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Psychedelics and the hard problem of consciousness
Jussi Jylkkä | Philosopher and psychologist with a PhD in both, working as a researcher at the Åbo Akademi University, Finland.
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Psychedelics and the hard problem of consciousness
Jussi Jylkkä | Philosopher and psychologist with a PhD in both, working as a researcher at the Åbo Akademi University, Finland.
Quote:How the psychedelic experience can shed light on the mind-body problem
Quote:The map is not the territory. The modelled brain is not consciousness. ‘This’ – the ineffable quality of subjective experience – is consciousness. No scientific description can ever reach it. The psychedelic experience allows us to get behind our models, and provides us with a special, unitary knowledge of consciousness; shedding new light on the infamous hard problem, writes Jussi Jylkkä.
Quote:How do we know matter and mind? Matter is known through observations and theories. I call such knowledge relational, because it is distinct from what it is about: the atomic model is about that something that we call “atom”; our observations of quantum interference are produced by that something that we model as “quarks”. As to what matter is outside my consciousness, I cannot know, since knowing is in consciousness. My own consciousness, in turn, I know simply through being it, through being this. I call such knowledge unitary. It is not “about” anything, nor is it “possessed” by anyone—it is simply the process that happens here and now. This is demonstrated by unitary experiences that can be produced by meditation, or more easily, through psychedelics.
Quote:Idealism, panpsychism, materialism…?
The hard problem is more than just the epistemic gap, it is also the question of why brain processes feel like anything in the first place. The hard problem is essentially a problem for physicalism, which holds that consciousness is physical: how can the physical be experiential, given that science gives us no clue about this? Through psychedelic experience, it is possible to see how this is reality, and how science merely gives models about reality. Thus, psychedelic experience demonstrates not only the absoluteness of this, but also the relativity of scientific images. It reveals a mystery: what is the physical in itself beyond our physical models of it as “quarks”, “energy”, of “fields”? The only access I have to reality in itself is this: this is what science models as “physical”. If ontological monism is true and everything is made of one single kind of substance, then everything is of the same kind as this. This is true even according to standard physicalism: if consciousness is a neural process, then consciousness is made of quarks—in other words, whatever quarks are, they are the constituents of consciousness. [3] You can call this “idealism” or “panpsychism” or “materialism”, but all these are merely words. This is real, and psychedelic experience shows what this is.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell