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Consciousness in a Physical World

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Title: Consciousness in a Physical World


1
Consciousness in aPhysical World
  • Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the
    Mind
  • The University of Alabama at Birmingham, April
    18, 2002
  • Torin Alter

2
The Modern Philosopher
3
The Shape of the Problem
Consciousness ?
Physical World
4
Dilemma
  • EITHER
  • Revise our conception of consciousness change
    the pegs shape.
  • OR
  • Revise our conception of nature change the
    holes shape.

5
Organization
  • The Hard Problem of Consciousness
  • Why Consciousness Must Be Physical
  • Why Consciousness Cant Be Physical
  • An Intriguing Alternative Theory
  • Consciousness and the Rest of the Mind

6
Terminology
  • Consciousness is multiply ambiguous
  • Awake (Dilberts friend is unconscious) ?
  • Knowing something (Hes conscious of your
    presence) ?
  • Ability to introspect or report what youre
    thinking (related to self-consciousness) ?
  • Subjective experience phenomenal character, what
    its like for the subject to undergo experience ?

7
More Terminology
  • Physical properties (roughly) those whose
    natures are revealed by some ideal physical
    science.
  • Fundamental mass and charge?
  • Non-fundamental shape, weight, being a rock,
    functional properties (propensity of light switch
    to cause lights to go on when switched up).

8
The Hard Problem(David Chalmers)
  • Part 1 (existence) How could a physical system
    such as a brain give rise to consciousness
    experience? Why dont objective brain processes
    take place without any accompanying subjective
    experience?
  • Part 2 (distribution) Why do certain kinds of
    brain processes correlate with certain kinds of
    experiences and not others?

9
Easy Problems
  • How does the brain process and discriminate
    environmental stimulation?
  • How does it integrate information?
  • How do we produce reports on internal states?
  • How do we access information and use it to
    control behavior?

10
What Makes Them Easy?
  • Problem explain how a certain function is
    performed.
  • Solution specify mechanism.
  • Example genetics.
  • Target explain the function and transmission of
    hereditary traits.
  • Mechanism DNA biology.
  • Result Mendels gene is reductively explained.

11
Why Is Explaining Consciousness Hard?
  • After explaining functions, the questions remain
  • Why is the performance of those functions
    accompanied by subjective experience?
  • Why this kind of subjective experience?

12
Is This Just Scientific Ignorance?
  • Analogy How could a body be alive?
  • That problem looks hard too. Must we posit some
    élan vital (irreducible life force)?
  • In fact, its really just a bunch of easy
    problems
  • Explaining physical growth, independent movement,
    reproduction, etc.

13
Not So Fast!
  • Life
  • Target explain functions physical growth,
    independent movement, reproduction, etc.
  • The only remaining mystery about being alive
    concerns consciousness.
  • Consciousness
  • Target does not appear to be a function.

14
Consciousness As a Physical Phenomenon
  • Physicalism (a.k.a. materialism) the world is
    entirely physical the peg is round.
  • The physical facts exhaust the facts fix the
    physical properties, and the properties of
    consciousnessthe phenomenal propertiesfollow.
  • Follow is logical, not merely natural.

15
Why Consciousness Must Be Physical
  • Occams Razor simpler theories are more likely
    to be true.
  • Simpler parsimony fewer kinds of basic
    entities and basic laws.

16
Dilberts Theory
  • Consciousness an ability to predict and then
    observe the results of actions.
  • Dilberts theory, like all versions of
    physicalism, passes the parsimony test no basic
    phenomenal properties or laws, in addition to
    physical properties and laws.
  • If we deny physicalism, then we face

17
The Threat of Epiphenomenalism
  • The physical world is more or less causally
    closed for any given physical event there is a
    purely physical explanation (notwithstanding a
    bit of quantum indeterminacy).
  • So, there is no room for nonphysical
    consciousness to do any independent causal work.
    Even if consciousness were absent, our behavior
    would have been caused in exactly the same way.
  • So, denying physicalism may lead to
    epiphenomenalism (Huxley, 1874).

18
Epiphenomenalism
  • C C C C
  • P P P P

19
Why Consciousness Cant Be Physical
  • Arguments From Crazy Science-Fiction Examples
  • Mary
  • Inverted spectrum
  • Zombies

20
Act 1 of the Mary Case
21
Act 2
22
The Inverted Spectrum
23
The Inverted Spectrum
  • What color will he say ripe tomatoes are?

