Tarski wrote:It depends on what you mean by consciousness. If you suspect that a robot could never be conscious (without somehow gaining some new thing along the way to complexity) then you need to read Dennett.
I'm uncertain whether a robot could be conscious.
And by awareness do you simply mean our ability to navigate the world and talk about it?
No. I mean our
experience of a world, or of anything at all. While our experience certainly provides us things to talk
about, and information we use to navigate the world, the experience itself, the awareness,
consciousness, is a distinct and very basic phenomenon. To say we aren't conscious we be to say that we don't feel or experience, which is absurd. The job of philosophy should not be to tell us that realities we perceive prior to thought itself, and on which thought depends, don't exist. The job of philosophy should be to explore those realities, and perhaps hypothetical counter-realities as well. To doubt one's own existence, consciousness, etc. is the worst of ivory tower abstraction--a luxury of pure fantasy unbound by the constraints of being.
Don