Instead, the brain is handling particular kinds of "experiential information" - visual, tactile, auditory, kinesthetic, gustatory, etc.
But that then becomes a dualistic framing of the situation because he is talking about qualia and all the metaphysical problems that must ensue from there. — apokrisis
This is the introduction to Searle's 2004 book Mind, A Brief Introduction.
INTROD U C T I O N
Why I Wrote This Book
There are many recent introductory books on the philoso-
phy of mind. Several give a more or less comprehensive
survey of the main positions and arguments currently in
the field. Some, indeed, are written with great clarity, rigor,
intelligence, and scholarship. What then is my excuse for
adding another book to this glut? Well, of course, any
philosopher who has worked hard on a subject is unlikely
to be completely satisfied with somebody else’s writings on
that same subject, and I suppose that I am a typical
philosopher in this respect. But in addition to the usual
desire for wanting to state my disagreements, there is an
overriding reason for my wanting to write a general intro-
duction to the philosophy of mind. Almost all of the works
that I have read accept the same set of historically inherited
categories for describing mental phenomena, especially
consciousness, and with these categories a certain set of
assumptions about how consciousness and other mental
phenomena relate to each other and to the rest of the world.
It is this set of categories, and the assumptions that the
categories carry like heavy baggage, that is completely
unchallenged and that keeps the discussion going. The
different positions then are all taken within a set of
mistaken assumptions. The result is that the philosophy of
mind is unique among contemporary philosophical sub-
jects, in that all of the most famous and influential theories
are false. By such theories I mean just about anything that
has “ism” in its name. I am thinking of dualism, both
property dualism and substance dualism, materialism,
physicalism, computationalism, functionalism, behavior-
ism, epiphenomenalism, cognitivism, eliminativism, pan
psychism, dual-aspect theory, and emergentism, as it is
standardly conceived. To make the whole subject even
more poignant, many of these theories, especially dualism
and materialism, are trying to say something true. One of
my many aims is to try to rescue the truth from the
overwhelming urge to falsehood. I have attempted some of
this task in other works, especially The Rediscovery of the
Mind, but this is my only attempt at a comprehensive
introduction to the entire subject of the philosophy of
mind.
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There's also this: Why I Am Not A Property Dualist:
https://faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/~paller/dialogue/propertydualism.pdf