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Monday, October 17, 2011

Sam Harris - The Mystery of Consciousness

Sam Harris is best known as an outspoken and fairly right-wing "new atheist" (he has defended the use of torture and generally sees all Muslims as Jihadists), but he is also a neuroscientist and somewhat of a philosopher (the study of consciousness is still as much philosophy as science).

In this article from his blog, he muses on the mystery of consciousness, using philosopher Thomas Nagel’s construction: "A creature is conscious if there is “something that it is like” to be this creature; an event is consciously perceived if there is “something that it is like” to perceive it. ⁠Whatever else consciousness may or may not be in physical terms, the difference between it and unconsciousness is first and foremost a matter of subjective experience. Either the lights are on, or they are not."

Here is the beginning of his article, and he sets himself apart in these few paragraphs from the majority of neuroscientists, led most notably by Patricia ChurchlandPaul Churchland, and Daniel Dennett (Neural Darwinism). The Churchlands tend to hold the eliminative materialism perspective, "which argues that commonsense, immediately intuitive, or 'folk psychological' concepts such as thought, free will, and consciousness will likely need to be revised in a physically reductionistic way as neuroscientists discover more about the nature of brain function" (cited from Patricia Churchland's Wikipedia page).

The Mystery of Consciousness

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(Photo by AlicePopkorn)
You are not aware of the electrochemical events occurring at each of the trillion synapses in your brain at this moment. But you are aware, however dimly, of sights, sounds, sensations, thoughts, and moods. At the level of your experience, you are not a body of cells, organelles, and atoms; you are consciousness and its ever-changing contents, passing through various stages of wakefulness and sleep, and from cradle to grave.
The term “consciousness” is notoriously difficult to define. Consequently, many a debate about its character has been waged without the participants’ finding even a common topic as common ground. By “consciousness,” I mean simply “sentience,” in the most unadorned sense. To use the philosopher Thomas Nagel’s construction: A creature is conscious if there is “something that it is like” to be this creature; an event is consciously perceived if there is “something that it is like” to perceive it. ⁠Whatever else consciousness may or may not be in physical terms, the difference between it and unconsciousness is first and foremost a matter of subjective experience. Either the lights are on, or they are not.[1]
To say that a creature is conscious, therefore, is not to say anything about its behavior; no screams need be heard, or wincing seen, for a person to be in pain. Behavior and verbal report are fully separable from the fact of consciousness: We can find examples of both without consciousness (a primitive robot) and consciousness without either (a person suffering “locked-in syndrome”).⁠[2]
It is surely a sign of our intellectual progress that a discussion of consciousness no longer has to begin with a debate about its existence. To say that consciousness may only seem to exist is to admit its existence in full—for if things seem any way at all, that is consciousness. Even if I happen to be a brain in a vat at this moment—all my memories are false; all my perceptions are of a world that does not exist—the fact that I am having an experience is indisputable (to me, at least).  This is all that is required for me (or any other conscious being) to fully establish the reality of consciousness. Consciousness is the one thing in this universe that cannot be an illusion.⁠[3]
Read the whole article.

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