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WHERE EXPERIENCES ARE: = DUALIST, PHYSICALIST, ENACTIVE AND REFLEXIVE ACCOUNTS OF PHENOMENAL CONSCIOUSNESS = p>
Max Velmans, Departmen=
t of
Psychology, Goldsmiths, University of London, New Cross,
web address
http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/departments/psychology/staff/velmans.html
Phenomenology and the Cog=
nitive
Sciences (in press)
Abstract.
Dualists believe that
experiences have neither location nor extension, while reductive and
‘non-reductive’ physicalists (biological naturalists) believe t=
hat
experiences are really in the brain, producing an apparent impasse in curre=
nt
theories of mind. Enactive and reflexive models of perception try to
resolve this impasse with a form of “externalism” that challeng=
es
the assumption that experiences must either be nowhere or in the brain.
However, they are externalist in very different ways. Insofar as they locate experiences
anywhere, enactive models locate conscious phenomenology in the dynamic
interaction of organisms with the external world, and in some versions, they
reduce conscious phenomenology to such interactions, in the hope that this =
will
resolve the hard problem of consciousness.=
The reflexive model accepts that experiences of the world result from
dynamic organism-environment interactions, but argues that such interactions
are preconscious. While the
resulting phenomenal world is a consequence of such interactions, it cannot=
be
reduced to them. The reflexive
model is externalist in its claim that this external phenomenal world, whic=
h we
normally think of as the “physical world,” is literally outside=
the
brain. Furthermore, there are=
no
added conscious experiences of the external world inside the brain. In the present paper I present the=
case
for the enactive and reflexive alternatives to more classical views and
evaluate their consequences. I
argue that, in closing the gap between the phenomenal world and what we
normally think of as the physical world, the reflexive model resolves one f=
acet
of the hard problem of consciousness. Conversely, while enactive m=
odels
have useful things to say about percept formation and representation, they =
fail
to address the hard problem of consciousness.
Keywords: dualism, physicalism, enactive, refl=
exive,
phenomenology, consciousness, externalism, internalism, reductionism,
consciousness, mind, brain, world, perception, Noe, Thomson, Velmans,
O’Regan, Myin, projection, space, phenomenal world, Lehar
The dualist view, which m= any people intuitively adopt, is shown in schematic form in Figure 1 below.
It will be clear that there are two fundame=
ntal
“splits” in this model.
Firstly, the contents of consciousness are clearly separated from the
material world (the conscious, perceptual&=
nbsp;
“stuff” in the upper part of the diagram is separated fr=
om
the material brain and the physical cat in the lower part of the diagram).<=
span
style=3D'mso-spacerun:yes'> This conforms to Descartes’ =
view
that stuff of consciousness (res cogitans, a substance that thinks) =
is
very different to the stuff of which the material world is made (res ext=
ensa,
a substance that has extension and location in space). Secondly, the perceiving subject is clearly separated from =
the
perceived object (the subject a=
nd her
experiences are on the right of the diagram and the perceived object is on =
the
left of the diagram).
This dualist model of per= ception supports a dualist view of the universe in which the universe is split into= two realms, the material realm and the mental realm (the latter including consciousness, mind, soul and spirit). In interactionist forms of dualism t= hese two realms interface and causally interact somewhere in the human brain.
The causal sequence in Figure 2 is the same=
as in
Figure 1, with one added step. While reductionists generally accept that the
subject’s experience of a cat seems to be insubstantial and
“in the mind”, they argue that it is really a state or
function of the brain. In sho=
rt,
the reductionist model in Figure 2 tries to resolve the conscious
experience—physical world split by eliminating conscious experience or
reducing it to something physical that E (the external observer) can in
principle observe and measure. But
reductionism retains the split
(implicit in dualism) between the observer and the observed. The perceived object (on the left =
side
of the diagram) remains quite separate from the conscious experience of the object (on the right side of the diagram)=
.
Note too that dualists and reductionists largely agree about where the external physical world, the br= ain and conscious experiences are placed. In spite of their dispute abou= t what experiences are, they agree (roughly) about where they are. Reductionists, for example, ta= ke it for granted that experiences are really brain states or functions, so they = must be in the brain. Altho= ugh dualists take experiences to be immaterial (and, strictly speaking, without location or extension) they again take it for granted that these must inter= face and interact with the physical world somewhere in the brain. In short, the brain is as close to experiences as one can get—and if experiences ar= e in the brain, they cannot be located in, or part of, the external physical wor= ld. One could describe this view as phenomenological internalism.=
At one extreme, theorists
sympathetic to the enactive approach argue that a better understanding of h=
ow,
say, visual perception works, resolves the hard problem of qualia by showing
our beliefs about our visual experiences to be entirely false. For example, Dennett (2002) points=
out
that we commonly think that we experience the visual world in fine detail a=
nd
colour from the centre of the visual field to the periphery. However, science demonstrates that=
this
cannot be so, having discovered that peripheral vision has poor acuity and =
does
not code for colour. According to Dennett, if we can be wrong about colour
extending to our visual periphery, we can be wrong about everything to do w=
ith
our phenomenology, for example, that we experience colour qualia at all.
