quote
William Clifford stated: "… we cannot suppose that so enormous a jump from one creature to another should have occurred at any point in the process of evolution as the introduction of a fact entirely different and absolutely separate from the physical fact. It is impossible for anybody to point out the particular place in the line of descent where that event can be supposed to have taken place. The only thing that we can come to, if we accept the doctrine of evolution at all, is that even in the very lowest organism, even in the Amoeba which swims about in our own blood, there is something or other, inconceivably simple to us, which is of the same nature with our own consciousness …"
Authors
Sources
- Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2015 Edition) plato.stanford.edu via serper
- Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu via serper
Referenced by nodes (3)
- consciousness concept
- evolution concept
- physical facts concept