Brains create consciousness?

In summary, the topic of whether the brain creates consciousness or not is a complex and highly debated issue. While some may have religious convictions that deny the brain's role in consciousness, or misunderstandings about neuroscience and medicine that support it, the issue is not as simple as it seems. There are many different metaphysical options, including materialism, physicalism, idealism, panpsychism, and more. Panpsychism, for example, argues that the brain is not the sole source of consciousness and that even single-celled organisms may have a subjective experience. The role of non-neuronal cells in the body and environmental influences on consciousness also raise questions. Ultimately, there is still a need for a rigorous test to determine the
  • #1
pftest
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Does the brain create consciousness (C)? Does C originate in brains? Is C limited to brains?

Many people think they already know the answer to these questions. They might have a religious conviction about souls and believe the answer is "no". Or they might have a misunderstanding of neuroscience and medicine, and think the answer is "yes" (after all, strokes and anesthesia prove that brains are required for C, don't they?).

However, as many here in the philosophy section are aware, the issue isn't so simple. There are many different metaphysical options, materialism, physicalism, idealism, panpsychism, panexperientalism, neutral monism, etc.

Here is an example of someone (Galen Strawson) making his case for panpsychism:

Realistic Monism: Why Physicalism Entails Panpsychism

What does physicalism involve? What is it, really, to be a physicalist? What is it to be a realistic physicalist, or, more simply, a real physicalist? Well, one thing is absolutely clear. You’re certainly not a realistic physicalist, you’re not a real physicalist, if you deny the existence of the phenomenon whose existence is more certain than the existence of anything else: experience, ‘consciousness’, conscious experience, ‘phenomenology’, experiential ‘what-it’s-likeness’, feeling, sensation, explicit conscious thought as we have it and know it at almost every waking moment. Many words are used to denote this necessarily occurrent (essentially non-dispositional) phenomenon, and in this paper I will use the terms ‘experience’, ‘experiential phenomena’, and ‘experientiality’ to refer to it.

Full recognition of the reality of experience, then, is the obligatory starting point for any remotely realistic version of physicalism. This is because it is the obligatory starting point for any remotely realistic (indeed any non-self-defeating) theory of what there is. It is the obligatory starting point for any theory that can legitimately claim to be ‘naturalistic’ because experience is itself the fundamental given natural fact; it is a very old point that there is nothing more certain than the existence of experience.

It follows that real physicalism can have nothing to do with physicSalism, the view—the faith—that the nature or essence of all concrete reality can in principle be fully captured in the terms of physics. Real physicalism cannot have anything to do with physicSalism unless it is supposed—obviously falsely—that the terms of physics can fully capture the nature or essence of experience. It is unfortunate that ‘physicalism’ is today standardly used to mean physicSalism because it obliges me to speak of ‘real physicalism’ when really I only mean ‘physicalism’—realistic physicalism.


[...]

Returning to the case of experience, Occam cuts in again, with truly devastating effect. Given the undeniable reality of experience, he says, why on Earth (our current location) commit oneself to NE? Why insist that physical stuff in itself, in its basic nature, is essentially non-experiential, thereby taking on

[a] a commitment to something—wholly and essentially non-experiential stuff—for which there is absolutely no evidence whatever

along with

the wholly unnecessary (and incoherent) burden of brute emergence

otherwise known as magic? That, in Eddington’s terms, is silly.

[...]

You can make chalk from cheese, or water from wine, because if you go down to the subatomic level they are both the same stuff, but you can’t make experience from something wholly non-experiential. You might as well suppose—to say it once again—that the (ontologically) concrete can emerge from the (ontologically) abstract. I admit I have nothing more to say if you question this ‘can’t’, but I have some extremely powerful indirect support from Occam’s razor and Eddington’s notion of silliness.

I finish up, indeed, in the same position as Eddington. "To put the conclusion crudely", he says, "the stuff of the world is mind-stuff"—something whose nature is "not altogether foreign to the feelings in our consciousness". "Having granted this", he continues, "the mental activity of the part of the world constituting ourselves occasions no surprise; it is known to us by direct self-knowledge, and we do not explain it away as something other than we know it to be—or, rather, it knows itself to be. It is the physical aspects [i.e. non-mental aspects] of the world that we have to explain."

Something along these general panpsychist—or at least micropsychist—lines seems to me to be the most parsimonious, plausible and indeed ‘hard-nosed’ position that any physicalist who is remotely realistic about the nature of reality can take up in the present state of our knowledge.


http://www.imprint.co.uk/jcs_13_10-11.html [Broken] *
http://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/~seager/strawson_on_panpsychism.doc

* the Journal of Consciousness Studies (JCS) is in the physicsforums list of accepted journals

In this topic i would like to see discussed whether C is created by the brain or not. What is the evidence and what are the philosophical problems for either case?
 
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  • #2
The brain can efficiently store and analyze information, but is it responsible for C? It most definitely has a lot to do with C and tends to interact with C a great deal.

But what about single celled organisms? Do single celled organisms have a subjective experience?

So how do all the non-neuronal cells in our body, including symbiotic bacterias, contribute to C, and (as apeiron will likely extrapolate on) what about environmental effects on C? If you deprive a newborn of all senses, I would think it highly unlikely they develop C (evidence suggesting this is so can be found in deprivation studies during critical developmental periods).

Then there's also the question of how proteomics and genomics influence C.

To test all these wonderful candidates, we still need a C test; So far, we judge C by behavior which isn't very rigorous.
 
  • #3
Pythagorean said:
The brain can efficiently store and analyze information, but is it responsible for C? It most definitely has a lot to do with C and tends to interact with C a great deal.

But what about single celled organisms? Do single celled organisms have a subjective experience?

So how do all the non-neuronal cells in our body, including symbiotic bacterias, contribute to C, and (as apeiron will likely extrapolate on) what about environmental effects on C? If you deprive a newborn of all senses, I would think it highly unlikely they develop C (evidence suggesting this is so can be found in deprivation studies during critical developmental periods).

Then there's also the question of how proteomics and genomics influence C.

To test all these wonderful candidates, we still need a C test; So far, we judge C by behavior which isn't very rigorous.
Yes those tests arent rigorous, they essentially just end up with the assumption you start out with. Assume that such and such behaviour indicates consciousness, and then you will only find consciousness when you find such and such behaviour. They may be suited for practical purposes (anesthesia, euthanasia, etc), but won't offer help in finding the origin of C.

The paper of Strawson (im still reading it), makes this argument against the emergence of C (from brains or from whatever else). First he challenges the assumption that the fundamental physical ingredients (he calls it "ultimates") are non-experiencing. He says physics offers us no basis to suppose this, rather it leaves the question open. Then he says that instead of assuming that such ultimates are completely non-experiencing, we actually have data showing that physical things do come with experiences (the data being our own brain and experiences). If we still do assume that ultimates are completely non-experiental, then given the fact that some things are experiental, we are left with a gap between non-experiencing ultimates and experiencing brains. Brute emergence is needed to bridge the gap, but this is just like "magic". X cannot intelligibly emerge from something completely non-X. There cannot be an explanation for such an event.

Btw about those newborns, are they born unconscious?
 
  • #4
I will say that I have not finished the paper, but certain notions to me seem sketchy. First the notion that all is intrinsically experiential is a necessary component of reality for the experiential cannot emerge from the non-experiential seems to me a semantic argument moreoso than a metaphysical argument.

