fbpx
Wikipedia

Cartesian materialism

In philosophy of mind, Cartesian materialism is the idea that at some place (or places) in the brain, there is some set of information that directly corresponds to our conscious experience. Contrary to its name, Cartesian materialism is not a view that was held by or formulated by René Descartes, who subscribed rather to a form of substance dualism.

Objects experienced are represented within the mind of the observer (see Cartesian theater).

In its simplest version, Cartesian materialism might predict, for example, that there is a specific place in the brain which would be a coherent representation of everything we are consciously experiencing in a given moment: what we're seeing, what we're hearing, what we're smelling, and indeed, everything of which we are consciously aware. In essence, Cartesian materialism claims that, somewhere in our brain, there is a Cartesian theater where a hypothetical observer could somehow "find" the content of conscious experience moment by moment. In contrast, anything occurring outside of this "privileged neural media" is nonconscious.

History

Multiple meanings

French materialism developed from the mechanism of Descartes and the empiricism of Locke, Hobbes, Bacon and ultimately Duns Scotus who asked "whether matter could not think?" Natural science, in their view, owes to the former its great success as a "Cartesian materialism", bereft of the metaphysics of Cartesian dualism by philosophers and physicians such as Regius, Cabanis, and La Mettrie, who maintained the viability of Descartes' biological automata without recourse to immaterial cognition.

However, philosopher Daniel Dennett uses the term to emphasize what he considers the pervasive Cartesian notion of a centralized repository of conscious experience in the brain. Dennett says that "Cartesian materialism is the view that there is a crucial finish line or boundary somewhere in the brain, marking a place where the order of arrival equals the order of 'presentation' in experience because what happens there is what you are conscious of."[This quote needs a citation]

Other modern philosophers have generally used less specific definitions. For example, O'Brien and Opie define it as the idea that consciousness is "realized in the physical materials of the brain",[1] and W. Teed Rockwell defines Cartesian materialism in the following way: "The basic dogma of Cartesian materialism is that only neural activity in the cranium is functionally essential for the emergence of mind."[2] However, although Rockwell's concept of Cartesian materialism is less specific in a sense, it is a detailed reply to Dennett's version, not an undeveloped predecessor. The main theme of Rockwell's book Neither Brain nor Ghost is that the arguments Dennett uses to refute his version of Cartesian Materialism actually support the view that the mind is an emergent property of the entire Brain/Body/World Nexus. For Rockwell, claiming the entire brain is identical to the mind has no better justification than claiming that part of the brain is identical to the mind.

Dennett's version of the term is the most popular.[citation needed]

Cartesian dualism

Descartes believed that a human being was composed of both a material body and an immaterial soul (or "mind"). According to Descartes, the mind and the body could interact. The body can affect the mind; for example, when you place your hand in a fire, the body relays sensory information from your hand to your mind, which results in your having the experience of pain. Similarly, the mind can affect the body; for example, you can decide to move your hand and your muscles obey, moving your hand as you desired.

Descartes noted that, although our two eyes independently see an object, our conscious experience is not of two separate fields of vision each possessing an image of the object. Rather, we seem to experience one continuous, oval-shaped field of vision that possesses information from both eyes which seems to have somehow been 'merged' into a single image. (Consider in a movie, when a character looks through binoculars and the audience is shown what he is looking at, from the character's point of view. The image shown is never made up of two completely separate circular images-- rather the director shows us a single figure-eight shaped region made up of information from each eyepiece.)

Descartes noted that information from both eyes seems to have been merged somehow before "entering" conscious perception. He also noted similar effects for the other senses. Based on this, Descartes hypothesized that there must be some single place in the brain where all the sensory information is assembled, before finally being relayed to the immaterial mind.

His best candidate for this location was the pineal gland, since he thought it was the only part of the brain that is a single structure, rather than one duplicated on both the left and right halves of the brain. Descartes therefore believed that the pineal gland was the "seat of the soul" and that any information that was to "enter" consciousness had to pass through the pineal gland before it could enter the mind. In his perspective, the pineal gland is the place where all information "comes together."

