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Plants do not have brains.
That is irrelevant to the OP.
The purpose of a head/brain transplant is to demonstrate the "atomic singularity" of human consciousness as a fundamental aspect of life.
Without consciousness there is no life.
The brain is merely a evolutionary quantum computer to transcode the atomic singularity of consciousness into neuroholographic memory.
What kind of experiment do you propose to detect consciousness in bacteria?
What is an "atomic singularity"?
I guess to detect consciousness in bacteria we would need a robust method to measure coherent energy transfer in bacterial microtubules.
I define the atomic singularity of human consciousness as the subjective experience of life. Consciousness is subjective experience independent from the physical (atomic) properties of a living organism.
So what do the words "atomic" and "singularity" have to do with it? I've never heard any such term used in scientific literature.
The quantum (atomic) singularity of life is the ubiquity of consciousness.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_singularity https://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=70767.0
According to what peer-reviewed scientific study?
I don't see anywhere on that Wikipedia page where the term "singularity" has anything to do with consciousness. It seems as though you have invented the term yourself.
Also, you didn't explain how to experimentally demonstrate a correlation or causation between microtubule energy transfer and consciousness.
Without consciousness there's no life.Without life there's no free will.
Quote from: tkadm30 on 15/08/2017 21:38:47Without consciousness there's no life.Without life there's no free will.Living organisms, including humans, do not have free will. There is a vast amount of data and very robust arguments supporting the notion that humans do not have free will. Life can exist without consciousness, and without free will. Your attempt to reconcile science with religion is biased and unscientific. The essential principle of the scientific method is to eliminate bias. Approaching scientific topics with a spiritual agenda means your arguments and thought processes are inherently biased, so you will consistently veer far from the truth. You really need to understand the concept of "confirmation bias".
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4802748/
I didn't invented the term "quantum singularity". I only derived the term "atomic singularity" from this concept, because consciousness is immaterial and essentially a non-local (quantum-like) phenomenon.
See: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25232047
When I say peer-reviewed, I mean something that has passed peer review and has become an accepted part of modern scientific literature. That certainly isn't the case for all the articles on that website, which also has a paper called "Cosmic design from a Buddhist perspective" (a paper which denies the Big Bang theory). This paper you have linked is little more than a discussion on philosophy.
I know you didn't invent the term "quantum singularity". I was talking about the term "atomic singularity".
So which part of the paper describes a method to detect the presence of consciousness? Not energy transfer, but consciousness specifically.
That website (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) by the way is a reference for modern scientific litterature. And notice no mention of retraction do appear. And when we discuss on the nature of consciousness, you are expected to dive into the philosophy of science.
Remember that imagination is more important than knowledge.
The feasibility of coherent energy transfer in microtubules is evidence that consciousness is a quantum-like phenomenon.
Quote from: snorkfort on 16/08/2017 05:39:08Quote from: tkadm30 on 15/08/2017 21:38:47Without consciousness there's no life.Without life there's no free will.Living organisms, including humans, do not have free will. There is a vast amount of data and very robust arguments supporting the notion that humans do not have free will. Life can exist without consciousness, and without free will. Your attempt to reconcile science with religion is biased and unscientific. The essential principle of the scientific method is to eliminate bias. Approaching scientific topics with a spiritual agenda means your arguments and thought processes are inherently biased, so you will consistently veer far from the truth. You really need to understand the concept of "confirmation bias".There is a mistaken notion for what free will means in religion; original intent of the concept. Animals act with natural instinct. Human free will has to do with the ability to act apart from natural instincts. Free will allows for artificial and unnatural instincts. Free will allows human to make choices apart from the DNA, which underlies our natural human instinct. This is why humans were considered higher than animals, and why many religions often repressed natural instinct with will power; celibacy. Flowing with instinct requires no free will. For example, in modern culture there is a secular gospel that there is no difference between male and female. This is based on collective choice and free will, since male and female are different by an entire chromosome; X or Y. There is a large difference in DNA. This secular orientation is not consistent with DNA and therefore it is not consistent with natural instinct. It is a conditioned social choice, that is made apart from the DNA and natural instinct. It is an aspect of free will and choice. It may still have an epigenetic induction on the DNA. The reason this is possible is we have two centers of consciousness. One center is old; inner self, and is connected to natural instinct and the DNA. The other center is relatively new in terms of evolution. The ancient concept of Satan being the binarius is connected to the two centers and the alternate choices that can be induced by the secondary center; departure from natural law which was created by God. Free will is not a concept that is applied to animals. Animals tend to remain within instinct, unless domesticated by humans to be unnatural and/or artificial. One can teach a dog to kill for sport. In this case, the human becomes the virtual secondary center for the dog, to allow the dog such choices, which over time can create epigenetic changes so it looks natural to the naked eye, but which no gene is ever found.
