On 14 October 2014 11:49, Bruno Marchal <[email protected]> wrote:

They eliminate consciousness because they grasp that it is the only way to
> keep the aristotelian belief in a creation intact.


I seem to be motivated to comment at some length on this topic! It must be
because of what I've been reading and thinking about recently. Graziano
writes, in an attempt to justify, in evolutionary terms, how the brain
might come to "believe" (incorrectly) that it is subjectively aware:

"...my colleagues and I have been developing the “attention schema” theory
of consciousness, which may explain why that computation is useful and
would evolve in any complex brain. Here’s the gist of it: Take again the
case of color and wavelength. Wavelength is a real, physical phenomenon;
color is the brain’s approximate, slightly incorrect model of it. In the
attention schema theory, attention is the physical phenomenon and awareness
is the brain’s approximate, slightly incorrect model of it. In
neuroscience, attention is a process of enhancing some signals at the
expense of others. It’s a way of focusing resources. Attention: a real,
mechanistic phenomenon that can be programmed into a computer chip.
Awareness: a cartoonish reconstruction of attention that is as physically
inaccurate as the brain’s internal model of color."

He's quite explicit here about the primacy of physical brain-based
explanation. But he also appeals to computation within this brain-first
explanatory schema, as in his distinction between wavelength as a "real,
physical phenomenon" and color as an approximate "model" of it. The problem
for this style of explanation is that, in terms of his explicit schema, any
"software" model is entirely reducible to primary brain "hardware". The
"real, physical phenomena" of the brain are fundamental and hence only
physical phenomena are accessible as objects of selection in any
evolutionary account, assuming physical primacy.

This distinction vitiates any attempt to justify the differential selection
of any particular "software" organisation since any such selection must
already be fully accounted for on the basis of "real, physical phenomena".
IOW, it actually provides no non-question-begging explanation of why there
would be any selective advantage for either "attention" or "awareness" per
se in this schema, as both would be equally subsumed in their "real"
physical implementation. Neither account could be more than an a posteriori
re-description of what had already been selected in the "real, physical"
regime, on the basis of purely "hardware" criteria. Properly understood,
such "soft" concepts must be seen as explanatorily redundant - as you imply
- if material explanation is accepted as primary.

In short: If Aristotle were right, there would be no need of dreams to
explain why there were machines. But if Plato is right, then we need
machines to explain why we are dreaming.

David

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