Dennett's account of Cartesian materialism

At the present time, the consensus of scientists and philosophers is to reject dualism and its immaterial mind, for a variety of reasons. (See Dualism -- Arguments Against). Similarly, many other aspects of Descartes' theories have been rejected; for example, the pineal gland turned out to be endocrinological, rather than having a large role in information processing.

According to Daniel Dennett, however, many scientists and philosophers still believe, either explicitly or implicitly, in Descartes' idea of some centralized repository where the contents of consciousness are merged and assembled, a place he calls the Cartesian theater.

In his book Consciousness Explained (1991), Dennett writes:

Let's call the idea of such a centered locus in the brain Cartesian materialism, since it's the view you arrive at when you discard Descartes' dualism but fail to discard the imagery of a central (but material) Theater where it "all comes together"[3]

Although this central repository is often called a "place" or a "location", Dennett is quick to clarify that Cartesian materialism's "centered locus" need not be anatomically defined-- such a locus might consists of a network of diverse regions.[4]

Dennett's arguments against Cartesian materialism

In Consciousness Explained, Dennett offers several lines of evidence to dispute the idea of Cartesian materialism.

Timing anomalies of conscious experience

Another argument against Cartesian materialism is inspired by the results of several scientific experiments in the fields of psychology and neuroscience. In experiments that demonstrate the Color Phi phenomenon and the metacontrast effect, two stimuli are rapidly flashed on a screen, one after the other. Amazingly, the second stimulus can, in some cases, actually affect the perception of the first stimulus. In other experiments conducted by Benjamin Libet, two electrical stimulations are delivered, one after another, to a conscious subject. Under some conditions, subjects report having felt the second stimulation before they felt the first stimulation.

These experiments call into question the idea that brain states are directly translatable into the contents of consciousness. How can the second stimuli be 'projected backwards in time', such that it can affect the perception of things that occurred before the second stimulus was even administered?

Two attempted explanations

Two different types of explanations have been offered in response to the timing anomalies. One is that perhaps sensory information is assembled into a buffer before being passed on to consciousness after a substantial time delay. Since consciousness occurs only after a time lag, the incoming second stimulus would have time to affect the stored information about the first stimulus. In this view, subjects correctly remember their having had inaccurate experiences. Dennett calls this the "Stalinesque Explanation" (after the Stalinist Soviet Union's show trials that presented manufactured evidence to an unwitting jury).

A second explanation for the timing takes the opposite tack. Perhaps the subjects, contrary to their own reports, initially experienced the first stimulus as being prior to and untainted by the second stimulus. However, when subjects were later asked to recall what their experiences had been, they found that their memories of the first stimulus had been tainted by the second stimulus. Therefore, they inaccurately report experiences that never actually occurred. In this view, subjects have accurate initial experiences, but inaccurately remember them. Dennett calls this view the "Orwellian Explanation", after George Orwell's novel 1984, in which a totalitarian government frequently rewrites history to suit its purposes.

How are we to choose which of these two explanations is the correct one? Both explanations seem to adequately explain the given data, both seem to make the same predictions. Dennett sees no principled basis for choosing either of the explanations, so he rejects their common assumption of a theater. He says:

We can suppose, both theorists have exactly the same theory of what happens in your brain; they agree about just where and when in the brain the mistaken content enters the causal pathways; they just disagree about whether that location is to be deemed pre-experiential or post-experiential. [...] They even agree about how it ought to "feel" to subjects: Subjects should be unable to tell the difference between misbegotten experiences and immediately misremembered experiences.[5]

Dennett's conclusions

Dennett's argument has the following basic structure:

1. If Cartesian materialism were true and there really was a special brain area (or areas) that stored the contents of conscious experience, then it should be possible to ascertain exactly when something enters conscious experience.
2. It is impossible, even in theory, to ever precisely determine when something enters conscious experience.
3. Therefore, Cartesian materialism is false.

According to Dennett, the debate between Stalinesque and Orwellian explanations is unresolvable — no amount of scientific information could ever answer the question. Dennett therefore argues (in accord with the philosophical doctrine of verificationism) that, since the differences between the two explanations are unresolvable, the point of disagreement is logically meaningless so both explanations are mistaken.

Dennett feels that the insistence on a place where 'it all comes together' (the Cartesian Theater) is fundamentally flawed, and therefore that Cartesian materialism is false. Dennett's view is that "there is no single, definitive 'stream of consciousness,' because there is no central Headquarters, no Cartesian Theatre where 'it all comes together'".

To avoid the perceived shortcomings of Cartesian materialism, Dennett instead proposes the multiple drafts model — a model of consciousness which lacks a central Cartesian theater.

Replies and objections to Dennett and his arguments

A philosophy without adherents?

Perhaps the primary objection to Dennett's use of the term Cartesian materialism is that it is a philosophy without adherents. In this view, Cartesian materialism is essentially a "Straw Man" — an argument explicitly constructed just so it can be refuted:

The now standard response to Dennett’s project is that he has picked a fight with a straw man. Cartesian materialism, it is alleged, is an impossibly naive account of phenomenal consciousness held by no one currently working in cognitive science or the philosophy of mind. Consequently, whatever the effectiveness of Dennett’s demolition job, it is fundamentally misdirected (see, e.g., Block, 1993, 1995; Shoemaker, 1993; and Tye, 1993).[6]

It is a point of intense debate as to how many philosophers and scientists even accept Cartesian materialism. On the one hand, some say that this view is "held by no one currently working in cognitive science or the philosophy of mind"[7] or insist that they "know of no one who endorses it." (Michael Tye) On the other hand, some say that Cartesian materialism "informs virtually all research on mind and brain, explicitly and implicitly" (Antonio Damasio) or argue that the common "commitment to qualia or 'phenomenal seemings'" entails an implicit commitment to Cartesian materialism that becomes explicit when they "work out a theory of consciousness in sufficient detail".[8]

Dennett suggests that the Cartesian materialism, though rejected by many philosophers, still colors people's thinking. He writes:

"Perhaps no one today explicitly endorses Cartesian materialism. Many theorists would insist that they have explicitly rejected such an obviously bad idea. But as we shall see, the persuasive imagery of a Cartesian theater keeps coming back to haunt us — laypeople and scientists alike — even after its ghostly dualism has been denounced and exorcised."

Replies from dualism

Many philosophers question Dennett's immediate rejection of dualism (dismissing it after only a few pages of argument in Consciousness Explained), pointing to a variety of reasons that people often find dualism to be a compelling view (see arguments for dualism).

To proponents of dualism, mental events have a certain subjective quality to them, whereas physical events obviously do not. That is, for example, what a burned finger feels like, what sky blue looks like, what nice music sounds like, and so on. There is something that it's like to feel pain, to see a familiar shade of blue, and so on; These sensations independent of behavior are known as qualia, and the philosophical problem posed by their alleged existence is called the hard problem of consciousness by Chalmers.[9]

Dualists argue that Dennett does not explain these phenomena, so much as ignore them. Indeed, the title of Dennett's book Consciousness Explained is often lampooned by critics, who call the book Consciousness Explained Away or even Consciousness Ignored.

Replies from Cartesian materialists

Some philosophers have actively accepted the moniker of Cartesian Materialists, and are not convinced by Dennett's arguments.

O'Brien and Opie (1999) embrace Cartesian materialism, arguing against Dennett's claim that the onset of phenomenal experience in the brain cannot in principle be precisely determined, and offering what they consider to be a way to accommodate Phi phenomenon within the Cartesian materialist paradigm.

Block has described an alternative called "Cartesian Modularism" in which the contents of conscious experience are distributed in the brain.[10]

Replies from neuroscience

Despite Dennett's insistence that there are no special brain areas that store the contents of consciousness, many neuroscientists reject this assertion. Indeed, what separates conscious information from unconscious information remains a question of interest, and how information from disparate brain regions are assembled into a coherent whole (the Binding problem) remains a question which is actively investigated. Recently Global Workspace Theory has argued that perhaps the brain does possess some universally accessible "workspace".[11]

Another criticism comes from investigation into the human visual system. Although both eyes each have a blind spot, conscious visual experience does not subjectively seem to have any holes in it. Some scientists and philosophers had argued, based on subjective reports, that perhaps the brain somehow "fills in" the holes, based upon adjacent visual information. Dennett had powerfully argued that such "filling in" was unnecessary, based on his objections to a Cartesian theater. Ultimately, however, studies have confirmed that the visual cortex does perform a very complex "filling in" process.[12]

