In this, the first ever episode of 'Spontaneous Philosophy', I discuss the nature of consciousness in a largely unplanned, tangential, but technical way. Oh, and I talk about a strange dream I had about being INSIDE a Chinese dragon. Yes.
The ideas of Descartes, Goff, Avicenna, and others are touched upon and put to use, as well as the theory of consciousness that makes most sense to me.
Namely, that consciousness is a repetition of gaze perception, which is itself a structural repetition of vantage perception (aka the badly termed, 'theory of mind'). In other words, I take panpsychism to be wrong so far as supposing that all sufficiently complex systems of matter bear consciousness, while the hard problem of consciousness more likely concerns a qualitatively new 'event' in hitherto non-conscious processes (rocks, plants, etc.). This 'event' may be something like a self-informing 'coupling' (as termed in physics), where the very act of projecting a model of this self-information determines the fact of its reality -- something that had not yet had the opportunity to take place for less complex systems.
Be warned -- the above description is clearer than what happens in the podcast, sorry :) Welcome to spontaneity.
Thank you, and I hope some of this was of use x