We can tell quite a detailed story about the light rays hitting your eye, being focused by the lens in your eye onto your retina. About the signal that sends to the optic nerve to your visual cortex. About the processing that happens there. The various forms of discriminations made by the visual system. But how, in the course of that, does the experience arise? — Keith Frankish
Maybe the experience you had of looking at the green leaf , the way it felt, was just a way of representing the world. Representing the fact that there is a leaf out there that has certain characterists. That reflects light a certain way. And maybe that's all there is to it. That's one strategy. And it's a strategy I used to think would work. But now, I'm not so sure about that. I've come to think that qualia are really too mysterious to be explained in physical terms. — Keith Frankish
What I'm suggesting is you'e under an illusion about the nature of the internal world. About what's involved in your having that experience. — Keith Frankish
I don't think that consciousness is an illusion. Consciousness is what we're all familiar with. That's not an illusion. The question is what's involved in having those experiences and those sensations. — Keith Frankish
In exactly what way consciousness emerged via evolution is a mystery, but we can be fairly certain about what had to obtain in order for it to be possible. Initially, electrical properties in aggregates of tissue such as the brain needed to be robust enough that a stable supervenience of electromagnetic field (EMF) was created by systematic electron fluxing. Quantum effects in molecules of the body are sensitive to trace EMF energy sources, creating a structural complex of relatively thermodynamic mass containing pockets of relatively quantum biochemistry integrated by sustained radiation. EMF/quantum hybridization is likely responsible for our synthetic experience of qualia, how we perceive unfathomably minute and diverse fluctuating in environments as a perpetualized substrate, perturbed by its surroundings but never vanishing while we are awake and lucid, the essence of perceptual “stream of consciousness”. Nonlocal phenomena are ever underlying the macroscopic substance of qualitative consciousness, its EMF properties as well as bulked matter in which nonlocality is partially dampened, and quantum processes in cells interface perception instantiated in bodies with nonlocality of the natural world which is still enigmatic to scientific knowledge. Quantum features of biochemistry have likely been refined evolutionarily so that mechanisms by which relative nonlocality affects organisms, mechanisms of EMF/matter interfacing, mechanisms targeting particular environmental stimuli via functionally tailored pigments along with further classes of molecules and cellular tissues, and mechanisms for translation of stimulus into representational memory all became increasingly coordinated until an arrangement involving what we call ‘intentionality’ emerged, a mind with executive functions of deliberative interpretation and strategizing, beyond mere reflex-centric memory conjoined to stimulus/response. Qualitative consciousness precedes the degree of unification we experience as humanlike awareness, for qualia can exist and perform a functional role in consort with quantum effects and additional gradations of nonlocal reality while an organism is almost entirely lacking the centralized control we would classify as intention.
Wouldn't that be a form of panpsychism? — Marchesk
So instead, he suggests that qualia are an illusion. By this, he does not mean the experience of the green leaf itself (or red apple, etc). He just doesn't think the experience has any properties of qualia. It just seems to be that way. — Marchesk
So what accounts for the illusion that conscious experience has properties of qualia? Keith suggests that one the one hand there is the perceptual account. But then there is a separate internal monitoring of the perceptual processes that gives rise to the sense of a rich, internal world. — Marchesk
And the reason for this illusion is to make ourselves and other humans feel special. The seeming hardness is a feature of the illusion, with the implication being one of survival and ethical considerations. — Marchesk
It seems about right to me. In view of evolution (including by-products of gene survival traits) being an explanation for pretty much everything about us, I think it reasonable to suspect the same of our experience. — Down The Rabbit Hole
The problem is that an explanation for everything is an explanation for nothing. If you can equally explain every outcome, you have zero knowledge. If you look at things from the perspective of evolutionary biology, everything has some kind of evolutionary reasoning. But this only provides you with a plausible explanation given the framing. It doesn't tell you what actually happened. — Echarmion
is a convergence of causal vectors we classify as biological. Didn't intend to introduce the baggage of any particular psychological, pious or godless form of that theory.In exactly what way consciousness emerged via evolution is a mystery, but we can be fairly certain about what had to obtain in order for it to be possible.
What I'm suggesting is you'e under an illusion about the nature of the internal world. About what's involved in your having that experience.
— Keith Frankish
...
So what accounts for the illusion that conscious experience has properties of qualia? — Marchesk
This also seems consistent with what Dennett says: it's not that qualia -- which are familiar, everyday phenomena -- do not exist, but that they are not what we think about them. — Kenosha Kid
The usage of the word illusion in this context strikes me as strange. What is it an illusion of? If the experience is "real" but doesn't involve any qualia, then the qualia are not an illusion. They're a representation. But that just brings us back to the view Frankish rejects. — Echarmion
Isn't this an explanation that could equally be applied to any possible outcome? That is, it merely restates that since all properties of the mind are evolved, qualia must also be evolved. But it doesn't provide any account of how this works. — Echarmion
Yeah, except they wouldn't have the properties for us to use the word qualia. We're conscious, just not in the way it seems, I guess. That does raise the question of what it means to be conscious. — Marchesk
There are recognizable qualitative characters of the given, which may be repeated in different experiences, and are thus a sort of universals; I call these "qualia." But although such qualia are universals, in the sense of being recognized from one to another experience, they must be distinguished from the properties of objects. Confusion of these two is characteristic of many historical conceptions, as well as of current essence-theories. The quale is directly intuited, given, and is not the subject of any possible error because it is purely subjective. — Clarence Irving Lewis
The usage of the word illusion in this context strikes me as strange. What is it an illusion of? If the experience is "real" but doesn't involve any qualia, then the qualia are not an illusion. They're a representation. — Echarmion
Philosophy Bites Podcast
The podcast is only 15 minutes. The two hosts interview Keith Frankish about his position on the hard problem. — Marchesk
Instead, it seems to me that we experience the world, which includes sunsets and red apples and human beings. And those are the things that we seek to explain. — Andrew M
Sunsets and red apples are experienced a particular way because we're human. The physiology doesn't account for why we experience it in terms of colors and other sensations. — Marchesk
consciousness is different, because our sensations are not the properties of structure and function. It's like saying that color just emerges from neuronal activity. Okay, but how and what does that mean? Is it spooky emergence? — Marchesk
What do you think the assumptions are that lead to the hard problem? Is not the primary idea that experience could not emerge from "brute matter"? Why would that be any more of a problem than the idea that self-organizing life could not emerge from brute matter? In either case, why not? Perhaps it is our conceptions of what experience, life and brute matter are that is the problem. The fact that we cannot exhaustively explain how it happens should not be surprising; we cannot really exhaustively explain much of anything. — Janus
This is nothing more than the usual -of-the-gaps argument: If science were capable of explaining consciousness, it would have already (impossibility of future scientific discovery); Science has not already explained consciousness; Therefore science cannot explain consciousness (and therefore consciousness is magic). — Kenosha Kid
It's not a god-of-the-gaps argument if the difficulty is conceptual. — Marchesk
but our scientific understanding is a necessary abstraction from the particulars of our human experience — Marchesk
But then there is a separate internal monitoring of the perceptual processes that gives rise to the sense of a rich, internal world. — Marchesk
Hmm. I wonder, if this were the case, how could we imagine anything at all. What causes one to experience unicorns and dragons?Because the causes of our human experience are not part of that experience — Kenosha Kid
Are you saying that we can only talk about our experiences and not about what caused them? — Harry Hindu
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