hehehe!
coldude, do you have any thoughts re: how consciousness originated?
Let's side aside the facts that have trouble defining consciousness, and deciding what is or isn't conscious... (Are dogs conscious? Ants? jellyfish? fly-trapping plants? ...)
The answer lies without a doubt in the evolution of the brain. I define consciousness as the ability of the brain to create a model of the world including itself, and to simulate models of the world of what might be or might have been if... (This definition has its problems, but let that slide for now.)
Obviously, then, there are levels of consciousness in the animal kingdom, with us at the top. Our brains can model the world around us, model their role in the world, think of what might happen if we do this or what else might happen if we do that, etc. They have the ability to deal with symbols: drawings, words, sounds, substituting for the real thing.
My brief answer: consciousness is a progressive development in the evolution of the brain, which expanded both in terms of size and computing capacity over the eons.
That's the best I can do for you right now, Stella
