Do we hold that behavior controls us? Software is written to control the hardware. Are you saying that consciousness evolved to control the brain? Then we project this on to free will and say that we have no control over anything? Personality is who we are. Behavior is how we project who we are. We still have control over how we act. If we had no control we would not be any more civilized than any other animal. There are animals who have civilized behaviors and cannot act in any other manner, or they will not survive.
I do not concede that the brain or consciousness evolved. That seems to be the majority concession though. We have no control over our personality, but we do have control over our behavior. That is the process of reasoning. If humans cannot reason, then why do we use logic and debate? That we have the potential to receive thoughts beyond our control has very little to do with what we do with those thoughts, other than we get free "ammo" to work with in our thought processes. I am not even denying that consciousness is unadaptable, but since we have no control over that, the next best thing is learning how to control one's behavior.
We have some control over how we act, but we have very little control over our internal motivations, what you describe as personality. Our personalities are largely immutable, and in particular immutable enough to make the analogy with software, which you are right to point out is also largely immutable.
You're also right that most software isn't adaptive enough to be able to say that it can control how it acts. But it could be.
I say analogy above, but in a way it's more than that. Software, abstractly, is a description of behavior. The relevant parts of minds are behavior. Therefore our minds are software. Note, I'm using behavior here more broadly than you are.
By behavior I mean not only how we act, but how we think too. (Bolded because this this difference in terminology comes up several times)
I would contend that our actions, or the results of what our brain is telling us how to act, can be controlled by choice. Our brain is continuously reasoning out the results of future actions. Most humans though fall into habitual routines that decreases the need for such reasoning.
I would object to your word choice here. We cannot control what our brain is telling us do do, because we are our brain. We can however control what we differ to our subconscious, which you seem to be describing. This is a semantic objection, but it helps to speak the same language.
I am not saying that software cannot be written to learn. Is learning software the same as controlling software? It seems like to me they are two different types of programming and are unable to learn and control at the same time. Even if they could it was because they were designed that way, and we are ruling out design.
What do you mean by controlling software? What kind of controlling software cannot be written?
The reason I brought up learning software, is because it is a type of software that changes it's behavior over time, as it learns. This is similar the human mind is movable when presented with a logical argument, for example. Learning software is adaptive software, potentially as adaptive as the human mind.
It seems to me that proving plants are self aware or not, would be as futile as proving God exist or not. We are self aware of each other. Until we can communicate with plants in any clear way, we have only plant behavior to determine how plants operate.
As I replied to Hygro, we have only each other's behavior to determine how we operate too. So behavior is the right standard to judge plants by. Plants clearly don't behave like they are self aware, nor do they have the anatomy that might behave like the part of ourselves that is responsible for self awareness; that is, plant's don't have brains.
Self awareness, defined as having a mental concept of oneself, is difficult to test for, but it's not impossible, and it is possible to objectively class thing as being self aware, not, or inconclusive. Plants are not self aware. Humans are. Dolphins are. Canines? dubious, though there is some evidence that they aren't.
Behavior is only as utilitarian as the entity showing such behavior. If we can determine there is a hint of behavior in any entity, then that entity may have a hint of consciousness. That does not preclude all consciousness is the same. Consciousness is only undermined when you try to apply it broadly and in the same manner over all entities showing a hint of consciousness. It seems to me that respect and good will should be handed out despite what one deserves?
It is true that it's better to give a rock human rights, than deny them to an actual human, but it does not follow that we should give rocks human rights. For things that might have moral standing and might not, it is certainly better to give them moral standing than not, but even better would be to think longer and put them in one category or the other.
Does the difference have to do with personality and behavior? Each personality is unique, but behavior seems to manifest itself as similar depending on the entity, ie human, plant, or dolphin. Comparing behavior does not give the full picture of consciousness, that is why we have personality test to determine patterns of behavior and even profile people. Patterns of behavior do not necessarily define consciousness, but they allow us to predict what may or may not happen. There is a thin line between controlling free will and dismissing it as non-existent.
I would say that patterns of behavior do define consciousness, but people's actions do not, as you correctly point out. As per above, I define behavior to include the process of thinking, not just acting.
If personality is unique, other than being utilitarian, how can we say consciousness is the same in each human, much less the same in every other entity that shows any signs of behavior indicating a hint of consciousness?
All people have a sufficiently similar mind to be called conscious. We think differently, but not so differently to call it something else. Not so differently that we should be given different moral consideration because of it.