
Any parent can vouch
for just how complicated things become when a child starts reaching the age of
hard questions. We’ve all been there:
“Why is the sky blue?”
“Because, honey, the
molecules in the air scatter blue light more than other colors.”
“Oh. Where do babies
come from?”
“Sperm and egg come
together to form a zygote, which develops into a fetus and then a child.”
“Hmm. Is there a God?”
“Maybe.”
“What about Santa?”
“Definitely.”
“Why does his breath
always smell funny?”
“He uses a special
mouthwash from the North Pole.”
“Daddy, what’s
consciousness?”
“Um…”
Source:
http://realizingconsciousness.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/consciousness.jpg
If someone asked you to
explain consciousness, could you do it? Very, very smart people have spent
their entire careers trying to understand the answer to that question. It is
surprising that something we all experience is so hard to explain. The
difficulty comes in describing the “what it’s likeness” that characterizes
consciousness. There’s something it’s like to experience the color red, to
taste chocolate, to feel happy or sad. Philosophers call this phenomenology.
Unlike other worldly stuff, it isn’t something we can point to or hold in our
hand. It’s not something we’ve been able to calculate. And we’ve yet to find a
rigorous method of measuring it.
In 1994 David Chalmers
published a paper (link is external) explaining why consciousness is such a
challenging phenomenon to understand. Although he wasn’t the first to discuss
these challenges, he was the first to categorize them into two types of problems:
“easy” problems and the “hard” problem. Easy problems involve the explanation
of how the mind integrates information, focuses attention and allows us to
report on mental states. Though not a piece of cake, such problems are easy
because solving them only requires that we determine the mechanisms that
explain these behaviors. Easy problems are physical by nature, falling within
the empirical domains of psychology, cognitive science and neuroscience. Given
the current trend in science of the mind, we’re confident that one day we will
solve these problems.
The hard problem, by
contrast, may never be solved. Specifically, the hard problem is determining
why or how consciousness occurs given the right arrangement of brain matter.
What makes it hard is that we cannot just point to some physical mechanism to
solve it, for that would be the solution to the easy problem. Instead, our goal
is to explain why certain physical mechanism gives rise to consciousness
instead of something else or nothing at all. Consider an analogy from physics:
knowing every equation predicting how mass and gravity interact does not tell
us why they interact in the way they do. To understand why mass and gravity
interact, we must appeal to highly esoteric explanations involving relativity,
quantum mechanics or string theory.
But while theoretical
physicists have produced some pretty specific models that are ready to be
tested with the likes of the Large Hadron Collider, consciousness lacks the
sort of general consensus that would allow us to move on and test our theories.
And for good reason—the hard problem is tricky.
Some argue that the
hard problem simply is unsolvable. The argument for this view can take two
different forms. The first argument is that our puny brains aren’t capable of
coming up with a solution, for our brains do not have the ability to process
the complicated information that would lead to an understanding of
consciousness. The second argument is that a solution to a problem requires
that you aren’t a part of the problem. What does this mean? To solve a problem,
or so goes the argument, you must have a bird’s eye view of all the facts. But
since we are all conscious, we can never have such a view. We simply cannot
solve the hard problem because we don’t have access to the level of information
necessary to piece everything together.
I think this argument
fails, for proponents of this view don’t explain why we cannot come to
understand such high concepts through induction. Inductive reasoning is the
“bottom-up” logic we often use to construct general belief from individual
examples.
One way we use
induction every day is when choosing what to wear. We choose a particular type
of outfit to wear based on past weather patterns surrounding that morning. If
we know the outdoor temperature has been 25 degrees fahrenheit for the last 10
days, we can assume it will be cold outside, thus it is appropriate to put on
winter clothes. Of course, you could fail to arrive at a true proposition
through induction. For example, if you live in St. Louis sometimes you might
find that a 65-degree day follows a 25-degree day. In that case the belief you
arrived at through induction is false. You instead should choose spring
clothing. But induction seems to work in many cases, especially in the physical
and mathematical realms. So it’s unclear why we could not use inductive
reasoning to solve the hard problem.
This inductive approach
is indeed what many philosophers and cognitive scientists have tried to take.
Based on what is known about phenomenal states along with the brains that
possess them, many theories of consciousness have emerged, leading to huge
debates in philosophy and the sciences. Perhaps the greatest debate has focused
the distinction between dualism and physicalism.
Physicalism holds that
consciousness is entirely physical. One type of physicalism denies there is a
problem at all. For folk in this philosophical camp, called identity theorists,
the mental just is the physical, that is, the mental is nothing else than
certain physical situation that obtains given certain arrangements of atoms.
Why would one want to hold this view? First off, its simplicity is attractive.
We need not appeal to “spooky” concepts like emergence to explain what’s going
on when we’re conscious. Second, it gives us a really good reason to think that
computers can become conscious. If brains are nothing but biological
implementations of computers running a certain program, it’s possible that a
silicon chip could run the same software as us.