The impact of this is itself controversial. Some assume that this is a devastating blow against Dennett, while others have argued that this in no way confirms Cartesian materialism or refutes the multiple drafts model, and that Dennett is fundamentally right even if he's mistaken about this detail.[13]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ O'Brien & Opie 1999
  2. ^ Rockwell 2005
  3. ^ Dennett 1991, p.107
  4. ^ Dennett 1991, p.107
  5. ^ Dennett 1991, p.125, original emphasis.
  6. ^ O'Brien and Opie 1999
  7. ^ O'Brien and Opie 1999
  8. ^ Dennett 1993
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2000-03-03.
  10. ^ Block 1995
  11. ^ Jay Ingram (2005)The Theatre of the Mind: Rasising The Curtain on Consciousness
  12. ^ Pessoa & De Weerd, 2003
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-02-14.

References

  • Block, Ned (June 1995). "On a confusion about a function of consciousness". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 18 (2): 227–287. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.207.6880. doi:10.1017/S0140525X00038188. ISSN 0140-525X. OCLC 04172559.
  • Dennett, D.C. (1991), Consciousness Explained, Little, Brown & Co. USA (ISBN 0-316-18065-3)
  • Dennett, D.C. (1993). The Message is: There is no Medium (reply to Jackson, Rosenthal, Shoemaker & Tye), Philosophy & Phenomenological Research, 53, (4), 889-931, Dec. 1993.
  • Engels, F. and Marx, K. (1845). The Holy Family. http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/holy-family/ch06_3_d.htm
  • O'Brien, G. & Opie, J. (1999), , Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59:939-63.
  • Pessoa, L. and De Weerd, P. (2003), "Filling-In: From Perceptual Completion to Cortical Reorganization", Oxford University Press, USA (ISBN 0-19-514013-3)
  • Rockwell, W. Teed. (2005), Neither Brain nor Ghost: A Nondualist Alternative to the Mind-Brain Identity Theory, MIT Press (ISBN 0-262-18247-5)

