Is the former possibility, that animals lack conscious minds,more plausible than the idea that we won a lottery with a chance of only 1 in x million? — jdh
You could also make the point that those who argue against animal minds do so merely out of a desire to be superior - or even something so simple as not wanting to feel guilty every time they eat a bacon sandwich. — Efram
To get back to the original topic: As has already been pointed out, there's no real connection between all this talk of odds and lottery and disproving anything. It just leaps from one place to another without basis. — Efram
This sounds very much like the argument that the universe must have been designed for humans (or, if you prefer, known terrestrial life in general) because conditions on Earth are so very suitable for us that finding ourselves on a one-in-a-million planet like this instead of an inhospitable rock is incredibly unlikely. — zookeeper
This is all about the definition of mind. If you define mind in as that of a human, then, obviously, animals do not have minds. However, this is nothing unexpected. — Chany
As a human being, it seems like I got very lucky, when it's conceivable that I could have been a bat, cicada, giraffe, cow, rat, spider, salmon, kangaroo, etc. — jdh
The probability that I won that lottery is 1, as it is for any lottery winner. Your 'we' is a human, and a human has - unless severely mentally impaired - almost certainly won the braininess lottery. But that's as surprising as the fact that Myrtle Krebspark of Lake Wobegon, Minnesota won the lottery, given that Myrtle Krebspark won the lottery.isn't it more likely that animal minds don't exist than that we won the lottery against all odds? — jdh
A primary function of a mind is to create knowledge - each mind has to do that for itself. Animals don't create knowledge. — tom
Myrtle Krebspark of Lake Wobegon, Minnesota — andrewk
How can we refute the following argument against the existence of animal minds? — jdh
Homo sapiens are just one of millions of extant species of conscious animals. If you rank these species in descending order of overall intelligence, human beings rank at the very top of the list--out of millions, we're number one. — jdh
The odds of me being a non-human animal seemingly far outweighed my chances of being a human. Nevertheless, I am a human. Since I am a human being, I appear to have won the lottery. I get to be smarter than every other species of animal that exists. — jdh
Since these odds are so unbelievable, can we question whether or not animal minds even exist? — jdh
If animal minds don't exist, then we didn't actually come out on top. If animal minds are not real, we did not win a contest against all odds. — jdh
The important question is: isn't it more likely that animal minds don't exist than that we won the lottery against all odds? — jdh
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