It is determinable in the sense that if we know of something that has 999 elements and we know of something that has 1000 elements, 999 of which are the same as something else, we can surmise that the 1000th element is present also based upon them being the same thing.
So if we know that one monkey wheel has 1000 elements, and another monkey wheel has 999 identical elements, with the 1000th element being a monkey turning the first wheel...?
No, we can see inside *all* the monkey wheels (bodies). We know the monkey wheels do not require monkeys (consciousnesses) to explain their functioning and we also have seen one particular monkey (our own consciousness) but see no other monkeys inside any other wheels.
The key difference is that the other monkeys if they exist are invisible.
We can 'see' inside the first monkey wheel because we experience our own capacity for awareness. In order to see inside the other wheels to the same degree, we would have to somehow experience other people's absence of that capacity. Are you a telepath, reading everyone's mind and finding nothing there? If so, maybe your telepathy just doesn't work very well. How are you seeing into all the wheels? Not just coming to a conclusion about their contents, but SEEING them? Sure, there are people who don't seem to have much awareness of what's going on around them (or even what they, themselves, are saying), but noticing that is a long way short of directly experiencing a lack of consciousness on their part.
Because GoblinCookie finds it hard to define something that is non-material in material terms without confusing people. The question is in effect a trap. The best definition is that a consciousness is a group of ideas, in the sense that 10 is a group of 1s; neither the ideas nor the consciousness are physical.
Correct, the trouble is that this very concept hits everyone elses consciousnesses very, very hard if consciousness is physical. I don't need other people to be conscious to explain their behavior and I can't see their consciousnesses. Invisible physical things that exist solely because they explain something else are what that principle was made to get rid of.
"The car made the body dodge the car" is a simpler explanation than "He saw the car so he decided to avoid it and dodged the car as a result".
When you agreed with my description of Occam's Razor, did you somehow miss the part where it applies equally to physical and non-physical assumptions? And also that it is a general guideline, not an absolute rule?
Consider "
There is some process that causes consciousness in me, and in entities similar to me." versus "
There is some process that causes consciousness in me. A different process causes entities similar to me to act in similar ways to me without being conscious." The first requires one assumption. The second requires two. Why do you think the second is a simpler explanation? And not just simpler, but so much simpler that the other isn't even worth considering as a possibility!
"
The car made the body dodge the car" uses fewer words, but doesn't explain anything or match observed evidence. If cars cause objects to dodge, why didn't the car make the box dodge the car? Or the body that was looking the other direction? What made the body dodge the soccer ball? We have a lot of evidence about how vision and muscles operate. We experience seeing oncoming objects and trying to avoid them. These aren't arbitrary assumptions thrown together to explain a single incident; they're based on a wide range of interconnecting evidence.
Of course, consciousness isn't required to dodge a car. People could build a robot that detected traffic with cameras or radar and was programmed to take evasive action. But this is still the evading object reacting to the car, by means that operate consistently in any similar context. I suppose the car could have cameras or radar, and send a signal telling the robot to get out of the way. To determine which of these happened, one would need to examine the car and the robot, and find out which has the capacity to detect a potential collision in advance and react to it. Occam's Razor isn't going to tell us that.
The problem is that our own monkey-wheel would also work just as well if we were not there. No creatures are ever needed to turn the wheels, whatever type of creature they may be. The only reason our own monkey exists at all is solely that we can see it.
Maybe our monkey wheel would work just fine without us, but that isn't what is happening. We
are there. Why should every other monkey wheel be different from ours? Consciousness isn't an explanation. It's an observed fact to be explained. However we try to explain it, there's no reason to limit the explanation to ourselves when it applies just as easily to everyone else.
Our monkey exists because it exists. We
know it exists because we can see it. If there's a glass jar full of marbles on your desk, and you drop a towel over it, do the marbles cease to exist as soon as you can't see them?
Since we know one monkey exists, and have a definite example of it, additional monkey in similar circumstances don't make the explanation drastically more complex. Two monkeys or 10 monkeys or 7 billion monkeys, it's all just a slight expansion of the 'monkey can turn wheel' assumption that's required for
any explanation, because every explanation has to cover the wheel with the monkey that we can see. We don't have any examples of the same sort of wheel turning when it definitely lacks a monkey. We have other types of wheel that rotate with nowhere for a monkey to fit, but they aren't the same kind of wheel and they don't turn the same way. It is a bigger assumption that monkey wheels can turn without a monkey than that they can turn with a monkey, which we can directly observe.
(The point was not 'If you don't like monkeys, maybe there's a squid turning the wheel'. The point was that even an explanation that is clearly, unquestionably more complex, with creatures that haven't been demonstrated to exist at all in the analogy, still isn't ruled out completely by Occam's Razor because it
is not an absolute rule.)