Other enactive theorists = however, would regard such views as unjustifiably extreme. While some people might have false beliefs about some aspects of their experience that they h= ave not bothered to think about closely, it does not follow that all of = our beliefs about our experiences are or need be wrong—and certainly does= not warrant the claim that conscious qualia do not exist! A moment’s close attention to the qualia of our visual field, for example, is all that is ne= eded to confirm the description of it given by science. Once one attends to it, it is perfectly obvious that we can discern fine detail at our point of focus but= not at the periphery of vision, and that although colour and detail at the periphery are at best fuzzy, both colour and detail at the focus of attenti= on are clear. In short, lack of = detail and colour of qualia at the periphery of vision has no bearing on the exist= ence of detail and colour of qualia at the focus of vision, and therefore no bea= ring on the existence of qualia as such.[1]
Recent findings on inatte= ntional and change blindness are, however, more challenging to our everyday beliefs. Studies of inattenti= onal blindness such as Simons & Chabris (1999), for example, suggest that we= do not see what we do not attend to even when we are directing our gaze at = it. Equally surprising, studies of cha= nge blindness such as Simons & Levin (1998) demonstrate that we do not noti= ce major changes in what we are gazing at unless fast transitions capture our attention, or we happen to be focusing our attention on the precise features that change. Taken together, = such findings provide persuasive demonstrations that what we notice about the perceived world is less complete and detailed than we usually think. The findings also challenge a comm= only held view within psychology about how perception works, namely that we have= a detailed, and complete inner representation of the external world built up = over successive eye saccades out of the degraded information arriving at the retinas. If such a complete representation were updated moment-by-moment, t= hen we should notice changes in the visual field by comparing current input with complete records of the world developed from prior input—but we don’t.
If true this would be a g= enuine advance in our understanding of how perception works (that we pick up just = 5 or 6 visual features at each fixation) and about the nature of consequent inner representations of the world (that they are limited to the features that are picked up and are, therefore, not complete). The dynamic interaction between in= ternal information and external information (picked up on a need to know basis) al= so suggests that internal information may sometimes be formatted in a way that= is suited to such ongoing activities, for example as a set of procedures for action, rather than being iconic or propositional. The idea that inner representation= s are at least in part procedural rather than iconic or propositional is a recurr= ing theme in cognitive science (see for example the procedural semantics develo= ped in considerable depth by Miller & Johnson-Laird, 1976). However, the inattentional and change blindness data does not suggest that there are = no inner representations at all (an extreme form of “externalism” sometimes associated with the enactive view, see, e.g. Noe & Thomson, 2004a). Nor does any of this data suggest that there are no “qualia.” On the contrary, there are qualia (associated = with the 5 to 6 features we pick up) wherever we look.
A group of enactive theorists nevertheless =
claim
that understanding perception in this way allows an explanation of t=
he
qualia of consciousness in ways that are not open to the more traditional v=
iew
that these are, in some mysterious fashion, generated by neural activity in=
the
brain. For example, O’Regan, Myin and Noe (in press?) ask, “
The notion that sensory-motor interaction with the world=
may
affect aspects of visual perception that have to do with apparent size, sha=
pe,
location and orientation of objects in space again has classical antecedent=
s in
psychology, dating back to experiments with inverted retinal images in 1897=
by
G.M. Stratton, and work with a variety of distorting spectacles by Ivo Kohl=
er
and others in the 1960s (see Velmans, 2000, ch7). It was also demonstrated,=
for
example, by the way that the distorted appearance of an Ames=
span>
Why should driving a Porsche or any other skill feel = like anything at all? I am not denying that functioning of different kinds in humans often feels like something for humans. However human functioning can often be dissociated from its normal feel. For example, once they are well le= arnt, consciously performed skills can often be performed unconsciously,= = [3] so it does not follow that skilful functioning itself explains the accompanying feel.[4]
If it is a contingent, not a nece= ssary fact that certain kinds of functioning in humans have certain kinds of feel, then switching one’s emphasis away from neural mechanisms as such, to “what neural systems allow an organism to do” gets one no close= r to understanding why that enabling of skill should have a feel at all. Piloting a 747 no doubt, feels like something, to a human pilot and the way that it feels is likely to h= ave something to do with human biology. But why should it feel the same way to an electronic autopilot that replaces the skills exercised by a human being? Or why should it feel like anything to be the control system of a guided missile system? Anyone versed= in the construction of electronic control systems knows that if one builds a system in the right way, it will function just as it is intended to do, = whether it feels like anything to be that system or not. If so, functioning in an electroni= c (or any other) system is logically tangential to whether it is like anything to= be that system, leaving the hard problem of why it happens to feel a certain w= ay in humans untouched[5].