How so? You might ask. For me, "Experience" just is a broad vague notion and certainly while "experience" is concretely attended to as a precondition for appearance in our reality, it is also precisely our "experience". What does it mean to "Experience" and if we are postulating that atoms "Experience" in what sense does that change anything? We certainly cannot say that they "experience" like we do, nor can we say that they "experience" like animals. So it seems that we simply use the word "Experience" as a designator for all that exists, such that it loses its meaning. We have just attached a new word that doesn't offend our logical sensibility to "fundamental reality", but as far as explanation goes we seem to have done nothing.
The problem of "emergence" which the author seems to dislike still fundamentally exists for his position as well. Being that the "experience" of the fundamental is in no way like ours and the only other way we infer about "experience" is through behavioral observations, and the "behavior" of a quantum entity certainly doesn't give much for inferring "Experiental qualities" we are left with answering how our complex form of experience can emerge from the fundamental experience of the atom. Pragmatically, nothing has changed. We have just applied a word (which it must be kept in mind is simply a human-devised category) to new phenomena and subsequently what differentiated that word from others has been abolished. We are still left with the problem of emergence of our experience from other "experience".
We still cannot describe the experience of others, we still cannot account for the "emergence" of our experience, we have simply trojan horsed in the concept experience to seemingly make for a more logical solution

Sorry for the quick, cluttered reply.
 
  • #5
http://www.iep.utm.edu/panpsych/#H4", the magical emergence of the mind. Once you give everything some degree of consciousness, you must only find the formula, which defines the degree (are you more conscious than the rock?). Panpsychism is counterintuitive, because we associate consciousness with the living things, part of the environment and not the environment itself. But does this mean that the rocks can't experience qualia? And if they can, won't it be million times "weaker" than ours? Like the qualia of the people in vegetative state? And if you find the formula and define consciousness, you will surely be able to make yourself ultra-conscious, million times more conscious than now, so is there some cap of the degree?

So you see panpsychism counters some problems, but creates a lot by itself.
 
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  • #6
JDStupi said:
I will say that I have not finished the paper, but certain notions to me seem sketchy. First the notion that all is intrinsically experiential is a necessary component of reality for the experiential cannot emerge from the non-experiential seems to me a semantic argument moreoso than a metaphysical argument.

How so? You might ask. For me, "Experience" just is a broad vague notion and certainly while "experience" is concretely attended to as a precondition for appearance in our reality, it is also precisely our "experience". What does it mean to "Experience" and if we are postulating that atoms "Experience" in what sense does that change anything? We certainly cannot say that they "experience" like we do, nor can we say that they "experience" like animals. So it seems that we simply use the word "Experience" as a designator for all that exists, such that it loses its meaning. We have just attached a new word that doesn't offend our logical sensibility to "fundamental reality", but as far as explanation goes we seem to have done nothing.
I think the idea is to bridge the gap between "utterly non-experiencing things" and "experiencing things". While experiences can be very different from each other (as we know from personal experience), and this means it is a very broad category, it does bridge the gap which is otherwise unbridgeable. We just don't know what it is like to experience such things, but neither do we know what its like to be a bat, or even one's neighbour.

The problem of "emergence" which the author seems to dislike still fundamentally exists for his position as well. Being that the "experience" of the fundamental is in no way like ours and the only other way we infer about "experience" is through behavioral observations, and the "behavior" of a quantum entity certainly doesn't give much for inferring "Experiental qualities" we are left with answering how our complex form of experience can emerge from the fundamental experience of the atom. Pragmatically, nothing has changed. We have just applied a word (which it must be kept in mind is simply a human-devised category) to new phenomena and subsequently what differentiated that word from others has been abolished. We are still left with the problem of emergence of our experience from other "experience".
We still cannot describe the experience of others, we still cannot account for the "emergence" of our experience, we have simply trojan horsed in the concept experience to seemingly make for a more logical solution
While "experience" is a human term/category, what it refers to is not. For example you can feel pain in many different varieties, you can see color in many different varieties. You can have many different experiences. That's the actual phenomenon the term refers to. These establish the principle that such things do occur in nature. By positing that experiences (of whatever kind) are also fundamentals, no brute emergence is required to explain the human types of experiences. There is still much left to explain, but it is no longer burdened with an inexplicable gap. Instead it becomes comparable with other natural phenomena.

Heres what he writes:
It is at this point, when we consider the difference between macroexperiential and microexperiential phenomena, that the notion of emergence begins to recover some respectability in its application to the case of experience. For it seems that we can now embrace the analogy with liquidity after all, whose pedagogic value previously seemed to lie precisely in its inadequacy. For we can take it that human or sea snail experientiality emerges from experientiality that is not of the human or sea snail type, just as the shape-size-mass-charge-etc. phenomenon of liquidity emerges from shape-size-mass-charge-etc. phenomena that do not involve liquidity. Human experience or sea snail experience (if any) is an emergent property of structures of ultimates whose individual experientiality no more resembles human or sea snail experientiality than an electron resembles a molecule, a neuron, a brain, or a human being. Once upon a time there was relatively unorganized matter, with both experiential and non-experiential fundamental features. It organized into increasingly complex forms, both experiential and non-experiential, by many processes including evolution by natural selection. And just as there was spectacular enlargement and fine-tuning of non-experiential forms (the bodies of living things), so too there was spectacular enlargement and fine-tuning of experiential forms.
 
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  • #7
Ferris_bg said:
http://www.iep.utm.edu/panpsych/#H4", the magical emergence of the mind. Once you give everything some degree of consciousness, you must only find the formula, which defines the degree (are you more conscious than the rock?). Panpsychism is counterintuitive, because we associate consciousness with the living things, part of the environment and not the environment itself. But does this mean that the rocks can't experience qualia? And if they can, won't it be million times "weaker" than ours? Like the qualia of the people in vegetative state? And if you find the formula and define consciousness, you will surely be able to make yourself ultra-conscious, million times more conscious than now, so is there some cap of the degree?

So you see panpsychism counters some problems, but creates a lot by itself.
Those are questions left open yes, but i don't think they are really logical problems with panpsychism itself. The same questions can be asked about any philosophical position, even if we accept that only brains are conscious. Does my hypothetical neighbour, who had a stroke, have weaker experiences? Can certain drugs, or a certain kind of surgery, make one ultra conscious? Etc.
 
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  • #8
Yes, I feel as though we may just end up just disagreeing on this one. While I understand that the paper is an attempt to bridge the gap, I don't see that it actually does so, except by switching words around.
I just say that the appelation is somewhat meaningless, so I can agree with it or disagree with it. What does it mean to "experience" something and what constitutes an experience are questions left un-attended to. An "experience" is just assumed as a primitive in order to bridge the divide between "experience" and "non experience".

While "experience" is a human term/category, what it refers to is not

And what does it refer to in the non-human or even non-animal case? What does it mean for an atom to "Experience" something? I feel as though we're grossly overextending our language in the same ilk that we say that matter is not a "particle or a wave because the words we use fail to be effective at those scales". This is similar to how I feel about attributing experiential qualities to matter at the small scale. It doesn't actually solve problems, it resolves a linguistic quibble.

By positing that experiences (of whatever kind) are also fundamentals, no brute emergence is required to explain the human types of experiences

I understand this, and I can see where you are coming from. I just feel that there isn't much of a difference in saying that " Some living phenomena emerged from non-living phenomena" and "Some experiential phenomena arose from some-thing-that-is-like-experience phenomena".
Moreover I fail to see why emergence of life from non-life is seen as such a problem. "What is one thing cannot emerge out of what is completely different". I see a proclemation, but I don't see it as being intuitively obvious as to why this must be the case.



I suppose I am looking at it from the perspective of the pragmatist philosophy: "What difference would it make in the world if this were true?". It doesn't seem like it would make much of a difference, all of our problems of understanding the emergence of life from non life would remain the same. We would still have to account for why matter became organized into life, and exhibited complexity. Once we are able to do that, I see the addition of experience as simply an un-necessary supplementary assumption inserted ad-hoc so as to not offend some ontological/linguistic sensibility. I don't see that it would aid us in understanding the world any further.

The main problem for me, if you wish to help me see your point of view, is the question posed earlier: "What does it mean for something to experience something" and "What would it mean for a rock (or atom or what have you) to experience?" ...I don't see that it means anything, and if it does it doesn't involve our current conception of experience, and as such the quibble of the antimony "experience-non experience" quickly dissolves because the original meaning of the words is not even the same.
Realize that, the un-intelligiblity of the position of emergence of experience from non experience is not "necessarily" un intelligible. In fact it may be that entire schools of Eastern philosophy (And western) would say that opposites are necessary in order to bring each other into existence, or in order to acquire knowledge about anything.
 