cartesian, materialism, philosophy, mind, idea, that, some, place, places, brain, there, some, information, that, directly, corresponds, conscious, experience, contrary, name, view, that, held, formulated, rené, descartes, subscribed, rather, form, substance, . In philosophy of mind Cartesian materialism is the idea that at some place or places in the brain there is some set of information that directly corresponds to our conscious experience Contrary to its name Cartesian materialism is not a view that was held by or formulated by Rene Descartes who subscribed rather to a form of substance dualism Objects experienced are represented within the mind of the observer see Cartesian theater In its simplest version Cartesian materialism might predict for example that there is a specific place in the brain which would be a coherent representation of everything we are consciously experiencing in a given moment what we re seeing what we re hearing what we re smelling and indeed everything of which we are consciously aware In essence Cartesian materialism claims that somewhere in our brain there is a Cartesian theater where a hypothetical observer could somehow find the content of conscious experience moment by moment In contrast anything occurring outside of this privileged neural media is nonconscious Contents 1 History 1 1 Multiple meanings 1 2 Cartesian dualism 1 3 Dennett s account of Cartesian materialism 2 Dennett s arguments against Cartesian materialism 2 1 Timing anomalies of conscious experience 2 2 Two attempted explanations 2 3 Dennett s conclusions 3 Replies and objections to Dennett and his arguments 3 1 A philosophy without adherents 3 2 Replies from dualism 3 3 Replies from Cartesian materialists 3 4 Replies from neuroscience 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory EditMultiple meanings Edit French materialism developed from the mechanism of Descartes and the empiricism of Locke Hobbes Bacon and ultimately Duns Scotus who asked whether matter could not think Natural science in their view owes to the former its great success as a Cartesian materialism bereft of the metaphysics of Cartesian dualism by philosophers and physicians such as Regius Cabanis and La Mettrie who maintained the viability of Descartes biological automata without recourse to immaterial cognition However philosopher Daniel Dennett uses the term to emphasize what he considers the pervasive Cartesian notion of a centralized repository of conscious experience in the brain Dennett says that Cartesian materialism is the view that there is a crucial finish line or boundary somewhere in the brain marking a place where the order of arrival equals the order of presentation in experience because what happens there is what you are conscious of This quote needs a citation Other modern philosophers have generally used less specific definitions For example O Brien and Opie define it as the idea that consciousness is realized in the physical materials of the brain 1 and W Teed Rockwell defines Cartesian materialism in the following way The basic dogma of Cartesian materialism is that only neural activity in the cranium is functionally essential for the emergence of mind 2 However although Rockwell s concept of Cartesian materialism is less specific in a sense it is a detailed reply to Dennett s version not an undeveloped predecessor The main theme of Rockwell s book Neither Brain nor Ghost is that the arguments Dennett uses to refute his version of Cartesian Materialism actually support the view that the mind is an emergent property of the entire Brain Body World Nexus For Rockwell claiming the entire brain is identical to the mind has no better justification than claiming that part of the brain is identical to the mind Dennett s version of the term is the most popular citation needed Cartesian dualism Edit Main article Cartesian dualism Descartes believed that a human being was composed of both a material body and an immaterial soul or mind According to Descartes the mind and the body could interact The body can affect the mind for example when you place your hand in a fire the body relays sensory information from your hand to your mind which results in your having the experience of pain Similarly the mind can affect the body for example you can decide to move your hand and your muscles obey moving your hand as you desired Descartes noted that although our two eyes independently see an object our conscious experience is not of two separate fields of vision each possessing an image of the object Rather we seem to experience one continuous oval shaped field of vision that possesses information from both eyes which seems to have somehow been merged into a single image Consider in a movie when a character looks through binoculars and the audience is shown what he is looking at from the character s point of view The image shown is never made up of two completely separate circular images rather the director shows us a single figure eight shaped region made up of information from each eyepiece Descartes noted that information from both eyes seems to have been merged somehow before entering conscious perception He also noted similar effects for the other senses Based on this Descartes hypothesized that there must be some single place in the brain where all the sensory information is assembled before finally being relayed to the immaterial mind His best candidate for this location was the pineal gland since he thought it was the only part of the brain that is a single structure rather than one duplicated on both the left and right halves of the brain Descartes therefore believed that the pineal gland was the seat of the soul and that any information that was to enter consciousness had to pass through the pineal gland before it could enter the mind In his perspective the pineal gland is the place where all information comes together Dennett s account of Cartesian materialism Edit At the present time the consensus of scientists and philosophers is to reject dualism and its immaterial mind for a variety of reasons See Dualism Arguments Against Similarly many other aspects of Descartes theories have been rejected for