In short, if one helps oneself to the feelings that accompany certain sensory motor acts it might be possible, or not, to extend some of those feelings to aspects of conscious experience th= at are not normally associated with skilful acts, thereby persuading us that t= hese are qualitatively different to how we normally think them to be, as some enactive theorists propose. B= ut this tells us nothing about why skilful acts themselves should feel like anything at all, and consequently fails to address the hard problem of conscious “qualia.”
To sum up, the enactive view differs from
standard physicalism and functionalism in that it replaces neural
representations in the subject’s brain with sensory-motor interactions
between subject and external world that cross the subject—object divi=
de,
and it is in this sense “externalist”. However, like physicalists a=
nd
functionalists, some enactive theorists try to
resolve the problem of “qualia” and with it, the conscious
experience/physical world split, by reducing conscious experiences to somet=
hing
that E (the external observer) can in principle observe and measure (to the
exercise of sensory-motor skills).
To the extent that they try to reduce how things appear from a
subject’s first-person perspective to how things appear from E’s
third-person perspective they are reductionist. I have given some in=
itial
reasons to doubt the viability of this enactive alternative to more standard
forms of reductionism above—and reductionism has many, additional
problems that I do not have space to elaborate on here (cf. Velmans, 2000
chs.3, 4 & 5). Instead, I=
want
to introduce a more radical proposal: that the
dualist and reductionist models of perception shown in Figures 1 and 2 abov=
e, should
be replaced by the reflexive model of perc=
eption
shown in Figure 3.
The Reflexive Model of Perception
Like the enactive view, t= he reflexive model of perception proposes a different analysis of how conscious experience relates to the brain and surrounding world (Velmans, 1990, 2000 ch6). It also accepts that ce= rtain forms of perception arise from a dynamic interaction of observer with obser= ved and that at least some aspects of this interaction have a sensory-motor component. However, unlike so= me supporters of the enactive view, it assumes that such sensory-motor interactions with the world are normally preconscious: these interactions may form part of the causal antecedents to a given experience,= but antecedent causes are not the same as their consequent effects. Consequentl= y, these sensory-motor interactions cannot be ontologically identical to the resulting experiences, and cannot (in this ontological sense) explain their nature (cf. Velmans, 1998, 2000 ch3).
Nor does the reflexive mo= del argue against the existence or importance of internal neural representation= s, although it remains open about the nature of such representations, which ma= y be iconic, procedural or in some other format. Whatever the format, internal repr= esentations are required to support memory, imagery, dreams, and hallucinations (where there is no external stimulus with which to engage in sensory-motor exploration) and once activated, these representations can also be sufficie= nt, proximal causes for very detailed experiences.[6] In short, the reflexive model adopts a largely conventional approach to the causes of perception, while accepting that our knowledge of how perceptual process= ing works is, at present, partial, and needs to be informed in its details by d= ata about change and inattentional blindness (along the lines suggested above) = and by whatever other findings emerge. However, even a full understanding of preconscious causes and correlates, described from a third-pe= rson perspective, won’t tell us all that we need to know about the consequ= ent effects, the qualia of consciousness. = To know about these, we have to ask the subject, and it is only when we have s= uch first-person data that we can construct a complete model of perception. One model of perception that combines (the third-person) information available = to an experimenter with an accurate description of what the subject experience= s is shown in Figure 3.
In most respects Figure 3= is the same as Figures 1 and 2. As b= efore, there is a cat in the world (perceived by E) that is the initiating stimulus for what S observes, and the proximal neural causes and correlates of what S experiences are, as before, located in S’s brain.[7] The only difference relates to the ontology and location of S’s experience. According to dualists, S’s experience of a cat consists of “stuff that thinks” that is located “nowhere”; according to reductionists, S’s experience of a cat is a state or function of the brain that is located in her brain; according to the reflex= ive model, both of the former models are theoretically rather than empirically driven with the consequence that they systematically misdescribe what S actually experiences. If you = place a cat in front of S and ask her to describe what she experiences, she should tell you that she sees a cat in front of her in the world. This phenomenal cat literally i= s what she experiences, located where it seems to be—and she has no = additional experience of a cat either “nowhere” or “in her br= ain.” According the reflexive model, this added experience is a myth. Applying Occam’s razor gets rid of it.