  • #9
JDStupi said:
The main problem for me, if you wish to help me see your point of view, is the question posed earlier: "What does it mean for something to experience something" and "What would it mean for a rock (or atom or what have you) to experience?" ...I don't see that it means anything, and if it does it doesn't involve our current conception of experience, and as such the quibble of the antimony "experience-non experience" quickly dissolves because the original meaning of the words is not even the same.
Some examples of experiences are: the visuals you see when you read this text on your computer screen, the pain you feel when you pinch yourself, the smell of onions, the sound of a voice, etc. Does this answer your question of what its like to experience something?

Now to contrast this with not experiencing anything... i can't really give you an example of that because you can't have experienced it. But some people (materialists/physic(s)alists) hold that the fundamental physical ingredients completely lack any experience. So there is therefor then a gap between the two and it is not a linguistic one.

I suppose I am looking at it from the perspective of the pragmatist philosophy: "What difference would it make in the world if this were true?". It doesn't seem like it would make much of a difference, all of our problems of understanding the emergence of life from non life would remain the same. We would still have to account for why matter became organized into life, and exhibited complexity. Once we are able to do that, I see the addition of experience as simply an un-necessary supplementary assumption inserted ad-hoc so as to not offend some ontological/linguistic sensibility. I don't see that it would aid us in understanding the world any further.
Maybe i am misunderstand what you write here, but it seems like you think experiences don't really exist?

The issue of origin of life is also mentioned in the paper:

...one cannot draw a parallel between the perceived problem of life and the perceived problem of experience in this way, arguing that the second problem will dissolve just as the first did, unless one considers life completely apart from experience. So let us call life considered completely apart from experience ‘life*’. My reply is then brief. Life* reduces, experience doesn’t. Take away experience from life and it (life*) reduces smoothly to P phenomena.
When he says "it reduces", he means that life doesn't have any new properties beyond those of its fundamental physical ingredients. It is therefore not comparable with the emergence of C.
 
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  • #10
I am most certainly not arguing that there is no experience. I was simply wishing for you to delve deeper into what it means "to experience" and contrast what it would mean for us to experience something as opposed to what it would even mean for a rock to experience something. I did not mean to imply that the concept of our experience or all experience is an ad hoc un-necessary assumption, I was however implying that extending the all-too-vague concept of "Experience" to anything and everything in terms of solving the problem of how we came to be, doesn't help much.

I just feel that the concept "to experience" is too vague, we barely know what it means outside of our own first-hand subjective experience. We barely know what goes into experience in any animals, plants are even furter down the line, and I just see a diluted concept of experience the further we get from the immediacy of our concrete experience.
 
  • #11
Correct, this is to do with the nature of consciousness, it is unknowable except from first person perspective. But its not so much related to the issue of whether it exists beyond brains.
 
  • #12
Hi pftest,
Would you say that consciousness is supervenient on the physical? By that I mean as Tim Maudlin (Computation and Consciousness) suggests:
A natural, indeed nearly inescapable, explanation … is that conscious events and episodes supervene on concurrent physical events and processes. One’s phenomenal state at a time is determined entirely by one’s brain activity at that time. Hence, two physical systems engaged in precisely the same physical activity through a time will support the same modes of consciousness (if any) through that time. Let us call this the supervenience thesis.

If it’s supervenient on the physical, one might then ask if the causal closure of the physical is true or not. I think that’s what Galen Strawson would like to argue against, while others would argue for it. Would you agree?

There’s also the question of whether or not mental phenomena can even be explained in physical terms. In other words, can mental phenomena such as qualia be described by describing the physical supervenient base? Clearly for example, such things as Benard cells can be explained, in full and with no remainder, by explaining the physical supervenient base. And we can suggest there is a correlation between the physical supervenience base and the mental events as suggested by Maudlin. But are the mental phenomena described by describing the physical supervenience base? I think that’s where it gets very sticky, with many people wanting to claim yes, the others claiming no.

I think you could make up a ‘matrix’* of sorts that showed how the different answers to these questions (and many more) result in certain conclusions and paradoxes. For every conclusion we reach by making a choice on one of these above questions (and many others) we seem to end up with paradoxes. I think the main reason we have so many different descriptions and ideas about consciousness is because of all these different ways people try to support answers to the fundamental questions. But I don’t see a single theory of consciousness yet that is fully consistent and doesn’t lead to some kind of paradox.

* Actually, there is a matrix of sorts on the internet that's similar to what I'm suggesting here: http://www.macrovu.com/CCTGeneralInfo.html [Broken]
 
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  • #13
The problem i have with supervenience is that it doesn't seem to be a physical activity. Maybe i misunderstand what supervenience is, but this is what i think it boils down to:

We have a bunch of trees.
We call those trees a forest.
Forest then supervenes on its trees.

So it appears to me that this whole supervenience business is about giving a group of objects a different label ("forest"). One might say the forest is a higher level description and the trees are a lower level description. This whole proces of giving something a new label is a mental activity taking place in someones mind, as opposed to a physical process taking place between the trees. If no conscious observer were involved to call the trees a forest, the supervenience relationship would vanish. Physically, the lowest level description (which is the language of physics and fundamentals) would be accurate enough to make all higher level descriptions redundant. If it is true that supervenience is a mental activity, then it follows that it cannot be used as an explanation in the origin of C and that very first C cannot merely be supervenient on the physical.

Again i think i might misunderstand what supervenience is, since i have seen many physicalists talk about it being compatible with the idea that C originates in brains.
 
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  • #14
Supervenience condition: Two systems engaged in the same physical activity will produce identical mentality (if they produce any at all).

The forest example by you is very good explanation why http://kwelos.tripod.com/emergent.htm" [Broken].

When people say mind emerges from the brain they usually mean http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strong_emergence" [Broken].

Basically the three possible variants are:
1) Strong emergence exists (non-reductive functionalism, epiphenomenalism)
2) Panpsychism exists (reductive functionalism, interactionism, idealism)
3) There is neither emergence nor panpsychism (reductive physicalism, eliminativism, parallelism, neutral monism, idealism)
 
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  • #15
I wouldn't say the forest example is a good one, but perhaps it would help if we extended that example. Saying something supervenes on something else is to say that there is some sort of dependence of one thing (generally a higher order property or description) on the things that make it up. A good example might be that the pressure of the air in a balloon supervenes on the action or motion of the molecules of nitrogen, oxygen, argon and other gases in the balloon. In the case of the forest, you might say the forest depends on there being trees of a certain density per square mile or a certain species or genus of tree, so the forest supervenes on the trees, but generally we like to express there being some kind of definable property such as pressure. However, if we were to define a forest as being supervenient on trees somehow, then any two forests would be identical if they had identical trees with identical limbs, roots, leaves, etc... The two forests couldn't be differentiated without there being some difference in one of the forests, such as an extra leaf on one of the trees that was in one forest but not the other. We could still say the property of being a forest is supervenient on there being a certain density or type of tree or some other tree like description, but I think that gets a bit hazy. Perhaps this would help:
As David Lewis puts it, “We have supervenience when there could be no difference of one sort without differences of another sort” (1986, p. 14). For example: no difference in an individual’s mental characteristics without some difference in physical characteristics; no difference in a computer’s program without a difference in the computer’s circuitry; no difference in the economy without some difference in the behavior of its underlying economic agents; no difference in the temperature of a gas without some difference in the behavior of the molecules forming it, and so on. But notice that there can be differences in the neurons, circuitry, agents, and molecules without a difference in mental, computational, economic, and thermal properties.