Another theory, functionalism,
holds that mental states are constituted by the function or role they play in a
given system. Under this view, mental states exist as causal relations to other
mental states. Functionalism is especially popular among computationalists, those
who believe the brain is just a biological implementation of a computer.
According to computationalists the brain is one system physically able to
realize mental states, other systems such as computers could also realize these
mental states. However functionalism does have its weaknesses. Many
philosophers have argued that the theory is insufficient to account for
consciousness because the role a mental state plays doesn’t explain why the
state must be one that is conscious. It's not clear why all our mental states
wouldn't just be processed unconsciously.
Fundamentally different
than physicalism, dualism is the theory that consciousness somehow falls
outside the domain of the physical. To be a dualist, you need not believe that
consciousness is a totally non-physical entity floating about the tops of our
physical brains, you simply must believe that the hard problem is not solvable
merely through sole appeal to the physical.
There are many types of
dualism purported to best solve different aspects of the hard problem. For
example, Cartesian dualism, one of the oldest forms of substance dualism, holds
that there are both physical and non-physical substances and that consciousness
is located within non-physical substance. Another theory, property dualism, holds
that consciousness is a non-physical property that emerges from the same things
that give rise to physical properties. Property dualists believe that neural
activity has both physical and non-physical properties. Physical properties
include things like electromagnetic potential while non-physical properties
include things like consciousness.
Property dualists can
further be distinguished into fundamental, emergence and neutral monist groups.
Proposed by Chalmers, fundamental property dualism holds that conscious
properties are basic properties of the universe similar to physical properties
like electromagnetic charge. According to Chalmers, these properties can
interact with other properties such as physical properties, but like
fundamental physical properties, conscious properties are their own distinct
fundamental entities. Consciousness works like electrical charge or other
physical properties do: it may cause physical matter to transition among
physical states and these physical states in turn may affect consciousness.
A closely related
theory, panpsychism, holds that all aspects of reality have some
“psychological” properties apart from their physical properties. This type of
property dualism suggests that the universe has consciousness at its base.
While this theory certainly is elegant, it is thought by some to carry
metaphysical baggage. One complaint has been that, if this theory is true, then
all matter would have a certain element of consciousness to it. Because
consciousness is inherently connected with the phenomenal, this is a peculiar
result, for it’s hard to imagine how there could be something it’s “like” to be
an electron, table, chair, tire or other inanimate object.
Furthermore,
consciousness seems to have boundaries. There is something that it’s like to be
me, to be you and to be someone else. Panpsychism has trouble explaining how
phenomenology has a boundary. If consciousness is a fundamental property of
matter, it appears as though all matter and collections of matter have a conscious
aspect. Collective consciousness entails that, not only do individual electrons
have consciousness, so do neurons and collections of neurons. It’s hard to see
the level at which you would exist as a conscious being. How many neurons
constitute you? Is it one of them, a few of them, all of them? Of course, one
might respond that, compared to other problems of consciousness, the boundary
problem is rather small. In that case, the elegance of the theory might
outweigh its weaknesses.
Like fundamental
property dualism, emergent property dualism holds that consciousness is a
property that emerges from particular types of physical arrangements of matter.
But is differs in that consciousness is a property that emerges over and above
what could be predicted given the arrangements of the matter’s physical
properties. Yet another type of property dualism, neutral monist property
dualism holds that physical and conscious properties are both dependent on some
more basic level of reality.
Why would one be
motivated to hold one of the above dualist views? What is the need to postulate
such spooky entities as non-physical conscious properties? Physicalists have
trouble explaining several aspects of consciousness in a way that is consistent
with our observations of how physical properties interact.
Frank Jackson’s thought
experiment (link is external) gets at one of the problems of the physicalist
approach:
Mary is a brilliant
scientist who is, for whatever reason, forced to investigate the world from a
black and white room via a black and white television monitor. She specializes
in the neurophysiology of vision and acquires, let us suppose, all the physical
information there is to obtain about what goes on when we see ripe tomatoes, or
the sky, and use terms like ‘red’, ‘blue’, and so on. She discovers, for
example, just which wavelength combinations from the sky stimulate the retina,
and exactly how this produces via the central nervous system the contraction of
the vocal cords and expulsion of air from the lungs that results in the
uttering of the sentence ‘The sky is blue’. [...] What will happen when Mary is
released from her black and white room or is given a color television monitor?
Will she learn anything or not?
Jackson argues that
Mary in fact will learn something new: what it’s like to see blue. Even though
she knows everything about the science of color, she has never experienced
color. Jackson later discusses another person, Frank, who experiences a color
that no other human has ever seen. It seems that no matter how much information
we have about the neural processes behind Frank’s experience of the color, we
will never know what it’s like to have Frank’s experience. According to
Jackson, that there is something learned only through phenomenal experience
shows that experience is not reducible to the purely physical.