24
Actual Cases?
  • Genetic abnormality R-cones have response
    pattern usually associated with G-cones, or vice
    versa this causes red-green colorblindness.
  • If both abnormalities occur together, this might
    cause red-green inversion.

25
The Challenge To Physicalism
  • A logical possibility functional/physical
    duplicates who are red-green inverted.
  • So, contrary to physicalism, fixing the physical
    facts leaves open different possibilities for the
    distribution of consciousness.

26
Zombies
  • Zombie physically (and functionally)
    indistinguishable from an ordinary human being,
    but without any consciousness.

27
Not These Kinds of Zombies
28
This Kind Philosophical Zombies
29
The Zombie Challenge
  • If zombies are logically possible, then fixing
    the physical properties leaves open the existence
    of consciousness physicalism fails.
  • Zombies seem logically possible no apparent
    contradiction in their description.
  • Think of logically possible worlds as those God
    could have created, had God so chosen.

30
Logical Possibility
31
General Argument Form
  • Step 1 Establish an epistemic gap (from episteme
    knowledge).
  • Step 2 Infer an ontological gap (from onta
    existing things, and logos science).

32
Is Step 2 Legitimate?
  • Does conceivability show logical possibility?
  • Possible counterexample water without hydrogen.

33
What Does the Water/H20 Discovery Show?
  • Water/H20 discovery constrains only how we
    describe logical possibilities worlds without
    H20 should not be described as containing water,
    even if they have a functional equivalent.

34
The Underlying Issue
  • Can (scientific) discoveries about the actual
    world show that the space of logical possibility
    is smaller than we thought?

35
Structure and Dynamics
  • A microphysical description of the world
    specifies a distribution of particles, fields,
    and waves in space-time.
  • Those basic systems are characterized by their
    spatiotemporal properties, and properties such as
    mass and charge.
  • Those properties are defined in terms of spaces
    of states with a certain abstract structure.
  • Those states can change over time according to
    certain principles of dynamics.
  • The microphysical descriptions entail complex
    macroscopic systems (chemistry, biology, etc.,
    emerge), but only structural and dynamic facts.

36
A Solution
  • The intrinsic features that physical relations
    relate are bits of consciousness, or phenomenal
    properties.
  • No less crazy than epiphenomenalism?

37
Panprotopsychism
  • The intrinsic features of the universe are bits
    of proto-consciousness
  • Consciousness comes from the combination of their
    intrinsic natures.
  • Physical properties come from their extrinsic
    relations.
  • The peg fits, but the shape of both peg and hole
    are changed.

38
Moral
  • The costs of rejecting physicalism are not as
    clear as may seem. Difficult issues about the
    nature of causality are at play.
  • We should reject the following argument
  • Some version of physicalism must be true, because
    naturalism requires it.

39
Subjects of Consciousness
  • One might defensibly deny that consciousness
    reduces to the physical. What about subjects of
    experience?
  • Non-physicalists tend to be anti-reductionist
    about persons. They shouldnt be.

40
Consciousness and Intentionality
  • Intentionality (Brentano) aboutness,
    representation.
  • Old view consciousness and intentionality are
    closely linked.

41
Standard Contemporary Picture
Conscious Experiences (raw feels)
Propositional Attitudes
42
The Fragmented Mind
  • Propositional attitudes have intentionality.
  • Experiences dont.

43
Is the Mind Fragmented?
  • Conscious experiences seem to be rich with
    intentionality.
  • Your visual experience of a round object can be
    assessed for accuracy. For example, your
    experience is inaccurate if there is nothing
    round in the room.
  • To be assessed for accuracy, must your experience
    be interpreted, like a string of words? Or is
    your experience inherently representational?

44
Conclusions
  • The Hard Problem is real.
  • Whether consciousness is physical may depend on
    esoteric, quasi-technical issues, such as whether
    empirical discoveries can constrain the space of
    logical possibility.

45
More Conclusions
  • The consequences of denying physicalism are less
    clear than may at first appear.
  • The standard picture, on which the mind is
    fragmented, is open to doubt.

46
Final Conclusion
  • Philosophers like science fiction.
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