skywise said:
If I was claiming that causal chains at the quantum level guaranteed particular effects at the macro (or quantum) level for everything but consciousness, then your complaints about the non-deterministic structure of the universe would be relevant. But this isn't what I'm saying. I happily agree that physical processes cause consciousness in the same probabilistic way that they cause any other physical effect. The only difference is that the particular effect of a blue color experience is a non-physical effect. That is, blue color experiences are caused (non-deterministically) by physical processes, but are not physical processes themselves.
Oh, I am using "deterministic" in the purely technical/systems sense of the word. When we say a system exhibits fully deterministic behavior, we mean that at time (t), we can predict with absolute precision the state of that system (given full knowledge of the starting conditions, etc.). We know where the system is going.
Non-deterministic systems don't have this property. We can know all the details of the system - perfectly - no need for quantum probabilistic fuzziness. We can know the starting state, with absolute precision. But when asked where the system will be at time (t) - where t is not a trivial number relative to the starting iteration - we cannot answer. This is, by common definition, stochasticity - unpredictability of system state in the future based on the current state.
Now, logically, this is utterly unacceptable. If I know
everything about a system, and its rules. . . how can I not know where it's going to be in the future? Alas, this is the nature of our universe - most complex systems are by definition non-deterministic. Incidentally, this is quite a new finding.
In the past, many of these stochasticities were explained as the "ghost in the machine," or God, or bad measurements, or whatever. Turns out, now that we have computers to run all sorts of complex test cases, it's intrinsic to algorithmic systems of all kinds. That's important, and relevant to discussions of consciousness and whether the fact that brains exhibit complex behavior means they are magical, or non-physical, or mythical, or non-materialist, or whatever term you choose to use.
Furthermore, I never said we couldn't explain consciousness either. Even if my concerns are right, they still leaves open an explanation of consciousness in terms of physical systems causing or taking on non-physical properties. This explanation takes consciousness as fundamental instead of trying to reduce it to some lower level physical phenomena. It's also worth noting that I even left open the possibility that we could one day give a purely physical explanation of consciousness, although it is entirely unclear at the moment what that might look like.
Indeed, I think we're in total agreement on these specific issues.
Reductum ad Absurdio is hardly the standard method of science nowadays, and expecting neural behaviors to be "explained" by boiling them down to constituent bits and pieces would be silly. In fact, the entire "systems" approach to inquiry takes this as axiomatic. As a (someday) Doctor in Systems Theory, I'd have to pretty much say I agree with that position.
And I also agree that our understanding of how thinking takes place is pretty pathetic right now. Most neuroscientists, I believe, would agree with this. Rather than requiring magic to explain our poor understanding, however, I'd suggest we need sharper thinking, better analytic structures, and broader minds - not a retreat to spiritualism or beliefs in the ether.
Incidentally, I'd suggest that projects like
Numenta represent relevant baby steps in the right direction.
With regard to your list of borderline cases for consciousness: it is a well known fallacy to suggest that fuzzy cases for a given concept imply that the concept has no application. As someone who loves movies, I could give you a giant list of things that may or may not count as movies (I'm thinking of various avant garde pieces of art). This shows that our concept of 'movie' is not entirely precise, but obviously does not imply anything deep let alone the non-existence of movies!
No, no - those aren't borderline cases! Some of those, I'd think, we all agree are "conscious." Some of them, most would agree, aren't. The ones in the middle? The problem isn't that we cannot agree on where they fit -
the problem is that we don't even have any generally accepted criteria by which to make this decision! That's more than mere definitional ambiguity. It's a strong suggestion that the "class" of things that are conscious is not well constituted (in the set theoretic sense of the word).
I think there's something important here, for sure. I think it's worthy of study (heck, I've spent years of academic life poking at it, myself). I think we're making some hesitant strides in the right direction. But I also think that we're not being anywhere near clear enough in what we are studying, or trying to explain, or to replicate, to measure, or whatever.
The core, historical roots of the concept of "consciousness" held that only adult humans, when not sleeping (or badly injured, etc.) are considered to have consciousness, to be conscious, to exhibit conscious thought. To me, this is a huge red flag (another one) that this concept has structural, definitional problems. Because, of course, the old ideas about humans being "above" all other life forms on our planet have been comprehensively shot down. Now that this has been show, we've sort of stretched the word "consciousness" here and there, at random, to try to cover over the cracks. It's not working.
Look, man, since you seem to have very specific requirements for how words are used I'll give up the term 'consciousness' to mean whatever fuzzy, non-existent thing that you insist it means. But its still true that there exist blue color experiences and it is these (along with every other phenomenal feel such as pains, tickles, experiences of sounds, etc.) that I'm talking about.
As more of a quantitative critter by nature, I'll admit that this whole "what blue feels like" thing as a "definition" of consciousness is just anathema to me. Subjectivity is great, and subjective experiences (like pain) are worth taking seriously. No doubt. But when we're trying to talk about "consciousness," taking as definitional the existence of subjectivity just seems. . . tautological. Sorry.
Consciousness has to do with self-referentiality (in the
Godel, Escher, Bach sense), self-awareness, and memory. Or something like that. Learning? Can one be conscious if one cannot learn? Not sure, but I think these are the genuine questions around the definitional issue - not what blue feels like.
Fussy complaints about definitional precision aside, I don't think the investigation of what I've been referring to as consciousness is doomed in terms of scientific investigation.
Again, we're in total agreement! In fact, I'd take this sentence, call it my own, and paste it on my forehead. :D But I think your reversion to "non-physicalist" explanations does sort of smell like you're saying it's beyond science. However, you've clarified that somewhat below - so I'll not beat that dead horse too many times here.
Oh, and 'materialist' and 'physicalist' are not synonymous with 'scientific'. It is perfectly scientific to think that there exist things that are not constituted by lower-level physical stuff. These are the things that science takes as fundamental. These include: space, time, causality, every law of nature, and basic non-divisible physical particles (if they exist). As a matter of fact, the scientific evidence is neutral on whether a conscious state is constituted by physical stuff or caused by it. The kind of non-physicalist views of consciousness that I have in mind can be accommodated by science, they just relocate conscious states as a fundamental type caused by physical stuff rather than a high-level type constituted by low level physical stuff.
This is a complex paragraph and includes a number of significant distinctions and proposed connections. I must admit, however, that I'm fully lost in terms of understanding with this "non-physicalist" thing is. There's a longstanding and still extant branch of thought about consciousness that posits it to be something beyond rational comprehension, something God-given, or irreducably complex, or just fundamentally mysterious and thus impervious to scientific analysis. I'd assumed this is the position you were carrying forth in positing "non-physicalist" explanations for it. In fact, in using Dennett as a straw man, that seems pretty much to be a given.
Now if, in fact, you are only saying that conscious systems exhibit behavior that is more than just the behavior of their bits and pieces. . . well, I'd think basically every scientist and writer in the field is in agreement - including Dennett. As I've tried to outline in discussing determinism and stochasticity,
any complex system is "more than the sum of its parts." That's not magic, it's just reality in our universe as we understand it thus far.
Peace,
Fausty