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In Defense of Physicalist Accounts of Consciousness

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Presentation on theme: "In Defense of Physicalist Accounts of Consciousness"— Presentation transcript:

1 In Defense of Physicalist Accounts of Consciousness
Ron Chrisley School of Cognitive & Computing Sciences, University of Sussex After October 1st: School of Computer Science, University of Birmingham Toward A Science of Consciousness 2001 Skövde, Sweden August 11, 2001 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

2 Can we have a science of consciousness?
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3 Can we have a science of consciousness?
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4 Can we have a science of consciousness?
Ö Can we have a science of consciousness? 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

5 More specifically: Can we have a physicalist science of consciousness?
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6 Take-Home Message If we gain a better understanding of what science is, then we will have a better idea of whether particular scientific accounts of consciousness are possible I’ll show this by looking at particular case – even if you disagree with the details, you can still agree with the general point 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

7 Overview Look at three influential arguments against the possibility of a physicalist account of consciousness: 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

8 Overview Look at three influential arguments against the possibility of a physicalist account of consciousness: Nagel: incompatibility of subjective and objective 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

9 Overview Look at three influential arguments against the possibility of a physicalist account of consciousness: Nagel: incompatibility of subjective and objective Jackson: knowledge argument (feat. Mary) 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

10 Overview Look at three influential arguments against the possibility of a physicalist account of consciousness: Nagel: incompatibility of subjective and objective Jackson: knowledge argument (feat. Mary) Chalmers: lack of logical supervenience (zombie earth) 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

11 Overview Show that these arguments only work on a particular and implausible view of science: 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

12 Overview Show that these arguments only work on a particular and implausible view of science: Objectivity as “the view from nowhere” 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

13 Overview Show that these arguments only work on a particular and implausible view of science: Objectivity as “the view from nowhere” Science as non-experiential 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

14 Overview Show that these arguments only work on a particular and implausible view of science: Objectivity as “the view from nowhere” Science as non-experiential Explanations as logical deductions 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

15 Strategy/Caveats Will argue for the possibility of physicalist accounts of consciousness: 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

16 Strategy/Caveats Will argue for the possibility of physicalist accounts of consciousness: By refuting three influential arguments against same 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

17 Strategy/Caveats Will argue for the possibility of physicalist accounts of consciousness: By refuting three influential arguments against same Not a direct argument; failure of the three arguments is compatible with the impossibility of physicalist accounts 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

18 Strategy/Caveats Will argue for the possibility of physicalist accounts of consciousness: By refuting three influential arguments against same Not a direct argument; failure of the three arguments is compatible with the impossibility of physicalist accounts Will be brisk, leaving out detail, and assuming familiarity with the three arguments to be rejected 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

19 Defining terms “Physicalist” 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

20 Defining terms “Physicalist” Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative
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21 Defining terms “Physicalist” Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative
Roughly: business as usual 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

22 Defining terms “Physicalist” “Account”
Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative Roughly: business as usual “Account” 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

23 Defining terms “Physicalist” “Account”
Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative Roughly: business as usual “Account” Scientific 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

24 Defining terms “Physicalist” “Account”
Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative Roughly: business as usual “Account” Scientific Where the action is 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

25 Defining terms “Physicalist” “Account” “Consciousness”
Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative Roughly: business as usual “Account” Scientific Where the action is “Consciousness” 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

26 Defining terms “Physicalist” “Account” “Consciousness”
Non-dualistic, ontologically conservative Roughly: business as usual “Account” Scientific Where the action is “Consciousness” Phenomenal awareness: “hard problem” 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

27 Nagel’s argument: Subjectivity vs objectivity
Consciousness is a subjective phenomenon 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

28 Nagel’s argument: Subjectivity vs objectivity
Consciousness is a subjective phenomenon That is, consciousness is accessible only from a subjective point of view 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

29 Nagel’s argument: Subjectivity vs objectivity
Consciousness is a subjective phenomenon That is, consciousness is accessible only from a subjective point of view But scientific accounts should be objective 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

30 Nagel’s argument: Subjectivity vs objectivity
Consciousness is a subjective phenomenon That is, consciousness is accessible only from a subjective point of view But scientific accounts should be objective Objective accounts are from “no point of view”, or a “God’s-eye view”: contain no subjectivity 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

31 Nagel’s argument: Subjectivity vs objectivity
Consciousness is a subjective phenomenon That is, consciousness is accessible only from a subjective point of view But scientific accounts should be objective Objective accounts are from “no point of view”, or a “God’s-eye view”: contain no subjectivity Thus, science cannot explain subjective consciousness 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

32 Rejecting “The view from nowhere”
Nagel’s mistake concerns the nature of objectivity 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

33 Rejecting “The view from nowhere”
Nagel’s mistake concerns the nature of objectivity Not a God’s eye view, not a “perspectiveless perspective” 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

34 Rejecting “The view from nowhere”
Nagel’s mistake concerns the nature of objectivity Not a God’s eye view, not a “perspectiveless perspective” Rather, a way of negotiating human, perspective-bound views; “a view from anywhere” (Brian Cantwell Smith, On the Origin of Objects) 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

35 Rejecting “The view from nowhere”
Nagel’s mistake concerns the nature of objectivity Not a God’s eye view, not a “perspectiveless perspective” Rather, a way of negotiating human, perspective-bound views; “a view from anywhere” (Brian Cantwell Smith, On the Origin of Objects) Thus, no incompatibility between objectivity and subjective experience 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

36 Jackson’s knowledge argument
Suppose there is a scientist, Mary, who has all the physical information about vision, but has never actually seen colour. 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

37 Jackson’s knowledge argument
Suppose there is a scientist, Mary, who has all the physical information about vision, but has never actually seen colour. When she eventually does see, say, red, she learns something she didn’t know before: what it’s like to see red 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

