all the implications, causes and consequences of that map.
Sure, but these are blind, impersonal processes we are talking about. It’s remarkable that even with the deep time effects we have working on this in our history that things have developed to the level of diversity and complexity they have, even if in very localized niches. Advantages can be very small and rudimentary and still statistically very effective. Being able to sense light just a little better than your peers may be all it takes to make your survival chances much better than the mean. A little adaptation goes a long way in many real-world contexts.
I am not referring to the reality of the physical world - which is not in dispute - but the view that the physical world is the **sole **reality.
You are boxing shadows here. I do not know anyone on this forum that claims to know in some positive sense that the physical reality we are aware of is the SOLE reality. The views espoused by materialists I know, and by myself do not entail that claim. Rather, the claim is this: nature is the reality we
are aware of. We don’t know what we don’t know, and so we must remain open on that issue. There may be more, we cannot say. But given what is available to us, the only reality that coheres in terms of experience and reason is the natural one. If there is more, we don’t have any way to apprehend such - theistic imaginations and credulity notwithstanding.
That is a very different claim. There may be more than nature, we just have no basis to suppose there is.
-TS