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superglucose wrote:But how many of them support life? And it didn't just take one billion years, it took six billion years from the formation of the planet to this point.
gmalivuk wrote:The Earth is actually quite a bit younger than 6 billion years, and no life could likely have survived the impact theorized to have created the moon, so life really only had about 3.5 billion years to evolve. There are trillions of stars older than our sun, any one of which could have planets like our Earth. I don't see why it makes any sense to suppose we're the first sentients when we know damn well that ours is far from being the oldest star.
zenten wrote:We're hardly the first sentient species on Earth.
We're most likely not the first sapient hominid on Earth, and it's entirely possible hominids are not the first sapient group of species.

Then again, I also think that some higher-life forms like dogs, dolphins, chimps, etc., may have some very rudimentary form of self-awareness.
Belial wrote:Then again, I also think that some higher-life forms like dogs, dolphins, chimps, etc., may have some very rudimentary form of self-awareness.
Define self-awareness.
I want to be!Steroid wrote:Don't want to be.bigglesworth wrote:If your economic reality is a choice, then why are you not as rich as Bill Gates?
Alex Trebek wrote:Self-awareness.
Belial wrote:Define self-awareness.

Belial wrote:Then again, I also think that some higher-life forms like dogs, dolphins, chimps, etc., may have some very rudimentary form of self-awareness.
Define self-awareness.

Belial wrote:If we became immortal would we cease to be self-aware?
Indon wrote:Belial wrote:Define self-awareness.
The ability to recognize your reflection, is the most fundamental I can get.
Belial wrote:Indon wrote:Belial wrote:Define self-awareness.
The ability to recognize your reflection, is the most fundamental I can get.
Then yes, several animals (elephants and certain birds jump out in my mind) demonstrate that level of self-awareness.
zenten wrote:Mind you, it is a poor one, as it only works if you have a good facility with visual images. A blind person for instance fails.

Kizyr wrote:A conscious perception that you exist. Perhaps also a mental distinction between oneself existing and not existing. It's not tied to mortality, but tied to existence.
zenten wrote:Mind you, it is a poor one, as it only works if you have a good facility with visual images. A blind person for instance fails.
Belial wrote:zenten wrote:Mind you, it is a poor one, as it only works if you have a good facility with visual images. A blind person for instance fails.
Let's toss that one, then.
RezardVareth wrote:Bad argumentation can be painful to answer, but responding with empty logic just perpetuates the cycle.
Izawwlgood wrote:(Probably still no flying cars).

Isn't sentience a necessary condition?3.14159265... wrote:Its easier to give a list of sufficient conditions for self-awareness.
1) Bieng able to recognize one's own relfection (I like this one).
2) Bieng able to write a biography of one's self.
3) Questioning the purpose of one's existence.
etc.
It is much harder to give a neccessary condition.
That looks like a circular definition to me. How do you define awareness?yy2bggggs wrote:Self aware was defined reasonably above (being aware of your own awareness).
Isn't sentience a necessary condition?
zenten wrote:Guys, can everyone try to use sentient as the word actually means, instead of how Commander Data kept on using it? I'm finding it hard to follow some of the points here because I'm not sure what meaning people are intending.

Assuming you mean what I think you mean, sentience being a necessary condition for self-awareness is not circular because they are not the same thing. For example, at least some flatworms are inarguably sentient - they have light-sensing organs, and have been shown to possess learning abilities - yet it is highly doubtful that they are self-aware (unless, of course, you define self-aware in such a way that it is implied by sentience, which I do not, zenten does not and nor do most people who do not use the two terms synonymously).3.14159265... wrote:Isn't sentience a necessary condition?
You caught yy2bggggs on his circular definitions, but not yourself. tsk tsk.
The fact that two words are synonymous in "common usage" does not mean that we should continue to use them as such when it is necessary to distinguish between their differing meanings. As zenten explained, sentience is not the same as self-awareness or sapience; yet, as I explained, it is requisite for both.Kizyr wrote:I'm using sentience and self-awareness interchangeably, since in common usage the two terms are interchangeable. I believe I've clarified that above, and I don't see any particular point in dividing the terms, since most people here are talking about the same thing--only different ways of coming up with some objective measure of it.
Wikipedia wrote:Sentience refers to utilization of sensory organs, the ability to feel or perceive subjectively, not necessarily including the faculty of self-awareness. The possession of sapience is not a necessity. The word sentient is often confused with the word sapient, which can connote knowledge, consciousness, or apperception. The root of the confusion is that the word conscious has a number of different usages in English. The two words can be distinguished by looking at their Latin roots: sentire, "to feel"; and sapere, "to know".
Sentience is the ability to sense. It is separate from, and not dependent on, aspects of consciousness.
[/quote]Robin S wrote:I was talking about self-awareness, not intelligence. I do not think that intelligence needs sentience.
Definining sentience itself in a meaningful way is extremely difficult. While we all subjectively know that we experience it, and extrapolate that other humans and even distantly-related animals do too, the only objective way to define it is in terms of experiencing sensations, which is itself inherently subjective. Wikipedia puts it better than I do:
[quote="Wikipedia"]Sentience refers to utilization of sensory organs, the ability to feel or perceive subjectively, not necessarily including the faculty of self-awareness. The possession of sapience is not a necessity. The word sentient is often confused with the word sapient, which can connote knowledge, consciousness, or apperception. The root of the confusion is that the word conscious has a number of different usages in English. The two words can be distinguished by looking at their Latin roots: sentire, "to feel"; and sapere, "to know".
Sentience is the ability to sense. It is separate from, and not dependent on, aspects of consciousness.
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