The idea in each of the above cases is that some property A (or family of properties) is “determined” by some other properties B that do not themselves possesses the property A, and that do not reduce to B (though this is a controversial point, as we shall see): individual neurons don’t possesses mental characteristics; circuits don’t possesses computational properties; individual agents don’t possesses economic properties; and individual molecules don’t have temperatures. The intent is to avoid the stronger relations (such as identity or definability) between the types of property, generally because it often isn’t clear how there could be such strong relations holding them together. Part of the reason for this, and one prime motivation for supervenience, is that mental, computational, economic, and thermodynamic characteristics are “multiply realizable:: the same properties might be realized by very different underlying physical configurations or stuff. However, it needs to be strong enough to support a kind of non-symmetric dependence between two levels of property, such that a “lower” level determines a “higher” level. This feature may give rise to the notion of “levels of dependence” and, in certain cases, “hierarchical organization”: the mental is at a higher “level,” is higher up the hierarchy, from the physical; the economy is at a higher level than the economic agents, and so on.
Ref: http://www.iep.utm.edu/superven/

So to get back to the question in the OP, "Does the brain create consciousness (C)? Does C originate in brains?" we generally say that C is supervenient on the brain. One could also argue whether it is really the brain as a whole that C is supervenient on. There are other theories that suggest that C is supervenient on the neurons themselves, not their interactions or the brain as a whole, but those theories still suggest that C is supervenient on something physical. There are still other theories that suggest C is supervenient on the EM field created by the neuron interactions. But again, those theories suggest there is some physical basis on which C supervenes.
 
  • #16
JDStupi said:
I am most certainly not arguing that there is no experience. I was simply wishing for you to delve deeper into what it means "to experience" and contrast what it would mean for us to experience something as opposed to what it would even mean for a rock to experience something.


It was Descartes who introduced a basic ontological distinction between the mental and the material. Strawson’s argument takes this difference as absolute, but that seems to me not at all necessary.

I think the really fundamental difference here is between the world from a point of view, and the world regarded from no point of view in particular, i.e. “objectively”.

In physics, one can certainly describe the world from the point of view of an atom. We can do that without assuming there’s anything “unphysical” going on.

What Descartes did was to take this basic difference between subjective and objective points of view, and treat it as a basic difference within objective reality. Then it became possible to confuse “having a point of view” with human self-awareness... and get into all kinds of muddle about “consciousness”.

This way of putting it makes it sound like Descartes made a mistake. Yes, but of course long before his time people had objectified “the mind” and talked about it as a kind of quasi-physical organ. What they had not done, before Descartes, was to recognize one’s own “subjective” point of view as having ontological significance. When Descartes took his own point of view seriously enough even to question whether anything else in the world was real, he made a hugely important step. It made the subjective standpoint available to thinking for the first time. But he could only do that within the available conceptual language of his time, which was entirely objective. So he made “mind” one of the two basic kinds of objective reality, and “matter” the other.

We continue this confusion when we talk about “consciousness” as an objective property of certain kinds of entities. No doubt what goes on in human brains (objectively) is somewhat different from what goes on in animal brains... though not very different. What goes on between humans, and between them and their environment, is very different from what goes on between animals. But this is all treating the matter objectively. That’s fine, and there are no absolute differences in this picture, between humans and animals, animals and plants, etc.

There is an absolute difference when we switch to our own unique, subjective point of view on the world. Then we’re on the side of what Strawson calls “experience”. But there’s no reason to think this is anything different from the activity of our brains... it’s just that same activity “seen from inside,” so to speak. The difference between mind and brain is purely a difference in viewpoint.

I think a useful definition of the kind of “consciousness” humans have is – a point of view that talks to itself. By learning to talk about the world, we learn to pay attention to it in ways that other animals aren’t able to do. We articulate to ourselves a remarkable internal mental world that parallels the objective world in which we live. But to mistake this for some kind of objective “psychic” property that we should attribute to atoms in addition to their “materiality” is just the persistence of a category error left over from the 18th-century.
 
  • #17
Hi ConradDJ,
ConradDJ said:
But to mistake this for some kind of objective “psychic” property that we should attribute to atoms in addition to their “materiality” is just the persistence of a category error left over from the 18th-century.

Panpsychism not always implies there are some extra "psychic properties" in the core of the particles. For example you can view the work that the particles itself do as inevitably leading to consciousness. You have different possible states, and depending of which is present or how many are present, you can have different degree of consciousness. Check for example the theory of http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q...sig=AHIEtbQdH8cxC4DMVKsX93s4_j6aivYf8Q&pli=1".
 
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  • #18
Ferris_bg said:
Supervenience condition: Two systems engaged in the same physical activity will produce identical mentality (if they produce any at all).

The forest example by you is very good explanation why http://kwelos.tripod.com/emergent.htm" [Broken].
Thats exactly what I am trying to say, thanks for the link.

When people say mind emerges from the brain they usually mean http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strong_emergence" [Broken].

Basically the three possible variants are:
1) Strong emergence exists (non-reductive functionalism, epiphenomenalism)
2) Panpsychism exists (reductive functionalism, interactionism, idealism)
3) There is neither emergence nor panpsychism (reductive physicalism, eliminativism, parallelism, neutral monism, idealism)
Thats a good simple overview. So far I am rejecting (1) because strong emergence doesn't seem to occur anywhere in nature. And from (3) i reject reductive physicalism + eliminativism (+ maybe neutral monism). Reductive physicalism because "reducing" something is also a psychological activity (the reduced property is always psychological). Eliminativism because eliminating experiences undermines all that is known by empiricism (including all physics) and so this seems self-defeating.

Neutral monism (if it means that the mental and physical are both actually something else that is neither mental nor physical), seems to require two instances of emergence.

Im curious what the big problems with panpsychism are. I have seen people argue that it is ridiculous, but that just seems like a rejection based on emotion.
 
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  • #19
Q_Goest said:
I wouldn't say the forest example is a good one, but perhaps it would help if we extended that example. Saying something supervenes on something else is to say that there is some sort of dependence of one thing (generally a higher order property or description) on the things that make it up. A good example might be that the pressure of the air in a balloon supervenes on the action or motion of the molecules of nitrogen, oxygen, argon and other gases in the balloon. In the case of the forest, you might say the forest depends on there being trees of a certain density per square mile or a certain species or genus of tree, so the forest supervenes on the trees, but generally we like to express there being some kind of definable property such as pressure. However, if we were to define a forest as being supervenient on trees somehow, then any two forests would be identical if they had identical trees with identical limbs, roots, leaves, etc... The two forests couldn't be differentiated without there being some difference in one of the forests, such as an extra leaf on one of the trees that was in one forest but not the other. We could still say the property of being a forest is supervenient on there being a certain density or type of tree or some other tree like description, but I think that gets a bit hazy. Perhaps this would help:

Ref: http://www.iep.utm.edu/superven/
So is gas just a label given to a bunch of molecules in motion? If we describe fully the behaviour of the molecules in the balloon, then:

1) there is no physical property of "pressure" left to describe
2) there is still some physical property of "pressure" left to describe (this would mean pressure is irreducible)

If (1) then supervenience is psychological (this is what i think) and this means there is nothing physicalist about the idea that C supervenes on the brain. I think it would fall in the same category as the idea that C is an illusion of the brain.

So to get back to the question in the OP, "Does the brain create consciousness (C)? Does C originate in brains?" we generally say that C is supervenient on the brain. One could also argue whether it is really the brain as a whole that C is supervenient on. There are other theories that suggest that C is supervenient on the neurons themselves, not their interactions or the brain as a whole, but those theories still suggest that C is supervenient on something physical. There are still other theories that suggest C is supervenient on the EM field created by the neuron interactions. But again, those theories suggest there is some physical basis on which C supervenes.
Ive seen McFadden's CEMI field around here before and it made me wonder... why the just the neuron EM field and not the rest.
 
  • #20
Ferris_bg said:

I don't see seeking the "atoms of synergy" as panpsychic. Rather it is asking what is the simplest level of systemshood.

Panpsychism is based on a material or substance ontology. Substance is material existence which possesses (locally, inherently) a set of properties.

But the systems view is a process ontology - one in which substance and form are in interaction. And Koch/Tononi would be seeking the minimum notion of a process. They talk about the process being differentiation~integration, and the fact it is synergistic.

