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Why the later scenario is not consistent?So there is life after death or we’re just dust. The latter scenario is inconsistent with your view.
This I have already discuss it in this thread. Consciousness cannot be an emergent phenomena. Consciousness cannot be primary. We experience therefore matter by fact is conscious.How do you know that rocks are conscious, as you stated earlier, if you can not test to determine if they are conscious? What is the scientific worth of your view, if it is not testable in any way?
As for humans, it depends on how you define consciousness. If consciousness involves being aware of one’s surroundings, being able to think, solve problems, etc. Then there is a way to test for all of this. Have the person describe their surroundings. Have the person take an IQ test, do EKGs, fMRIs, etc.
It is a state of being arm as it is a state of being human and have thought. An arm of course cannot have thought, memory, identity etc. It minimally respond to its surrounding though so in that sense it is conscious.Consciousness involves awareness. What is the arm “aware” of? In what way is it aware?
A neuron is conscious if matter is conscious.You also claimed that the basic constituents of consciousness (neurons?) are conscious. This raises more questions. For starters, do you have any empirical evidence to support for this particular claim? There is also a phenomenal character to consciousness. Is that present at the level of neurons?
It just seems that the type of consciousness that you’re referring to is not the same type of consciousness in sentient creatures, so your reasoning doesn’t follow.