Let us assume, for the sake of argument, a form of epiphenomenalist dualism, in which there are two distinct kinds of things: physical processes occurring in the brain and an associated array of conscious experiences — tom111
Consciousness is a passive byproduct, a kind of “ride-along” to the real causal story that takes place in the material world.
Once we grant this setup, we immediately encounter the problem of psychophysical harmony. Why is it that our conscious experiences are so perfectly aligned with our physical and behavioral states? Why does seeing a red apple correspond to the experience of redness rather than the feeling of pain or a random hallucination? Within epiphenomenalism, there is no causal reason for this mapping to be so orderly. The physical world could just as easily have produced any pattern of conscious experiences, or none at all. The fact that our inner experiences match the external world so precisely seems like an extraordinary coincidence if consciousness has no causal role. — tom111
…consciousness is an enriched state of mind. The enrichment consists in inserting additional elements of mind within the ongoing mind process. These additional mind elements are largely cut from the same cloth as the rest of the mind—they are imagetic—but thanks to their contents they announce firmly that all the mental contents to which I currently have access belong to me, are my thing, are actually unfolding within my organism. The addition is revelatory. Revealing mental ownership is first and foremost accomplished by feeling. When I experience the mental event we call pain, I can actually localize it to some part of my body. In reality, the feeling occurs in both my mind and my body, and for a good reason. I own both, they are located within the same physiological space, and they can interact with each other. The manifest ownership of mental contents by the integrated organism where they arise is the distinctive trait of a conscious mind.
Perhaps, to rescue dualism, we might turn to interactionist dualism, the idea that mind and matter do interact. Yet this immediately raises another problem: how could such an interaction occur without violating the laws of physics as we understand them? The brain appears to be a closed physical system governed by conservation laws. To allow non-physical causes to influence it would require new physics or a revision of our current understanding of causation, and we have no evidence for either. — tom111
The brain appears to be a closed physical system governed by conservation laws. — tom111
There is no such thing as a closed physical system, so we can dismiss this as a non-issue. — Metaphysician Undercover
What if neither monism or dualism are true? I agree that between the two, monism makes more sense, but it perhaps seems more reasonable to say that reality consists of many things that only appear to be unified. — ProtagoranSocratist
And, I think it's very clear that dualism offers better principles, due to it being more consistent with how we experience things. — Metaphysician Undercover
. The assumption that we can reduce past and future to being understood by the very same principles (monism) appears to be very mistaken. — Metaphysician Undercover
Let us assume, for the sake of argument, a form of epiphenomenalist dualism, in which there are two distinct kinds of things: physical processes occurring in the brain and an associated array of conscious experiences. On this view, every physical event in the brain produces a corresponding mental event, a subjective experience, but these mental events have no causal influence on the physical. Consciousness is a passive byproduct, a kind of “ride-along” to the real causal story that takes place in the material world. — tom111
Once we grant this setup, we immediately encounter the problem of psychophysical harmony. Why is it that our conscious experiences are so perfectly aligned with our physical and behavioral states? — tom111
Why does seeing a red apple correspond to the experience of redness rather than the feeling of pain or a random hallucination?
Given the implausibility of perfect psychophysical harmony under dualism, monism seems the only coherent position left. Consciousness is not something added onto the physical world. It is the physical world itself, viewed from the inside. — tom111
Do you think such a "dual-aspect" monism resolves the problem of psycho-physical harmony? I have always thought the problem remains just as acute. Consider that, if behavior is wholly explicable in terms of mechanism, then it doesn't seem that "how phenomenal experience is" can ever be selected for by natural selection. And yet, all the ways in which consciousness seems to be set up as a "user interface" (e.g. Hoffman)—as problematic as that analogy might be—would seem to suggest a causal role for "volitional choice. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Indeed, the entire physicalist paradigm seems to have a difficulty with unity and multiplicity, in defining how a single bee is a "one." The older idea was to declare that the world was made up of subsistent building blocks (so your idea about form, consciousness being the product of arrangements of building blocks), but this sort of ontology has been critically undermined by advances in physics, and always had explanatory issues (e.g., gravity as a sort of occult force acting at a distance, and inability to explain mind, etc.) — Count Timothy von Icarus
. . . The second is monism, which holds that mind and matter are not two separate kinds of things at all, but rather that consciousness is a particular organization or pattern within the physical, not something over and above it. — tom111
That's true. I suppose physics is seemingly gradually moving away from "building block" models to more continuum models (eg quantum field theory). This is something I need to think more on — tom111
Yet it seems highly implausible that the qualities of experience would so precisely mirror a system’s physical and functional organization.
Why should neural activity for detecting 650 nm light feel like red, so well-suited to signalling urgency? Why should the mechanisms of tissue damage produce the feeling of pain, which drives protection? Or why should patterns of motion perception yield the vivid sense of fluid, continuous movement, matching the body’s need to predict trajectories? — tom111
What does it mean for an experience to "mirror" or "match" physical and functional organization? This seems to be somewhat similar to Chalmers' "hard problem of consciousness," — SophistiCat
But why does that association exist at all? Why is there a link between a specific pattern of neural activity and a specific type of conscious feeling, one that consistently fits the body’s needs? — tom111
Why does consciousness map onto physical and behavioural organisation in such an orderly, adaptive way, instead of being random or disconnected? — tom111
Apologies, slowly replying to comments. — tom111
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