example the pineal gland turned out to be endocrinological rather than having a large role in information processing According to Daniel Dennett however many scientists and philosophers still believe either explicitly or implicitly in Descartes idea of some centralized repository where the contents of consciousness are merged and assembled a place he calls the Cartesian theater In his book Consciousness Explained 1991 Dennett writes Let s call the idea of such a centered locus in the brain Cartesian materialism since it s the view you arrive at when you discard Descartes dualism but fail to discard the imagery of a central but material Theater where it all comes together 3 Although this central repository is often called a place or a location Dennett is quick to clarify that Cartesian materialism s centered locus need not be anatomically defined such a locus might consists of a network of diverse regions 4 Dennett s arguments against Cartesian materialism EditIn Consciousness Explained Dennett offers several lines of evidence to dispute the idea of Cartesian materialism Timing anomalies of conscious experience Edit Another argument against Cartesian materialism is inspired by the results of several scientific experiments in the fields of psychology and neuroscience In experiments that demonstrate the Color Phi phenomenon and the metacontrast effect two stimuli are rapidly flashed on a screen one after the other Amazingly the second stimulus can in some cases actually affect the perception of the first stimulus In other experiments conducted by Benjamin Libet two electrical stimulations are delivered one after another to a conscious subject Under some conditions subjects report having felt the second stimulation before they felt the first stimulation These experiments call into question the idea that brain states are directly translatable into the contents of consciousness How can the second stimuli be projected backwards in time such that it can affect the perception of things that occurred before the second stimulus was even administered Two attempted explanations Edit Two different types of explanations have been offered in response to the timing anomalies One is that perhaps sensory information is assembled into a buffer before being passed on to consciousness after a substantial time delay Since consciousness occurs only after a time lag the incoming second stimulus would have time to affect the stored information about the first stimulus In this view subjects correctly remember their having had inaccurate experiences Dennett calls this the Stalinesque Explanation after the Stalinist Soviet Union s show trials that presented manufactured evidence to an unwitting jury A second explanation for the timing takes the opposite tack Perhaps the subjects contrary to their own reports initially experienced the first stimulus as being prior to and untainted by the second stimulus However when subjects were later asked to recall what their experiences had been they found that their memories of the first stimulus had been tainted by the second stimulus Therefore they inaccurately report experiences that never actually occurred In this view subjects have accurate initial experiences but inaccurately remember them Dennett calls this view the Orwellian Explanation after George Orwell s novel 1984 in which a totalitarian government frequently rewrites history to suit its purposes How are we to choose which of these two explanations is the correct one Both explanations seem to adequately explain the given data both seem to make the same predictions Dennett sees no principled basis for choosing either of the explanations so he rejects their common assumption of a theater He says We can suppose both theorists have exactly the same theory of what happens in your brain they agree about just where and when in the brain the mistaken content enters the causal pathways they just disagree about whether that location is to be deemed pre experiential or post experiential They even agree about how it ought to feel to subjects Subjects should be unable to tell the difference between misbegotten experiences and immediately misremembered experiences 5 Dennett s conclusions Edit Dennett s argument has the following basic structure 1 If Cartesian materialism were true and there really was a special brain area or areas that stored the contents of conscious experience then it should be possible to ascertain exactly when something enters conscious experience 2 It is impossible even in theory to ever precisely determine when something enters conscious experience 3 Therefore Cartesian materialism is false According to Dennett the debate between Stalinesque and Orwellian explanations is unresolvable no amount of scientific information could ever answer the question Dennett therefore argues in accord with the philosophical doctrine of verificationism that since the differences between the two explanations are unresolvable the point of disagreement is logically meaningless so both explanations are mistaken Dennett feels that the insistence on a place where it all comes together the Cartesian Theater is fundamentally flawed and therefore that Cartesian materialism is false Dennett s view is that there is no single definitive stream of consciousness because there is no central Headquarters no Cartesian Theatre where it all comes together To avoid the perceived shortcomings of Cartesian materialism Dennett instead proposes the multiple drafts model a model of consciousness which lacks a central Cartesian theater Replies and objections to Dennett and his arguments EditA philosophy without adherents Edit Perhaps the primary objection to Dennett s use of the term Cartesian materialism is that it is a philosophy without adherents In this view Cartesian materialism is essentially a Straw Man an argument explicitly constructed just so it can be refuted The now standard response to Dennett s project is that he has picked a fight with a straw man Cartesian materialism it is alleged is an impossibly naive account of phenomenal consciousness held by no one currently working in cognitive science or the philosophy of mind Consequently