Chalmers poses a
different problem (link is external) for physicalism. He tells us to imagine a
molecule-by-molecule replica of ourselves, exact down to each individual neuron
and its firing state. He then asks to consider whether it’s conceivable that
this creature is a philosophical zombie, that is, a creature that is
behaviorally indistinct from us but lacking consciousness. Even though on the
outside a zombie appears conscious just like you and me, is it possible for it
to be “dark” inside? Chalmers says yes. And if that’s the case, he argues, then
physicalism must be false. If we admit we can conceive of a world physically
indistinct from ours yet lacking phenomenal consciousness, we cannot hold that
the mental wholly is based on or reduces to the physical.
But can we really
conceive of an exact copy of ourselves that lacks consciousness? On the face of
it, most of us would say no. I simply cannot imagine what it would be like to
be me without there being anything it’s like to be me. But that’s not what
Chalmers is asking us to do. As part of his argument, he makes a distinction
between positive and negative conceivability. Positive conceivability means
that something is conceivable insofar as you have an imaginative picture of the
situation that obtains if the conception were true. But negative conceivability
means that something is conceivable insofar as you cannot rule it out a priori,
that is, you cannot rule it out from reason alone.
This distinction is
crucial for Chalmers’ argument to work. Now all he needs is to get you to admit
that reason alone does not provide you with motivation to reject the
possibility that your exact physical copy could lack consciousness. Since
physicalism holds the physical gives rise to the mental, and because we’ve
provided an example of a situation wherein the physical does not give rise to
the mental, we must either reject physicalism or reject our negative conception
of zombies. Since it isn’t possible to reject the latter, we must reject the
former. So physicalism must be false.
Philosophers like
Chalmers and Jackson argue that the only appropriate action is to reject
physicalism and move in the direction of dualism. These arguments have gotten
much attention in the literature from authors on both sides of the debate. And
many objections have arisen.
In response to Jackson,
Laurence Nemirow argues (link is external) that knowing what it’s like to have
an experience is the same thing as knowing how to imagine having the
experience. In Mary’s case, she didn’t learn something new, she just gained the
ability to experience color. David Lewis makes a similar argument (link is
external): Mary gained the ability to remember, imagine and recognize.
Earl Conee makes a
slightly different argument (link is external): knowing what it’s like does not
require having an imaginative experience. He introduces Martha, who is able to
visualize intermediate shades of colors she has not experienced that fall
between pairs of shades that she has experienced. Martha is not familiar with
the shade of “cherry red” but knows that cherry red is halfway between burgundy
red and fire red, two shades she has experienced. According to Conee, Martha
could know what it’s like to experience cherry red, but so long as she never
imagined it, she might never have experienced that color.
Interestingly, Jackson
himself changed his mind several times as to the implications of the Mary
argument. Although the argument appeared to offer a strong problem for
physicalism, he also believed that all behavior is caused by physical forces.
Given that the argument seemed to prove the existence of non-physical
phenomenology, Jackson needed to find a way square it away with his conception
of the physical. His strategy was to argue for epiphenomenalism, which holds
that phenomenal states are caused by physical states, but phenomenal states do
not affect the physical. Epiphenomenalism means that our phenomenal states are
akin to movies that constantly play while unconscious brain processes direct
all behavior.
Later on, Jackson
decided that Mary’s conscious recognition of color did have an effect on the
physical: it made her say “wow.” If a conscious recognition could be the cause
for an expression requiring, which requires a change in mental states, then
consciousness appears to play some role in guiding our behavior. So
epiphenomenalism would be false. He argued that physicalism could in fact
account for this “wow” experience. If the color experience is entirely
contained within in the brain, it’s possible that a new experience can cause
further changes to the brain, resulting in the utterance of a “wow” statement.
He used the analogy of akinetopsia, a deficit that causes the inability to perceive
motion. He argued that someone cured of this condition would not discover
anything new about the world (since she knows about motion). Instead, surprise
would be the response of a brain now able to see motion.
Chalmers’ zombie
argument has been subject to scrutiny as well. Because it’s logically valid,
that is, because evaluation of the argument’s premises do lead it its
conclusion, one must attack the premises in order to undermine the argument.
One objection has been that the zombie argument undermines itself. Because the
argument builds a world that is defined entirely physically, the world
necessarily would contain consciousness; therefore zombies cannot exist in it.
Other philosophers attack negative conceivability. They argue that the mere possibility
of something does not mean it actually exists. Although zombie worlds might be
possible, it is still the case in this world that consciousness is entirely
physical.
So which theory wins?
Dualism or physicalism? It depends on who you ask. Many empirical researchers
are hardcore physicalists, but not all are. The answer to this question will
require more insight into the fundamental structure of our physical world. It
might turn out that a really consistent theory of physics could lead us to understand
exactly what consciousness is. But it might not. Consciousness might forever
remain a mystery.
No comments:
Post a Comment