Differentiation~integration is a standard systems dichotomy. It is making the local~global, construction~constraint, distinction in talking about "the production of local variety" vs "the production of global cohesion".

The systems view does have a version of panpsychism I guess in pansemiosis. This makes the claim that everything that exists - no matter how small or minimally formed - is a bootstrapping process. So even atoms of matter would really be a minute scrap of synergistic process.

I'm not sure why Koch calls Tononi's approach panpsychic. He often makes philosophical statements that seem at odds with his neuroscientific insights. But I think there is an obvious distinction to be made between the idea of "properties of atoms" and "atoms of process". One reduces properties to local substance. The other treats the interaction between substance and form as an irreducible property!
 
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  • #21
ConradDJ said:
I think a useful definition of the kind of “consciousness” humans have is – a point of view that talks to itself. By learning to talk about the world, we learn to pay attention to it in ways that other animals aren’t able to do. We articulate to ourselves a remarkable internal mental world that parallels the objective world in which we live. But to mistake this for some kind of objective “psychic” property that we should attribute to atoms in addition to their “materiality” is just the persistence of a category error left over from the 18th-century.

Nicely put. We start off with everything just being subjective (our general impressions of reality). Then we learn to be objective - making a sharp distinction between ourselves as observers and the world we observe. And it is not a dualistic break, just a dynamical distinction (what Pattee is arguing with his epistemic cut). We have to be making it, pencilling in some boundary between self and other, for it to exist. So we are still subjective creatures. And creating objectivity is a mental process.

Then we decide to turn it round and objectify ourselves as well. The modeller also wants to be modeled, the observer also to be the observed.

For as long as the observer tries to maintain the fiction that observables have objective existence, the exercise does not go very well. Because the notion of objective existence is based on the "view from nowhere" and what we are trying to observe is precisely "a point of view".

If instead we take a different approach, one that sees "point of view" as a dynamic process, an act of epistemic cut forming, then we can start to make models that include both the modeller and the modeled in some properly objective way.

So reductionism reduces subjectivity (POV) to the objective view from nowhere - a realm without observers. Then finds it cannot model POVs in a causal language that has been rendered observerless - where observerhood has been made a paradox as observers no longer seem causally essential to "what exists".

To get out of that bind, we have to instead start with a model of the modelling relation - the dynamical connection between observer and observed. Then reduce that relationship to its essence. We would then have a theory of how POVs form their "mental" worlds.

Heidegger: "The stone is worldless, the animal is poor in world, man is world-forming."
 
  • #22
I’d agree with Ferris in quoting Chalmers where Chalmers states that (weak) emergence is a “psychological” property. I think that might be a bit confusing though...
pftest said:
So is gas just a label given to a bunch of molecules in motion?
Yes, basically. So is pressure.
If we describe fully the behaviour of the molecules in the balloon, then:

1) there is no physical property of "pressure" left to describe
2) there is still some physical property of "pressure" left to describe (this would mean pressure is irreducible)

If (1) then supervenience is psychological (this is what i think) and this means there is nothing physicalist about the idea that C supervenes on the brain. I think it would fall in the same category as the idea that C is an illusion of the brain.
Yes, the property of “pressure” is weakly emergent on the motion of the gas molecules, so there is nothing left to describe if you describe everything about the molecules as you state in 1) above. Chalmers would call this psychological, meaning that we perceive the pressure having some emergent property that is somehow autonomous from the underlying processes. But all that is really meant by saying a weakly emergent property is autonomous is that we can describe the process at different levels. For example, what makes any gas (or any liquid for that matter) behave the way it does has to do with the Van Der Waals forces, conservation of momentum and energy, gravitational and electrical fields, and various vibrational, translational and rotational forms of energy intrinsic to molecules. Regardless of how complex a fluid’s behavior is, these forces are what make fluids (both liquids and gasses) do what they do, including creating convection currents such as found in Benard cells for example. What we find is that these very low level forces can be represented at a larger scale by the Navier Stokes equations and various other equations that take into account the agregate movement of the molecules that is created by those other, lower level forces. But the lower level forces always work the same, regardless of what other phenomena might arise at the higher level. The lower level forces don’t magically fail to operate as they always do just because they are part of a highly complex system. So pressure (and all fluid motion) is reducible to the local interactions between the molecules that make up the fluid.

The punch line is exactly as you say then. If C is supervenient on the interaction of neurons, our theory of mind falls into the same category as the idea that C is an illusion, C is irrelevant, and C is not knowable. But very few people really accept that. Most, including Chalmers and Bedau, will then step back and say C must be strongly emergent.
Ive seen McFadden's CEMI field around here before and it made me wonder... why the just the neuron EM field and not the rest.
McFadden pointed out in our discussions that the primary driver of his theory was that the EM field in the brain is non-separable because of entangled photons. Unfortunately, I don’t think that really holds up. However, the fact that you need a physical system that is non-separable for C to supervene on seems pretty obvious, at least to some folks.
 
  • #23
I think therefore I am?

Sounds familiar...
 
  • #24
Ferris_bg said:
You have different possible states, and depending of which is present or how many are present, you can have different degree of consciousness. Check for example the theory of http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q...sig=AHIEtbQdH8cxC4DMVKsX93s4_j6aivYf8Q&pli=1".


I took a look at this article about Tononi. It’s a good illustration of the confusion I was talking about above, in that it treats “consciousness” as an objective characteristic of certain very complex systems, and attempts to quantify it. Okay, if we can do that, then of course somewhat less complex systems will have somewhat less “consciousness”, and there could be a very small amount of it in quite simple systems too.

The only objection I have to this is that the article pretends that it’s addressing the nature of subjectivity. Referring to robotic vacuum cleaners, bees and newborn babies, it says –

“The truth is that we really do not know which of these organisms is or is not conscious. We have strong feelings about the matter... But we have no objective, rational method, no step-by-step procedure, to determine whether a given organism has subjective states, has feelings.”

So on the one hand we’re talking about objective properties of systems, and on the other hand whether the system “sees from inside”, so to speak. And I think this is the reason there’s such a “hard problem” with “consciousness” – that we talk as though "its own viewpoint" were some mysterious characteristic that a system might or might not have.

A baby or a bee or a vacuum cleaner certainly “has” its own point of view on the world. If that’s all “panpsychism” means, then it doesn’t mean much. A tree or a rock or an atom surely “sees” the world around it, in that it receives and responds to information in its physical environment. Does anyone question that?

But what do these different kinds of systems do with the information they receive? So far as I know, only humans do this thing of building a world in their heads that they talk to themselves about, and compare with how others see the world. So only humans are in a position to say, “Yow, that hurts!” or “I really like that.”

If you want to ask whether a rock or a robot or an insect “has feelings” – well, of course they don’t have feelings like ours, and they don’t have the capacity for noticing and relating to their own feelings that we humans have. But this difference is clearly not mainly about sensory systems or brain complexity, since our brains aren’t that different from those of other animals. It’s mainly about being able to talk to ourselves and with others.

Now as a matter of fact – to digress for a minute – I think it would be a very good thing for physicists to ask what the world looks like from the point of view of an atom. I think the main reason why combining Relativity and Quantum theory presents such a deep problem for physicists is that they don’t take “the viewpoint of the observer” seriously enough. In contrast to the objective reality we imagine is out there, the physical world we all actually experience is made of real-time interactions that communicate information between different points of view. And we don’t yet have the language to conceptualize this kind of system of relationships.

I think both Relativity and QM, in different ways, are talking about the structure of the kind of system that we (and atoms) see “from inside.” These theories seem so “counter-intuitive” because of our very strong tendency to conceive the world as made of things-in-themselves with intrinsic properties that are independent of any interaction... and that objective view just doesn’t work, at a fundamental level.

But I would never describe this as “panpsychism”. An atom “has a point of view” only in the sense of being in this particular place at this particular moment, interacting with the world. To that extent, it’s just like each of us. But there’s no big mystery about “subjectivity” in this sense, and it has nothing to do with what goes on in the brain.
 
