Skyweir wrote:Exquisitely astute Wayfriend.
BTW, my position is more like this: the arc caused by simulated gravity is the same as one caused by real gravity ... but there is no ball experiencing the arc. (That is, a simulation could provide a simulated neuron grid for a thought-process to occur, but there is no being experiencing the thoughts.)
Skyweir wrote: That consciousness to DEVELOP .. requires physicality .. a physical structure or body. Why? Because the body is sensory and as such is flooded or immersed in data. And consciousness evolved to make sense of that data to ensure survival. And I totally love that

total nerd exciting love moment right there.
That is pretty much my belief, and I have been saying so a long while now. But it is only based on intuition. However, that consciousness must have a "seat" - it must have a place to reside - I think is generally accepted. There is a mystery as to how pure consciousness can interact with base matter. However, we need not understand that fully to recognize that there must be a physical place where this interaction occurs.
Skyweir wrote:Interesting observation is consciousness gravity or the arc? From my subpar scientific perspective .. the arc is intrinsically causally connected to gravity itself, no? So the question is then .. is the arc a consequence or an affect of gravity?? Or something else? It kinda is though right? Its the measureable and observable effect of gravity.
Well there are first order effects, second order effects, etc. You can simulate gravitiy's attraction on objects, that's first order. Then there are behaviors you can observe in those objects when they react to gravity. That's second order. Then you may notice pressure and heat resulting from those behaviors on masses of particles, that's third order. Etc. etc.
It seems to me that the idea in a simulation is you simulate the base components, and then you observe these higher order phenomenon. The higher order phenomenon should in some way replicate real-world behaviors. Succeeding in that you have a good simulation; failing in that, you have a bad one.
Skyweir wrote:To my mind then, if it is ... consciousness IS the arc .. and that makes some sense to me.
As I said above, I don't quite see it the same way. The arc is surely a second-order or more phenomenon. But I equate that to thoughts or memories, which are built of either real or simulated brain matrix, and so are second order.
But there is a third thing here ... there is gravity, simulated or real. There is an arc, which is produced by the action of the gravity ... but then there is the ball, which is the thing that EXPERIENCES the arc. To my way of thinking, consciousness is not JUST a higher-order phenomenon, it is more, it is the interaction of that phenomenon with something that can experience it. There must be a place for the "ego" to reside, if you will. There must be a ball.
A simulated ball is only a collection of numbers that are assigned meaning. It is not an actual thing. The numbers are things, and the place holding the number is a thing, and the meaning we assign to the numbers is a thing. But a number and/or a number holder and/or a number assigner is not a ball, and never can be.
The ball is very much like gravity - a simulated ball will never be a real ball. Ok. So maybe the phrase "simulating gravity will never produce real gravity" applies to it. However, the difference between gravity and ball is that GRAVITY needs MERELY to be simulated, success is achieved. But the ball needs to BECOME something more. You don't simulate it, you simulate everything else and hope that it emerges. I hope that makes sense, it's hard to describe my idea lucidly.