If their point is 'behavior is plausibly mindless but experience implies that there's something more to consciousness', then they're asking the hard problem of consciousness but doing a bad job of it (like everyone else).
It's also possible that they don't understand computation at all -- but once again, a lot of people approach the hard problem of consciousness without separating it from computation.
It's also possible that they don't understand computation at all -- but once again, a lot of people approach the hard problem of consciousness without separating it from computation.