Koukl points out that in order to recognize something as an illusion, two things are required: (1) the presence of a conscious observer who is capable of perception, and (2) the ability to distinguish between what is real and what is illusion.
If there were no conscious observers who can perceive, then it is impossible to know there is an illusion because the non-conscious do not perceive or know anything. So if consciousness was not real there would be no way to perceive that consciousness was just an illusion. If consciousness is required to perceive an illusion, then consciousness cannot itself be an illusion. Similarly, one would have to be able to perceive both the real world and the illusory world in order to know there is a distinction between the two, and to subsequently identify the illusory world as illusory. If all one perceived was the illusion, they would not be able to recognize it as such.
Indeed... but Dennett clearly isn't just doing that, for he also talks about the presence of our experiences. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I disagree with your summation of substance dualism as "there are souls," because that suggests it's a theological position. It strikes me that you've jettisoned the classical Cartesian position so that you could move on to the more modern views. My thought is that substance dualism and it's newer offspring property dualism largely collapse into the same thing under analysis and no real headway has been made by Chalmers or Searle in their new classification system. They've just rearranged the furniture. — Hanover
I can dismiss property dualism, or at least panpsychism because it seems that if panpsychism there would be no way to know where my consciousness starts and another begins, but what I experience is that I'm a being in a body. And there is still all the issues common to substance dualism (for example, how do tiny conscious things interact with physical brain?) — anonymous66
I'm not aware of any other way to view consciousness. The evidence suggests that when the physical brain is changed or damaged, then there are changes in consciousness. There is no evidence of any consciousness without a physical brain.If you want to say that consciousness is generated by the "physical brain" then how is that not an example of the "naive realism" you have rejected as being "demonstrably false"? — John
I think that the metaphysical question that must be first answered is 'what is intelligence?' — James
The evidence suggests that when the physical brain is changed or damaged, then there are changes in consciousness. — Anonymous66
I think the evidence suggests rather that our sense organs are such that they give us the ability to see the world in a way that is beneficial for the survival of our species, not a completely accurate one. — Anonymous66
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