I believe that consciousness' role in adaptation is missed. Its quite obvious if you think about it. It makes things matter.*
It gives the organism a lived experience with value as an intrinsic element. Like, hunger is bad, pain is bad, broken bones are bad etc. That fruit looks good etc. Therefore the conscious animal possesses a basic rationality in that it has interests and chooses what is in those interests. Or, however clumsily, it at least tries to.
Rationality because, it is rational to choose what is better, and consciousness allows for 'better' and 'worse' courses of action. Or, states of being.
I call this 'rational attraction to being'. Its the 'form' (modality, way, procedure, goal and mechanism) of conscious life.
Purely physical (or non-mental) evolution is 'irrational attraction to being' because it produces life forms which survive and continue to exist, but without good reason to do so. There are causes or reasons in the process, but they are non-mental. Its just machinery. And therefore has no moral or qualitative element. Elementary Darwinism.
Imagine the difference. A smile that is just down to muscle machinery, and a smile that is due to consciousness.
Consciousness gives us a good reason to survive. A good reason to eat. A good reason not to fall over etc. Consciousness, then, is basically the foundation of ethics. Including the concept that "higher animals" deserve some kind of consideration and respect.
*its worth noting that (IIRC) the mammalian (basic needs, urges) and emotional brain (feelings) are said to have developed before the higher order frontal lobe processing ( advance planning, moral reasoning etc). The former "axiological / value containing" functions were the foundation of the latter. They give us a a rationale to plan etc.
It gives the organism a lived experience with value as an intrinsic element. Like, hunger is bad, pain is bad, broken bones are bad etc. That fruit looks good etc. Therefore the conscious animal possesses a basic rationality in that it has interests and chooses what is in those interests. Or, however clumsily, it at least tries to.
Rationality because, it is rational to choose what is better, and consciousness allows for 'better' and 'worse' courses of action. Or, states of being.
I call this 'rational attraction to being'. Its the 'form' (modality, way, procedure, goal and mechanism) of conscious life.
Purely physical (or non-mental) evolution is 'irrational attraction to being' because it produces life forms which survive and continue to exist, but without good reason to do so. There are causes or reasons in the process, but they are non-mental. Its just machinery. And therefore has no moral or qualitative element. Elementary Darwinism.
Imagine the difference. A smile that is just down to muscle machinery, and a smile that is due to consciousness.

Consciousness gives us a good reason to survive. A good reason to eat. A good reason not to fall over etc. Consciousness, then, is basically the foundation of ethics. Including the concept that "higher animals" deserve some kind of consideration and respect.
*its worth noting that (IIRC) the mammalian (basic needs, urges) and emotional brain (feelings) are said to have developed before the higher order frontal lobe processing ( advance planning, moral reasoning etc). The former "axiological / value containing" functions were the foundation of the latter. They give us a a rationale to plan etc.
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