How Neuroscience Will Change Our View On Consciousness
Cognitive Neuroscience, DOI: 10.1080/17588921003731586
By Victor A. F. Lamme
Is there consciousness in machines? Or in animals? What happens to
consciousness when we are asleep, or in vegetative state? These are
just a few examples of the many questions about consciousness that are
troubling scientists and laypersons alike. Moreover, these questions
share a striking feature: They seem to have been around forever, yet
neither science nor philosophy has been able to provide an answer. Why
is that? In my view, the main reason is that the study of consciousness
is dominated by what we know from introspection and behavior. This has
fooled us into thinking that we know what we are conscious of. The
scientific equivalent of this is Global Workspace theory. But in fact
we don't know what we are conscious of, as I will explain from a simple
experiment in visual perception. Once we acknowledge that, it is clear
that we need other evidence about the presence or absence of a
conscious sensation than introspection or behavior. Assuming the brain
has something to do with it, I will demonstrate how arguments from
neuroscience, together with theoretical and ontological arguments, can
help us resolve what the exact nature of our conscious sensation is. It
turns out that we see much more than we think, and that Global
Workspace theory is all about access but not about seeing. The exercise
is an example of how neuroscience will move us away from psychological
intuitions about consciousness, and hence depict a notion of
consciousness that may go against our deepest conviction: “My
consciousness is mine, and mine alone.” It's not.
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