whatever the effectiveness of Dennett s demolition job it is fundamentally misdirected see e g Block 1993 1995 Shoemaker 1993 and Tye 1993 6 It is a point of intense debate as to how many philosophers and scientists even accept Cartesian materialism On the one hand some say that this view is held by no one currently working in cognitive science or the philosophy of mind 7 or insist that they know of no one who endorses it Michael Tye On the other hand some say that Cartesian materialism informs virtually all research on mind and brain explicitly and implicitly Antonio Damasio or argue that the common commitment to qualia or phenomenal seemings entails an implicit commitment to Cartesian materialism that becomes explicit when they work out a theory of consciousness in sufficient detail 8 Dennett suggests that the Cartesian materialism though rejected by many philosophers still colors people s thinking He writes Perhaps no one today explicitly endorses Cartesian materialism Many theorists would insist that they have explicitly rejected such an obviously bad idea But as we shall see the persuasive imagery of a Cartesian theater keeps coming back to haunt us laypeople and scientists alike even after its ghostly dualism has been denounced and exorcised Replies from dualism Edit Many philosophers question Dennett s immediate rejection of dualism dismissing it after only a few pages of argument in Consciousness Explained pointing to a variety of reasons that people often find dualism to be a compelling view see arguments for dualism To proponents of dualism mental events have a certain subjective quality to them whereas physical events obviously do not That is for example what a burned finger feels like what sky blue looks like what nice music sounds like and so on There is something that it s like to feel pain to see a familiar shade of blue and so on These sensations independent of behavior are known as qualia and the philosophical problem posed by their alleged existence is called the hard problem of consciousness by Chalmers 9 Dualists argue that Dennett does not explain these phenomena so much as ignore them Indeed the title of Dennett s book Consciousness Explained is often lampooned by critics who call the book Consciousness Explained Away or even Consciousness Ignored Replies from Cartesian materialists Edit Some philosophers have actively accepted the moniker of Cartesian Materialists and are not convinced by Dennett s arguments O Brien and Opie 1999 embrace Cartesian materialism arguing against Dennett s claim that the onset of phenomenal experience in the brain cannot in principle be precisely determined and offering what they consider to be a way to accommodate Phi phenomenon within the Cartesian materialist paradigm Block has described an alternative called Cartesian Modularism in which the contents of conscious experience are distributed in the brain 10 Replies from neuroscience Edit Despite Dennett s insistence that there are no special brain areas that store the contents of consciousness many neuroscientists reject this assertion Indeed what separates conscious information from unconscious information remains a question of interest and how information from disparate brain regions are assembled into a coherent whole the Binding problem remains a question which is actively investigated Recently Global Workspace Theory has argued that perhaps the brain does possess some universally accessible workspace 11 Another criticism comes from investigation into the human visual system Although both eyes each have a blind spot conscious visual experience does not subjectively seem to have any holes in it Some scientists and philosophers had argued based on subjective reports that perhaps the brain somehow fills in the holes based upon adjacent visual information Dennett had powerfully argued that such filling in was unnecessary based on his objections to a Cartesian theater Ultimately however studies have confirmed that the visual cortex does perform a very complex filling in process 12 The impact of this is itself controversial Some assume that this is a devastating blow against Dennett while others have argued that this in no way confirms Cartesian materialism or refutes the multiple drafts model and that Dennett is fundamentally right even if he s mistaken about this detail 13 See also EditConsciousness and mind body problem Dualism epiphenomenalism and qualia Materialism and eliminative materialism Direct realism indirect realism and representationalismNotes Edit O Brien amp Opie 1999 Rockwell 2005 Dennett 1991 p 107 Dennett 1991 p 107 Dennett 1991 p 125 original emphasis O Brien and Opie 1999 O Brien and Opie 1999 Dennett 1993 Commentary on Chalmers Archived from the original on 2000 03 03 Block 1995 Jay Ingram 2005 The Theatre of the Mind Rasising The Curtain on Consciousness Pessoa amp De Weerd 2003 Behavioral and Brain Sciences Archived from the original on 2006 02 14 References Edit Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Consciousness Studies Block Ned June 1995 On a confusion about a function of consciousness Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 2 227 287 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 207 6880 doi 10 1017 S0140525X00038188 ISSN 0140 525X OCLC 04172559 Dennett D C 1991 Consciousness Explained Little Brown amp Co USA ISBN 0 316 18065 3 Dennett D C 1993 The Message is There is no Medium reply to Jackson Rosenthal Shoemaker amp Tye Philosophy amp Phenomenological Research 53 4 889 931 Dec 1993 Engels F and Marx K 1845 The Holy Family http www marxists org archive marx works 1845 holy family ch06 3 d htm O Brien G amp Opie J 1999 A Defence of Cartesian Materialism Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 939 63 Pessoa L and De Weerd P 2003 Filling In From Perceptual Completion to Cortical Reorganization Oxford University Press USA ISBN 0 19 514013 3 Rockwell W Teed 2005 Neither Brain nor Ghost A Nondualist Alternative to the Mind Brain Identity Theory MIT Press ISBN 0 262 18247 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cartesian materialism amp oldid 1081332787, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.