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- Xref: sparky comp.ai.philosophy:7386 sci.philosophy.tech:4949
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- From: chandra@cis.ohio-state.edu (B Chandrasekaran)
- Newsgroups: comp.ai.philosophy,sci.philosophy.tech
- Subject: Re: Searle on animal consciousness
- Date: 25 Jan 1993 08:47:41 -0500
- Organization: The Ohio State University Dept. of Computer and Info. Science
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- References: <1jvevlINN4va@cannelloni.cis.ohio-state.edu> <1993Jan25.023842.11756@sophia.smith.edu> <1993Jan25.115504.13869@sophia.smith.edu>
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- In article <1993Jan25.115504.13869@sophia.smith.edu% orourke@sophia.smith.edu (Joseph O'Rourke) writes:
- %In article <1993Jan25.023842.11756@sophia.smith.edu% I wrote:
- %% This raises an interesting question: suppose we established
- %%(somehow) that a particular species experienced pain, but otherwise had no
- %%mental life [...]. Would it be accurate to call these creatures conscious?
- %
- % Let me add to this thought. The night after I last sprained my
- %ankle, I had great difficulty sleeping from the pain, but I managed a
- %few hours of fitful sleep. It seems clear to me the pain continued while
- %I was asleep. Searle argues for this convincingly in "The Rediscovery of
- %the Mind." My body responded to the pain even while asleep, e.g., by not
- %attempting to roll over. So one can have unconscious pains.
- % It seems therefore that establishing that an animal experiences
- %pain does not establish that it is conscious.
-
- Hm, what I would say is not that you had pain when you were unconscious,
- but the mechanisms that cause you to feel pain were active and were trying
- to pierce your consciousness, hence your fitful sleep. That is, each time
- you sort of woke up, the pain mechanisms scored a minor success, they
- made you *feel* pain. If you had not had fitful sleep (say you had taken
- a sleeping pill), then I think it would be incorrect to say that you had
- pain while you slept.
-
- Would you say that a patient under anesthesia is in pain, he just
- doesn't feel it? I think that would be an odd use of the term.
-
-