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  • #25
panpsychism doesn't really bother me, much like I'm not concerned about free will.

The question of subjective experience though... I don't think we really have a clue how that arises. Not even an inkling. The more we probe the brain and gene expression, the more evidence we find that our behavior is part of the causal chain of determinism, that free will isn't really necessary to explain behavior. I'm fascinated with weak emergence as a general property of the universe, but I'm still dumbfounded as to how you'd manifest a subjective experience from our known laws. And even more dumbfounded as to how you'd inject free will into a deterministic system. What is free will? The ability to choose? But choices aren't arbitrary, they're based on a compressed collection of stimuli from our ancients (genetics) and the history of stimuli on our own receptors. So what is free will then?
 
  • #26
Pythagorean said:
The question of subjective experience though... I don't think we really have a clue how that arises... The more we probe the brain and gene expression, the more evidence we find that our behavior is part of the causal chain of determinism, that free will isn't really necessary to explain behavior. I’m fascinated with weak emergence as a general property of the universe, but I'm still dumbfounded as to how you'd manifest a subjective experience from our known laws. And even more dumbfounded as to how you'd inject free will into a deterministic system. What is free will? The ability to choose? But choices aren't arbitrary, they're based on a compressed collection of stimuli from our ancients (genetics) and the history of stimuli on our own receptors.


I’m going to try to respond to this in terms of what I tried to say above, that subjectivity is purely an issue of viewpoint. Here you are taking a purely objective view of the world, and then asking where “experience” and “free will” fit into that picture. But they don’t fit into it – because you’re imagining the world as if you could stand “outside” of it and inspect it the way you view an object. Subjective experience and free will only exist from the point of view of whomever or whatever is doing the existing. And this is never done independently of the rest of the world.

To try to unpack that – first of all, the issue of “determinism” is irrelevant. My own view is that it’s hardly sensible to talk about “causal chains of determinism” as a basic feature of the world, when we know this is not a good description of submicroscopic processes. But let’s go ahead and assume everything is rigorously determined and nothing ever happens by chance.

So I'm sitting here thinking about something and trying to make a decision. A cosmic particle flies in from a distant star and gets absorbed by a neuron in my brain, causing it to fire... and this results in my deciding a certain way. That’s the objective viewpoint. My subjective experience is that I made the decision. I don’t understand why these two descriptions of the situation are in any way contradictory.

Would I be more “free” in my decision if all the physical events involved in it had occurred inside my head? Or if there were no external circumstances whatever involved in it? I don’t think I ever make any such decisions. When I say “I” made the decision, I’m not referring to some mysterious psychic entity that’s somehow independent of the physical world. I mean me, including my brain and my body and all the relevant influences of all kinds that go into my being who I am, right now. What else could I mean?

From the point of view of the person doing the deciding, it’s “free” only in the sense that the decision is up to them – including all the relevant influences and “determining causes” that make up who they are. It makes no difference whatever whether we assume there’s some degree of chance involved in those “causal factors”.

So now, as to the question of “how you'd manifest a subjective experience from our known laws.” Evidently the laws support all kinds of more and less complex systems, each of which has its own point of view on the world, to the extent that it exists at a certain place and time in the web of ongoing interaction. Some of these systems do a lot more internal processing than others, and can interact with their environments more autonomously. Whether or not this processing is perceived as “subjective experience” is not a question that can be meaningfully asked “from the outside”, objectively.

So far as we know, only humans have the ability to ask or answer questions about their own experience. Our brains have become bigger and more complex in response to the many new possibilities language opens up. But there’s no reason to think there’s anything else going on that objectively distinguishes our internal processing from that of other systems.

To ask whether subjectivity exists, objectively, in a given system, is the “category error” I discussed above. We would be making the same mistake if we said that subjectivity – along with its sense of being free or being constrained – is merely an “illusion”, merely “imaginary”, as though it were supposed to be something else.
 
  • #27
apeiron said:
If instead we take a different approach, one that sees point of view as a dynamic process, an act of epistemic cut forming, then we can start to make models that include both the modeller and the modeled in some properly objective way.

... we have to instead start with a model of the modelling relation - the dynamical connection between observer and observed. Then reduce that relationship to its essence. We would then have a theory of how POVs form their mental worlds.


Apeiron – once again, we’re clearly wrestling with similar issues. And I don’t disagree with what you say... but you seem to be trying to make an objective model that can adequately include “points of view”, by describing them in process-language rather than thing-language.

That kind of description may or may not prove useful in some way – but I don’t think we need an objective model that includes subjectivity. What we need is to grasp the basic difference between an objective description and a description from a point of view in the world.

That is, we need to free ourselves from the assumption that a view “from outside” should be able to include everything important about the world.

My goal is not a view “from outside” that includes everything, even our mental experience, as “objectively real”. My thought is closer to Fra’s in the “Beyond” forum – that we need to develop ways of describing the world “from inside”, not to replace the objective description but to complement it.

There’s a lot about the world that’s well described objectively, often even “deterministically”. But there’s another aspect of the world’s structure that’s only visible “from inside” the web of communicative connections between different points of view. This is basically a structure that let's each interaction be meaningful in the context of other kinds of interactions – that let's interactions be “measurements”, in the language of QM. This is certainly a dynamic structure, but I don’t think it’s one that can be succesfully “modeled” from a standpoint outside the system.

I don’t think we will understand either QM or the nature of “consciousness” until we have better ways of thinking about what Heidegger called “being here” (Dasein) – existence from the standpoint of things “doing the existing” within this web of real-time connection.
 
  • #28
Q_Goest said:
The punch line is exactly as you say then. If C is supervenient on the interaction of neurons, our theory of mind falls into the same category as the idea that C is an illusion, C is irrelevant, and C is not knowable. But very few people really accept that. Most, including Chalmers and Bedau, will then step back and say C must be strongly emergent.
Im not sure i follow the bit about C being irrelevant and unknowable. What i meant with my statement "it falls into the same category as the idea that C is an illusion", is that it leaves the status of consciousness intact, since it describes consciousness in terms of conscious activities (such as having illusions, dreaming, seeing, smelling, (and supervenience)etc.). So i would say it ends up with the conclusion that "consciousness = consciousness", and so there is nothing physicalist to it. Because supervenience is a conscious activity, when one says that "consciousness supervenes on the brain" it translates to "consciousness is a conscious activity of the brain". A brain must already be conscious in the first place to imagine the supervenience relationship.
 
  • #29
ConradDJ said:
There’s a lot about the world that’s well described objectively, often even “deterministically”. But there’s another aspect of the world’s structure that’s only visible “from inside” the web of communicative connections between different points of view. This is basically a structure that let's each interaction be meaningful in the context of other kinds of interactions – that let's interactions be “measurements”, in the language of QM. This is certainly a dynamic structure, but I don’t think it’s one that can be succesfully “modeled” from a standpoint outside the system.

I don’t think we will understand either QM or the nature of “consciousness” until we have better ways of thinking about what Heidegger called “being here” (Dasein) – existence from the standpoint of things “doing the existing” within this web of real-time connection.

Yes, but that would still seem to me to be modelling and so an "objective" description.

But then you may just mean that "objective" is a mistaken term for what we do when we model. And I would agree to that.

I see the task as generalising. So we have a very particular and subjective POV. And to move out of that, we seek the most general and hence objective POV - the god's eye view in some sense. Nozick called it seeking the invariances of nature. The maximal symmetries.

Reductionism has been about the search for the fundamental substance - the atoms, the matter, the general physical stuff of which a material world is made.

But you are talking about generalising something else - the notion of relationships. And that is really the systems approach. It is certainly exactly the Peircean semiotic approach.

So I don't think you are doing something different when it comes to the modelling, just focusing on something different as the central thing to objectify or generalise.

Our subjective POV is based on a hierarchical interaction between general ideas and particular impressions. Our ideas are the longrun context that frames our moment to moment impressions (just as these impressions accumulate over time to become generalised as ideas).

