Defining consciousness remains a huge challenge in understanding the nature of subjective experience.
The hard problem of consciousness involves explaining the qualitative character of consciousness, distinct from functional aspects explored in neuroscience.
Deep dives
Overview of Making Sense Podcast and Purpose
The Making Sense Podcast aims to organize and compile conversations on various topics of interest. These compilations provide an overview of Sam Harris' perspectives, arguments, explorations, and thoughts, while also highlighting agreements, disagreements, and evolving ideas of his guests. The purpose is not to provide a complete view but to encourage further exploration. The podcast covers diverse subjects, including consciousness, identity, free will, mind, brain, artificial intelligence, belief, unbelief, meditation, spirituality, and more.
The Struggle to Define Consciousness
Consciousness is a challenging topic as defining it remains elusive. While many thinkers recognize the lack of a good explanation or definition, some argue that we may be asking the wrong questions or expecting too much. However, the distinctiveness and complexity of consciousness drove Sam Harris to pursue a PhD in neuroscience. The podcast explores various thought experiments and hypotheticals that attempt to shed light on the nature of consciousness, acknowledging the paradox between its undeniable presence and the difficulty in making sense of it.
Consciousness as a Self-Evident Truth
Sam Harris argues for the unity of knowledge, asserting that consciousness is the only thing that cannot be an illusion, a philosophical stance known as solipsism. According to him, even when reality is uncertain or potentially illusory, the presence of perception itself is consciousness. This viewpoint differentiates consciousness from the contents of one's experiences or the veracity of those experiences. Consciousness is akin to a mirror reflecting the passing lights and colors of our experiences, remaining undeniably real and fundamental even if the contents may be deceptive or illusory.
The Hard Problem of Consciousness
The hard problem of consciousness, as highlighted by philosopher David Chalmers, centers on understanding why and how any physical activity gives rise to subjective experience. While easy problems in neuroscience explore functional aspects like perception or memory, the hard problem delves into the nature of consciousness itself. Despite advances in correlating neural processes with conscious states, explaining the feeling or qualitative character of consciousness remains a challenge. The podcast features discussions with Chalmers and others who explore and debate this hard problem, differentiating it from the relatively easier problems in neuroscience.
Filmmaker Jay Shapiro has produced a new series of audio documentaries, exploring the major topics that Sam has focused on over the course of his career.
Each episode weaves together original analysis, critical perspective, and novel thought experiments with some of the most compelling exchanges from the Making Sense archive. Whether you are new to a particular topic, or think you have your mind made up about it, we think you’ll find this series fascinating.
In this episode, we survey the landscape of consciousness and get acquainted with the mystery of the mind. We start with an attempt to define consciousness–and veterans of conversations on consciousness will know that this is a huge part of the challenge.
David Chalmers begins with his conception of what he coined “The Hard Problem of Consciousness” and a famous question offered by the philosopher Thomas Nagel.
We then construct a “Philosophical Zombie” before the philosopher Thomas Metzinger explains why he is thoroughly unimpressed by the ability to imagine “such a thing,” while he simultaneously warns us against ever attempting to build one. Anil Seth brings some hope of whittling away the intuition gap of the hard problem by pursuing the “easy” problems, with clear scientific reasoning.
Later, Iain McGilchrist lays out the intuition-shattering implications of the famous Roger Sperry experiments with split brain patients that suggest that consciousness can be cut with a knife… at least temporarily. Annaka Harris then shifts the conversation to the realm of panpsychism, which suggests that consciousness is nomologically fundamental and potentially permeates all matter.
Finally, Don Hoffman explains that consciousness is not only fundamental and non-illusory, but that the physical world we appear to be navigating is merely a virtual space-time interface, which has evolved to hide the true nature of reality from us.
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