It seems that so far most WAMS in this thread have gone with the idea that consciousness is information processing. Thus the claims that toilet cisterns, thermostats and even micetraps are conscious. (But a thermometer also processes information, so I'm not sure why they are discounting that one.)
There are several issues here, so let's separate them.
If I choose to define the word "consciousness", in my thought process, as to equate to information processing, then I am not a WAMS, I am a person who has made the choice to define an unclear term in a way that I can use.
You are not whatever it is you think you are, because you are simply a person who has made a personal, individual choice to define an unclear term in a way that you can use.
For the sake of us having a conversation, either I will have to momentarily accept your term, you will have to momentarily accept mine, or we will both have to accept an altnerate term.
But what I am trying to ascertain here is why western atheist-materialist skeptics (WAMS) will not accept that their view of consciousness, as an emergent property or epiphenomenon of matter, is not faith-based? If it were not faith-based, I believe that WAMS should be able to say exactly what causes (or is) consciousness quite explicitly.
My definition of "awareness" is specifically intended to eliminate the need for faith-based explanations. It is a purely mechanical, natural, and in the case of you and me, biological process.
Would you say these devices are ever conscious (presumably when turned on and performing a calculation), at however rudimentary a level, with the scientific calculator being more conscious?
Something to consider is purpose - does a calculator need self-awareness? The automated toilets, which
are self-aware in the respect that they can perform their own diagnostics, interact with their surroundings independently, distinguish between itself and the user, and communicate their needs in the form of diagnostic reports, are at least as much so as, say, insects, right?
It's not consciousness in what you are looking for, but for the sake of argument, what else would it need to do to be a self-aware toilet system?
Everything you're asking is dependent upon what level you are looking at it. Are you looking at it at a level of self-preservation? Something that is not alive will have no need for self-preservation or any emotions that offspring from that condition. This is part of evolutionary considerations.
This discussion is very philosophical at its root, and so we do need to identify differences in the
needs of awareness between varying mechanical and biological constructs. Technically, or so I've heard, the cockroach is the most advanced creature on the Earth.