So all we are talking about in "objectifying" our understanding of reality is forming ever more general ideas about the world. And these ideas in return lead to ever more particular impressions.

If I learn for example that reality is fundamentally composed of material particles, then this general idea will shape my impressions - it will be the expectation that drives even what I look to find.

And the same if instead I have a general idea that the world is composed of relationships. Now that leaps out at me at every turn.

So all understanding remains subjective. But generalisation is a way of structuring our subjective experience so it seems more universal, more objective.

And that would not change if our ideas are based on notions of atoms or notions of relationships.

I know there is a debate concerning internalism vs externalism in philosophy. There is a difference between the two in that one sees the boundaries of a system as something that "exists" (if you can stand outside looking at it, then it exists), while the other sees boundaries in terms of limits - the limits of a process. So from the inside, there is only the limit where things cease to be. And so the boundaries themselves "don't exist".

I would take the internalist position here.

Yet still, internalism does not equal subjective (and externalism = objective). Both are general ideas framed within out minds (in an attempt to go beyond our particular physically local and emboddied POV). Although the internalist view of boundaries is probably more in keeping with the view that, after all, our understanding is from "inside the system".
 
  • #30
nismaratwork said:
That's not at all what I meant; there is also the issue of emergent properties such as sending signals through chemical or electrical means that are absent in a rock. I was trying to draw the comparison that just because say, we have Hydrogen in us, doesn't mean we're ever going to fuse it into helium. We lack major elements of MORE Hydrogen, the effects that as as a result of gravity, and heat.

Panpsychism strikes me as the ultimate in reductionism; much as the assumption was once made that a protein was a protein... well look, how it encodes/folds is rather more the issue!
Ok let's focus on the absence of signals in rocks. My position is that you won't be able to point out any emergent physical property in the signal or rock, because anything you point at will consist of, and be describable in terms of, the basic physical ingredients (such as elementary particles, the four forces).

What you really mean with "emergence" here is better illustrated with the protein example. A protein may fold in many different ways, just like a molecule may move up, down, left, right, follow a circular or figure 8 pattern, etc. However, no matter how complex the motion gets, there is a simpler version. Motion has been around at least since the big bang.

You will find that the same is true for the "signal" and anything else physical you can find in the universe.

It's not always a matter of complexity, it can just be a matter of potential within the bounds our complexity provides. A rock is not a stupid human, and a human is not a thinking rock, anymore than some vast intelligence beyond humanity would be a "really bright" human.
It is arbitrary(subjective) how we define "bright", "stupid", and even "brain". Look at sorites paradox, where we have a pile of sand and keep taking grains away from it. It is arbitrary when we stop calling it "pile". The same goes for the brain. Imagine the simplest brain there is, then take one molecule away from it. Is it still a brain? The answer is arbitrary. "brains" are arbitrary labels and as such have only an arbitrary starting point.

If we drop all those arbitrary (higher level)descriptions, we end up with the lower level descriptions of the basic physical ingredients (as identified by physics). We may arbitrarily feel that "stupid" is not a suitable description for a rock, but we can indeed say (at least if one is a physicalist) that a rock really just consists of a collection of basic physical ingredients, as do humans.
 
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  • #31
pftest said:
Ok let's focus on the absence of signals in rocks. My position is that you won't be able to point out any emergent physical property in the signal or rock, because anything you point at will consist of, and be describable in terms of, the basic physical ingredients (such as elementary particles, the four forces).

What you really mean with "emergence" here is better illustrated with the protein example. A protein may fold in many different ways, just like a molecule may move up, down, left, right, follow a circular or figure 8 pattern, etc. However, no matter how complex the motion gets, there is a simpler version. Motion has been around at least since the big bang.

You will find that the same is true for the "signal" and anything else physical you can find in the universe.

It is arbitrary(subjective) how we define "bright", "stupid", and even "brain". Look at sorites paradox, where we have a pile of sand and keep taking grains away from it. It is arbitrary when we stop calling it "pile". The same goes for the brain. Imagine the simplest brain there is, then take one molecule away from it. Is it still a brain? The answer is arbitrary. "brains" are arbitrary labels and as such have only an arbitrary starting point.

If we drop all those arbitrary (higher level)descriptions, we end up with the lower level descriptions of the basic physical ingredients (as identified by physics). We may arbitrarily feel that "stupid" is not a suitable description for a rock, but we can indeed say (at least if one is a physicalist) that a rock really just consists of a collection of basic physical ingredients, as do humans.

My response is that there is nothing arbitrary about it, rather it's a matter of a limited set of possible thermodynamic processes that can be supported. We can only assign appellation like "pile" based on conventions borne of our experiences, but that changes nothing about reality. Of course, your sand example is telling in a world of silicon... it's just clear that silicon alone isn't enough, anymore than we're JUST carbon, or hydrogen.

Whether or not we can call it as humans, there is a threshold of complexity AND the action of those complex ingredients that forms the line between living and inert, never mind conscious. A simple way to look at this would be that unlike your pile of sand, you can pick out neurons from a brain one by one, and whether you like it or not, it will cease to be a brain. When exactly you reduce it to the point of being dead or inert is something you'll discover, but it doesn't depend on how we view it, or define it.

You can't look at a rock and call it stupid, because stupidity is a function of non-inert, thinking matter. A rock isn't even a definition that means much... a rock of what exactly?... granite? Sandstone? Cocaine?! In the same way, I'm not touching "conscious", because we only have ourselves at the "top" example, and can only compare ourselves to other animals, fungi, rocks... etc.

You can get a rock we call a planet, which is incredibly complex and dynamic, but it's still not thinking; two neurons do more thinking than Jupiter ever will. There is plenty of physical "noise" in a rock, but no signal, and I'd say it's the capacity to produce signals that is the big difference, the yardstick we can use.
 
  • #32
apeiron said:
I see the task as generalising. So we have a very particular and subjective POV. And to move out of that, we seek the most general and hence objective POV - the god's eye view in some sense...

Reductionism has been about the search for the fundamental substance - the atoms, the matter, the general physical stuff of which a material world is made.

But you are talking about generalising something else - the notion of relationships. And that is really the systems approach...

So all understanding remains subjective. But generalisation is a way of structuring our subjective experience so it seems more universal, more objective.

And that would not change if our ideas are based on notions of atoms or notions of relationships.


Thanks for putting this so clearly. There’s a fundamental issue here that’s difficult even to state, because we have such excellent conceptual tools for dealing with the world of things (including “systems” of all kinds), and few attempts have even been made to deal with the relationships between things.

So for example, we refer to “consciousness” as a characteristic of certain kinds of things, as maybe “emerging” in certain types of complex systems. I think it would be better to think of consciousness (in the human sense) as an aspect of the talking-relationships people learn to have with each other (and then later with themselves), as they grow up.

The issue is that the modeling / generalizing mode of thought that we’re so good at is inherently “objectifying”. To think this way is to step out of our connections with things and imagine them “in themselves” – even if when we’re imagining is a “system of relationships” or a “web of real-time interaction”.

This is why I don’t identify with “systems thinking” or the kind of “internalism” that you refer to above... even though I recognize that they’re genuine attempts to find language for the “relational” aspect of existence. Even when what they’re trying to model is the “observer / observed relationship” itself, to my mind this kind of thinking remains within the traditional paradigm, of the disengaged thinker building models of reality in his head and checking if they correspond to the appearances.

This paradigm is excellent, but limited. It does not work for clarifying what’s at the basis of the physical world, or for clarifying what we mean by “consciousness”.

There’s another paradigm – I’m thinking of Phenomenology – that tries to describe the world of subjective consciousness itself. But to my mind this doesn’t get at what’s fundamental either, because the self-enclosed world of the self-observing consciousness also tends to miss the deeper dimension of communicative connection with other people. We don’t yet have a paradigm adequate to “the between” out of which I think our conscious selves emerge.

Heidegger is one of the few philosophers who understood this. You can’t “generalize” about existence, because there is never more than one’s own existence to deal with. Nor are relationships like things, that have properties and can be described “from outside”. Relationships (in the sense I think is fundamental) only exist for the two who are in the relationship – and even they have opposite viewpoints on it.