38 Jackson’s knowledge argument
Suppose there is a scientist, Mary, who has all the physical information about vision, but has never actually seen colour. When she eventually does see, say, red, she learns something she didn’t know before: what it’s like to see red So physical information is not all the information about consciousness 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

39 Rejecting the non-experiential view of science
Jackson’s mistake is to assume that science is a set of propositions that can be written down and read, independently of experience 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

40 Rejecting the non-experiential view of science
Jackson’s mistake is to assume that science is a set of propositions that can be written down and read, independently of experience Rather, science is an experiential activity, not just the “output” of that activity 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

41 Rejecting the non-experiential view of science
Jackson’s mistake is to assume that science is a set of propositions that can be written down and read, independently of experience Rather, science is an experiential activity, not just the “output” of that activity To be sure, text plays a big role in the activity of science, but so also does experience 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

42 Rejecting the non-experiential view of science
Jackson’s mistake is to assume that science is a set of propositions that can be written down and read, independently of experience Rather, science is an experiential activity, not just the “output” of that activity To be sure, text plays a big role in the activity of science, but so also does experience Science does not aspire to provide an account of anything to anyone independently of their experience 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

43 What to do about Mary? Mary may have all the “physical information”, but does not know everything that science knows about vision 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

44 What to do about Mary? Mary may have all the “physical information”, but does not know everything that science knows about vision Thus, the fact that she learns something does not indicate some limitation of science 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

45 What to do about Mary? Mary may have all the “physical information”, but does not know everything that science knows about vision Thus, the fact that she learns something does not indicate some limitation of science Science presupposes that one already knows what is trying to be explained 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

46 What to do about Mary? Mary may have all the “physical information”, but does not know everything that science knows about vision Thus, the fact that she learns something does not indicate some limitation of science Science presupposes that one already knows what is trying to be explained It does not atempt to make this intelligible for those for whom the problem does not arise 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

47 Chalmers’ argument: the possibility of Zombie Earth
Scientific explanations must show how the lower-level facts logically entail what is to be explained 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

48 Chalmers’ argument: the possibility of Zombie Earth
Scientific explanations must show how the lower-level facts logically entail what is to be explained We can imagine a Zombie Earth, physically identical to Earth, but with no consciousness at all 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

49 Chalmers’ argument: the possibility of Zombie Earth
Scientific explanations must show how the lower-level facts logically entail what is to be explained We can imagine a Zombie Earth, physically identical to Earth, but with no consciousness at all So consciousness is not logically entailed by physical facts 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

50 Chalmers’ argument: the possibility of Zombie Earth
Scientific explanations must show how the lower-level facts logically entail what is to be explained We can imagine a Zombie Earth, physically identical to Earth, but with no consciousness at all So consciousness is not logically entailed by physical facts So there cannot be a physicalist explanation of consciousness 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

51 Rejecting the deductive view of science
Showing how low-level facts entail what is to be explained is only one mode of explanation 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

52 Rejecting the deductive view of science
Showing how low-level facts entail what is to be explained is only one mode of explanation An explanation need only make it intelligible how something with one description also has another description 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

53 Rejecting the deductive view of science
Showing how low-level facts entail what is to be explained is only one mode of explanation An explanation need only make it intelligible how something with one description also has another description Scientific understanding consists in a practical capacity to interrelate the two descriptions 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

54 Rejecting the deductive view of science
Showing how low-level facts entail what is to be explained is only one mode of explanation An explanation need only make it intelligible how something with one description also has another description Scientific understanding consists in a practical capacity to interrelate the two descriptions Furthermore, our views on what is logically entailed by physics can change: history of science 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

55 Analysis The three arguments rely on an inaccurate view of science:
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56 Analysis The three arguments rely on an inaccurate view of science:
Perspectiveless 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

57 Analysis The three arguments rely on an inaccurate view of science:
Perspectiveless Exhausted by linguistic information 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

58 Analysis The three arguments rely on an inaccurate view of science:
Perspectiveless Exhausted by linguistic information Explains via logical deduction 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

59 Analysis The three arguments rely on an inaccurate view of science:
Perspectiveless Exhausted by linguistic information Explains via logical deduction None of these are assumed by a view of science which sees it as a situated, embodied activity carried out by experiencing agents 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

60 Analysis The three arguments rely on an inaccurate view of science:
Perspectiveless Exhausted by linguistic information Explains via logical deduction None of these are assumed by a view of science which sees it as a situated, embodied activity carried out by experiencing agents Content should inform method: Cognitive Science is realising that cognition (even science) is such an activity 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

61 Individualism vs social science
Critics of scientific accounts of consciousness unanimously assume the case of the individual 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

62 Individualism vs social science
Critics of scientific accounts of consciousness unanimously assume the case of the individual If an individual cannot achieve X, then science cannot achieve X 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

63 Individualism vs social science
Critics of scientific accounts of consciousness unanimously assume the case of the individual If an individual cannot achieve X, then science cannot achieve X But there is the possibility that the scientific community as a whole might understand (all aspects of) consciousness, even if no one person does 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

64 Afterword I have only argued that it is possible for physicalist science to provide accounts of consciousness that elude the three objections 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

65 Afterword I have only argued that it is possible for physicalist science to provide accounts of consciousness that elude the three objections This will be of no use if scientific accounts conform to the (limited) models of science that Nagel, Jackson & Chalmers presuppose 5/7/2019 TSC 2001

66 Afterword I have only argued that it is possible for physicalist science to provide accounts of consciousness that elude the three objections This will be of no use if scientific accounts conform to the (limited) models of science that Nagel, Jackson & Chalmers presuppose Scientists should be aware of the wider possibilities when going about their business 5/7/2019 TSC 2001


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