A new article in Aeon: "Seeing and somethingness: an evolutionary approach to consciousness can resolve the ‘hard problem’ – with radical implications for animal sentience"
As usual with essays of this type, the subject matter does not actually address the “hard problem” of consciousness - as is claimed in the opening caption. It simply looks at issues of the supposed development of feedback loops in the brain (physical signals however convoluted), detection, and supposed perception and qualia. This has been done many, many times previously.
A few capsules of his presentation:
We are no further forward with the central issue of individuality, the discrete personal consciousness, and its essential (non-transferrable) subjectivity. The theory still utterly fails to bridge the gap between the physical and the mental and subjective.
Another problem with his theory is that the author (a psychologist) rules out animals other than higher mammals and birds from having the evolutionarily developed consciousness he claims. So no consciousness in octopi, reptiles, fish or any arthropods. Contrary to the latest research.
Final writing on the tombstone: here lies another materialist neurological (this time mixing in evolutionary concepts) theory that after all is said still totally and willfully ignores paranormal phenomena like NDEs and reincarnation memories. DOA.
I suppose it is an interesting piece though.
(This post was last modified: 2022-10-03, 06:41 PM by nbtruthman. Edited 3 times in total.)
As usual with essays of this type, the subject matter does not actually address the “hard problem” of consciousness - as is claimed in the opening caption. It simply looks at issues of the supposed development of feedback loops in the brain (physical signals however convoluted), detection, and supposed perception and qualia. This has been done many, many times previously.
A few capsules of his presentation:
Quote:"....all such physical-identity theories (mind is what the physical brain does) have got off on the wrong foot. They were – and are – attempts to explain how phenomenal properties could be properties of a brain process. But this rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of the kind of thing that needs explaining. Let me emphasise: sensations are ideas. They are the way our brains represent what’s happening at our sense organs and how we feel about it. Their properties are to be explained, therefore, not literally as the properties of brain-states, but rather as the properties of mind-states dreamed up by the brain.
..................................
...once I came to see it this way, the shades fell away. Phenomenal consciousness is the result of a cognitive operation performed by the brain: representing sensory experience in a certain way. Quite possibly, it involves the brain generating something like an internal text, that it interprets as being about phenomenal properties.
..................................
My project (then) became to work out how a biological machine like the brain could carry out this feat of representation. ...I’ve tried to come up with an evolutionary sequence that will get us from nothingness to somethingness..."
We are no further forward with the central issue of individuality, the discrete personal consciousness, and its essential (non-transferrable) subjectivity. The theory still utterly fails to bridge the gap between the physical and the mental and subjective.
Another problem with his theory is that the author (a psychologist) rules out animals other than higher mammals and birds from having the evolutionarily developed consciousness he claims. So no consciousness in octopi, reptiles, fish or any arthropods. Contrary to the latest research.
Quote:"....there will be no physiological means for generating phenomenal experience unless the animal has a brain that, building on reverberatory sensory-motor loops, can create attractors of the kind we’ve identified. Second, there can have been no evolutionary incentive for the animal’s ancestors to acquire such a brain unless it has a lifestyle in which possession of a phenomenally enriched sense of self can enhance its personal and social survival."
Final writing on the tombstone: here lies another materialist neurological (this time mixing in evolutionary concepts) theory that after all is said still totally and willfully ignores paranormal phenomena like NDEs and reincarnation memories. DOA.
I suppose it is an interesting piece though.