Ok, inner-model/outer-model stuff I'm fully on-board with above (we talked about that once before, but that's a good further delineation you're making). I say we color-code the inner-model stuff as some color in order to keep it discrete.There are no brains in the inner model. "Brain" is a concept of the outer model of our experience. Within the inner model, there are states that correspond to what we'd call brains in the outer model. That's it.
Again, "voltages" are a concept of the outer model. Within the inner model, there are states that correspond to what we call electrical voltages in the outer model.
All of these states are the same "stuff", just in different configurations and accepting different types of transformations. The laws of physics determines the types of configurations and transformations that are possible.
Within the inner model, there is no distinction between internal and external. There are just states. Some of these states have enough degrees of freedom to become what we call in the outer model "stars". Some of these states have enough degrees of freedom to have what we call in the outer model "the property of life". In the outer model, we recognize these "life" states as self-replicating transformations. The states within states capability of the universe allows these "life" states to become more complex, which we describe not just as self-replicating, but self-organizing. This "self-organization" is nothing more than the dependency of higher-level states on the lower level states. To use an analogy from the outer model, the high-level organization of a wallpaper pattern is nothing more than a repeated dependency on a low-level structure.
Of course, the million dollar question is How does this lead to consciousness? If I knew the precise mechanism, I'd be busy working on a publication. But I do know that complexity leads to all kinds of unexpected emergent phenomena. And I can recognize that the apparent degrees of consciousness strongly correlate with the degrees of cortical complexity in biological life. So, it's not a hard leap of faith I'm making here.
In the inner-model we have states, but I have a little issue with this word "states." When I hear it, I think "status" 98% of the time, vs. like "nation state." What is the "state" of your job? "State" of the union address? The "state" of your marriage?"
In short, the term "state" denotes condition to me. Condition of what? Stuff. So I say stuff is more elemental than state semantically. Unfortunately "Stuff" feels about as formal as two teen girls talking about the condition of their closet ("OMG BECKY YOU SHOULD GET THAT STUFF OUT OF YOUR CLOSET HAHA LOL SMH.")
I would say "thing" is better than stuff, but it's got some issues too. At least it is dimensionally agnostic. A logic state is as much a thing as is a dog.
In any case, "things" can be brought together to create other things which act in predictable or unpredictable ways.
Yes?