Quote from: tkadm30 on 16/08/2017 23:05:26That website (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) by the way is a reference for modern scientific litterature. And notice no mention of retraction do appear. And when we discuss on the nature of consciousness, you are expected to dive into the philosophy of science.When you do actual science, you are expected to be able to make predictions and then test those predictions by using experiments and/or other forms of observation. Philosophy alone does not do that. Without falsifiable predictions, experimentation and observation, you have no science. What falsifiable prediction or experiment did that paper suggest which allows its claims to be tested for scientifically?QuoteRemember that imagination is more important than knowledge. Maybe in some things (writing novels, for example), but I sure would not want scientists telling me that there claims came from their imagination instead of time-tested,repeated experimentation.QuoteThe feasibility of coherent energy transfer in microtubules is evidence that consciousness is a quantum-like phenomenon. Restating your claim is not the same as providing evidence for it. I want scientifically-acquired evidence that coherent energy transfer in microtubules has any kind of cause-and-effect relationship with consciousness.
I wouldn't bother trying to reason with tkadm30. He doesn't understand even the basic principles of science, and he thinks that he can reconcile unsubstantiated spiritual beliefs with science simply through wacky philosophising.
Quote from: puppypower on 16/08/2017 11:46:21Quote from: snorkfort on 16/08/2017 05:39:08Quote from: tkadm30 on 15/08/2017 21:38:47Without consciousness there's no life.Without life there's no free will.Living organisms, including humans, do not have free will. There is a vast amount of data and very robust arguments supporting the notion that humans do not have free will. Life can exist without consciousness, and without free will. Your attempt to reconcile science with religion is biased and unscientific. The essential principle of the scientific method is to eliminate bias. Approaching scientific topics with a spiritual agenda means your arguments and thought processes are inherently biased, so you will consistently veer far from the truth. You really need to understand the concept of "confirmation bias".There is a mistaken notion for what free will means in religion; original intent of the concept. Animals act with natural instinct. Human free will has to do with the ability to act apart from natural instincts. Free will allows for artificial and unnatural instincts. Free will allows human to make choices apart from the DNA, which underlies our natural human instinct. This is why humans were considered higher than animals, and why many religions often repressed natural instinct with will power; celibacy. Flowing with instinct requires no free will. For example, in modern culture there is a secular gospel that there is no difference between male and female. This is based on collective choice and free will, since male and female are different by an entire chromosome; X or Y. There is a large difference in DNA. This secular orientation is not consistent with DNA and therefore it is not consistent with natural instinct. It is a conditioned social choice, that is made apart from the DNA and natural instinct. It is an aspect of free will and choice. It may still have an epigenetic induction on the DNA. The reason this is possible is we have two centers of consciousness. One center is old; inner self, and is connected to natural instinct and the DNA. The other center is relatively new in terms of evolution. The ancient concept of Satan being the binarius is connected to the two centers and the alternate choices that can be induced by the secondary center; departure from natural law which was created by God. Free will is not a concept that is applied to animals. Animals tend to remain within instinct, unless domesticated by humans to be unnatural and/or artificial. One can teach a dog to kill for sport. In this case, the human becomes the virtual secondary center for the dog, to allow the dog such choices, which over time can create epigenetic changes so it looks natural to the naked eye, but which no gene is ever found. Sounds like you know nothing about scientific experiments regarding free will, most of which support the notion that humans do NOT have free will. There is absolutely no evidence that human behaviour is fundamentally different from animals. Animals also make decisions and occasionally decide not to mate. The important question is whether we actually have conscious control over our decisions, and most of the data indicates that we do not. //www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhO2lVQRT8Y
Restating your claim is not the same as providing evidence for it. I want scientifically-acquired evidence that coherent energy transfer in microtubules has any kind of cause-and-effect relationship with consciousness.