Heidegger saw that we need a different kind of category-system to deal with the aspect of the world that we “see from inside”, only from this unique perspective each of us has, and that goes deeper than our own self-hood. Instead of “generalizing” – which abstracts from the uniqueness of existence rooted in real-time connection. In Being and Time he called this kind of category “existentials” – attempts to articulate the structure of “being-in-the-world” from one’s own point of view.

It’s relatively easy to explain why the traditional model-building paradigm is limited, and Heidegger was good at that. It’s not easy at all to see what a different paradigm would look like. Being and Time made a remarkable start at this, but Heidegger was unable even to complete that work as he’d originally projected it. And neither his later writing nor that of his “followers” got much further, in my view. So while I’m sure many philosophers see this as a closed chapter in our story... for me, it’s still the basic unresolved issue, if we're trying to understand the basis of our own existence.
 
  • #33
I think pftest is making a basic point about language, which is actually very important to recognize because language is all we have here. Langauge involves hanging labels on things, but what are these "things"? They are the only things we are in any position to hang labels on: shared experiences. Period, that's what language is, hanging labels on experiences that we (assume we) share. So we cannot actually label the object "table", all we can label are the shared experiences we have around that object. This is quite important when we come to physicalism, and the OP question of whether or not a brain "creates" consciousness.

Both brain, consciousness, and create, are words, so can be nothing but hanging labels on shared experiences. We are looking for connections between these shared experiences, to make sense of them. Just like with cause and effect, we are looking for basic relationships, and also just like with cause and effect, we cannot actually demonstrate that the cause "creates" the effect, all we can say is the former gives us a way to make sense of the appearance of the latter, given that we experience things in temporal order. Using precise language like that saves us from making wrong terms based on assumptions we have made that we cannot actually demonstrate are true, and the same holds for claims that brains create consciousness, or are the "source" of consciousness, whatever we imagine a "source" is.
 
  • #34
hello121 said:
Consciousness is a term that has been used to refer to a variety of aspects of the relationship between the mind and the world with which it interacts
Yes, this seems like a much safer statement than the claim that brains create consciousness.
 
  • #35
ConradDJ said:
The issue is that the modeling / generalizing mode of thought that we’re so good at is inherently “objectifying”. To think this way is to step out of our connections with things and imagine them “in themselves” – even if when we’re imagining is a “system of relationships” or a “web of real-time interaction”.

I see it differently because generalisation should produce two things - two halves of a dichotomy, two poles of a spectrum, two levels of a hierarchy. And so we can remain "within" what we produce. If we only imagine monistic options, then we are putting ourselves "outside" looking on.

Subjectively, for instance, the world seems patchily both broken and smooth. We then generalise from this experience to create the metaphysical dichotomy of discrete~continuous to represent the two limiting extremes of what could be the case. Just imagining all reality to be fundamentally discrete would be monistic and leaving us standing outside. But imagining reality instead to be bounded in these two opposed directions means that we can remain inside, living in a reality that is still just a patchy mix and suspended between two limiting cases.

It should be no surprise this is our actual situation when it comes to physical theory. We have to one side (the local scale) a theory of reality as a discrete grain of events (QM), and to the other side (the global scale), a theory of reality as a continuous dynamical fabric (GR). And attempts to collapse one extreme into the other (QG) is a project that keeps floundering in paradox.

So the internalist approach says the apparent dualism of QM~GR is what we should expect to find - reality crisply differentiated in the most general way possible, and then ourselves inside it. To collapse the crisply differentiated into a single monistic generalisation (QG) would put us outside reality, and it doesn't really work.

Now I believe that you can collapse QM~GR back into some prior "monistic" state, but it would be a vague state, a perfect symmetry. Not a crisp monistic generalisation. You would have to collapse, in effect, both the local and the global, both the notions of the discrete and the continuous. So the primal QG state is neither discrete nor continuous, merely the potential to become divided towards these opposing crisp limits.

Sorry, getting a little off track here. But the point is that internalism in systems science/hierarchy theory/Peircean semiotics is motivated by this idea that limits always come in complementary pairs and so we always have something definite to either side when we generalise and objectify our ideas.

Now your goal is to have a relational view of reality. So you say instead of focusing on the point like actors, you will build a model around their point-to-point interactions.

But this is monistic as you are still outside looking down at these individual events or histories. You stand in the (undefined) larger space or void in which there is a play of atomistic relating. Because you want to deal with events isolated at an instant, you don't account for the generally passing time within which all these events are located.

A more complete Peircean approach would be properly hierarchical. First you have the something that can happen (the local fluctation). Then you have the interactions that fluctuations make possible (the dyadic interaction you want to focus on). But then you have over time the generalised organisation that results from a free play of localised relating. You have a global system that has developed definite habits that constrain the relating.

So internalism is not imagining the view of actors interacting with each other - that is still an atomistic or local scale of analysis. It is about local actors interacting with global constraints - the systems view in which you are generalising the opposing extremes of scale and so placing yourself, as the observer, in the middle of things.

This paradigm is excellent, but limited. It does not work for clarifying what’s at the basis of the physical world, or for clarifying what we mean by “consciousness”.

I think it definitely clarifies physics - it makes more sense of QM~GR and QG for a start. It is a more suitable ontology than monistic atomism.

Hierarchy theory is also the best model for making sense of brains and minds that I have come across. It really works in my experience.

Heidegger is one of the few philosophers who understood this. You can’t “generalize” about existence, because there is never more than one’s own existence to deal with. Nor are relationships like things, that have properties and can be described “from outside”. Relationships (in the sense I think is fundamental) only exist for the two who are in the relationship – and even they have opposite viewpoints on it.

Systems thinking grew out of Naturphilosophie, Schelling and Hegel.
 
<h2>1. How does the brain create consciousness?</h2><p>The exact mechanism by which the brain creates consciousness is still not fully understood. However, it is believed that consciousness arises from the complex interactions between neurons and their connections in the brain.</p><h2>2. Can consciousness be explained solely by brain activity?</h2><p>There is ongoing debate among scientists about whether consciousness can be fully explained by brain activity. Some argue that there may be other factors at play, such as quantum processes or non-physical phenomena.</p><h2>3. Is consciousness the same as intelligence?</h2><p>No, consciousness and intelligence are two separate concepts. While consciousness refers to the subjective experience of being aware, intelligence is the ability to acquire knowledge and skills and apply them in various situations.</p><h2>4. Can consciousness be measured or quantified?</h2><p>Currently, there is no definitive way to measure or quantify consciousness. However, some scientists use brain imaging techniques and behavioral studies to study the neural correlates of consciousness.</p><h2>5. Can consciousness exist without a brain?</h2><p>There is no evidence to suggest that consciousness can exist without a brain. The brain is necessary for the complex neural processes that give rise to consciousness. However, some theories propose the idea of consciousness being a fundamental property of the universe, independent of the brain.</p>

1. How does the brain create consciousness?

The exact mechanism by which the brain creates consciousness is still not fully understood. However, it is believed that consciousness arises from the complex interactions between neurons and their connections in the brain.

2. Can consciousness be explained solely by brain activity?

There is ongoing debate among scientists about whether consciousness can be fully explained by brain activity. Some argue that there may be other factors at play, such as quantum processes or non-physical phenomena.

3. Is consciousness the same as intelligence?

No, consciousness and intelligence are two separate concepts. While consciousness refers to the subjective experience of being aware, intelligence is the ability to acquire knowledge and skills and apply them in various situations.

4. Can consciousness be measured or quantified?

Currently, there is no definitive way to measure or quantify consciousness. However, some scientists use brain imaging techniques and behavioral studies to study the neural correlates of consciousness.

5. Can consciousness exist without a brain?

There is no evidence to suggest that consciousness can exist without a brain. The brain is necessary for the complex neural processes that give rise to consciousness. However, some theories propose the idea of consciousness being a fundamental property of the universe, independent of the brain.

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