Sure it does.
When people actually investigateing consciousness, the brain and such start ot unravel the mystery, your argument will dissappear in my opinion.
I would really like to see evidence of that. Only, it's impossible.
No, I think that living systems are fundimentally conscious.
What separates living systems from non-living systems. Are you a vitalist?
There is a certian level of single entity complexity that our techonology has simply not reached.
Gibberish. What is "single entity complexity" and how would it be any different from "multiple entity complexity" so as to produce consciousness?
I don't think non-living systems have a sense of self because they have no reason for one.
What would be the reason then? Furthermore, what would explain why this reason instantiates consciousness? Magic.
Where as all living systems do have a sense of self and boundary because it is endemic to being a living organism.
More gibberish! And vitalist gibberish at that. WHY is it "endemic" to a living organism? Why not to a robot who has sense-inputs?
When we start to build artificial systems that reproduce themselves and change with respect to the enviroment we will be well on our way to how life has defined the self.
But nowhere near to establishing the why and how of consciousness. This is a doomed project and it is crystal clear as to why. This is because even if one finds the necessary and sufficient conditions for why sentience is instantiated, this is no way proves that those N&S conditions "explain" it since to give an account of this explanation isn't on a par with, "why does water put out fire?" since in the latter case a chemical account may be the explanation, or causality in the case of billiard balls. NOTHING like that exists in the consciousness case. There are only "reasons" magically instantiating said property. No such thing as "contact" in the case of the above examples, which exists as a sort of communion, at least. So, I have just proved that the neuroscientific project fails in crucially explaining consciousness beyond hedging it within "reasons." It doesn't matter today and it won't matter 100 million years in the future with super-intelligent and self-conscious AIs. Consciousness will ALWAYS remain a mystery, like it or not.
"Additional property" seems an unjustified leap. Without a good explaination for why some things are conscious and some things not this is a pointless theoretical discussion.
Well, neuroscience I think is pointless in trying to explain consciousness as well, then. At least by positing a discrete and separate self I am TRYING to give an explanation on a par with any other explanation of phenomena (specifically, "contact" in the differential exchange of matter). But since that's impossible with consciousness, if you leave out the soul hypothesis, you are left with even more magic.
So, it's not an unjustified leap. It's actually the ONLY possible explanation!
You have no idea what your "additional property" is or how it works or what sort of thing it is or anything really.
I don't have to. I REALLY don't. Anymore than why water interacts with fire extinguishes it. Oh sure I can go very minutely explain all the atomic characteristics and how they match up, but that bottoms out after a certain point unless you are willing to accept infinite regress. I'm not, are you?
So, your point of view is just an assertion.
So is yours. Now, the question is, which p.o.v is a more viable one; that is, has more explanatory depth? That consciousness magically instantiates in a "living system" because thats just how living systems are, or because there is a property-bearing entity with consciousness as its attribute: i.e, a soul substance?
Yes, you do. If you don't understand the why's and how's of consciousness there is no point in having an argument about your assertions about it.
If you don't understand the why's and how's of consciousness there is no point in saying that "investigating" the workings of the brain will magically offer a solution....