In short, the reflexive model’s externalism applies to the phenomenology of some experiences. Unlike the exter= nalism of enactive theory, which applies to the antecedent causes or vehicles of g= iven experiences, the central claim of the reflexive model is that insofar as experiences are anywhere, they are roughly where they seem to be. For example, a pain in the foot really is in the foot, and this perceived print= on this page really is out here on this page. Nor is a pain in the foot accompanied by some additional experience of pain in the brai= n, or is this perceived print accompanied by some additional experience of<= /i> print in the brain. In terms of ph= enomenology, this perceived print, and my experience of this print are one and= the same.= [8]
It should be easy to gras= p the essence of this. The external objects that we experience seem to be out there in the world, not in our he= ad or brain—and classical “mental” sensations such as itches= and pains seem to be clearly located on the surface of our skin. But this immediately presents us with the problem of perceptual projection: g= iven that the proximal neural causes and correlates of what we experience are= in the head or brain, how can we explain the fact that various sensations a= nd experiences seem to be beyond the brain?
No one doubts that physic= al bodies can have real extension and location in space. Dualists and reductionists neverth= eless find it hard to accept that experiences can have a real, as opposed to a ‘seeming’ extension and location. They do not doubt, for example, th= at a foot has a real extension and location in space, but, for them, a pain in t= he foot can’t really be in the foot, as they are committed to the view t= hat it is either nowhere or in the brain. In sum, location in phenomenal space = is not location in real space.
According to the reflexiv= e model however, this ignores the fact that, in everyday life, we take the phenomen= al world to be the physical world. It also ignores the pivotal role of phenomenal space in forming our very understanding of space, and with it, o= ur understanding of location and extension in measured or “real” space.
What we normally think of= as the “physical foot” for example is actually the phenomenal foot<= /i> (the foot as seen, felt and so on). That does not stop us from pointing to it, measuring its location and extension and so on. If so, at least some phenomenal objects can be measured. While a pain in the foot mig= ht not be measurable with the same precision, few would doubt that we could specify its rough location and extension (and differentiate it for example = from a pain in the back).
What we normally think of=
as
“space” also refers, at least in the initial instance, to the
phenomenal space that we experience through which we appear to move. Our
intuitive understanding of spatial location and extension, for example, der=
ives
in the first instance from the way objects and events appear to be arranged
relative to each other in phenomenal space (closer, further, behind, in fro=
nt,
left, right, bigger, smaller and so on). We are also accustomed to making s=
ize
and distance estimates based on such appearances. This print for example
appears to be out here in front of my face, and THIS PRINT appears to be bi=
gger
than this print. However, we
recognise that these ordinal judgments are only rough and ready ones, so wh=
en
we wish to establish “real” location, distance, size or some ot=
her
spatial attribute, we usually resort to some form of measurement that
quantifies the dimensions of interest using an arbitrary but agreed metric
(feet, metres etc), relative to some agreed frame of reference (for example=
a
Cartesian frame of reference with an agreed zero point from which measureme=
nt
begins). The correspondence, or lack of correspondence, between phenomenal
space and measured space is assessed in the same way (e.g. by comparing
distance judgments with distance measurements) in psychology experiments. For example, I can estimate the distanc=
e of
this phenomenal print from my nose, but I can also place one end of a measu=
ring
tape on the tip of my nose (point zero) and the other end on this print to
determine its real distance.[9]
Such comparisons allow on= e to give a broad specification of how well phenomenal space corresponds to or m= aps onto measured space. According to the reflexive model, phenomenal space provides a natural representation, shaped by evolution, of the distance and location of objects viewed from the perspective of the embodied observer, w= hich models real distance and location quite well at close distances, where accu= racy is important for effective interaction with the world. My estimate that this page is about 0.5 metres from my nose, for example, is not far off. However, phenomenal appearances and our consequent distance judgments quickly lose accuracy as distances increase. For example, the dome of the night sky provides the outer boundary of the phenomenal world, but gives a completely misleading representation of dista= nces in stellar space.[10]
Note that, although we ca= n use measuring instruments to correct unaided judgments of apparent distance, si= ze and so on, measuring tapes and related instruments themselves appear to us = as phenomenal objects, and measurement operations appear to us as operations that we are carrying out on phenomenal objects in phenomenal space. In short, even our understanding of “real” or measured location is underpinned by our experience of phenomenal location. And crucially, whether I make dist= ance judgments about this perceived print and judge it to be around 0.5 metres in front of my face, or measure it to find that it is only 0.42 metres, does not alter the phenomenon that I am judging or measuring. The distance of the print that I am judging or measuring is the distance of this perceived print out here on this page, and not the distance of some other ‘experience of print’ in my brain.
These observations about =
the
spatially extended nature of the experienced phenomenal world fit in with
common sense and common experience and they will come as no surprise to tho=
se
versed in European phenomenology.
They also have many theoretical antecedents, for example in the work=
of
Yet, according to the ref= lexive model, it is precisely in the confused, unempirical, and doctrinal nature of some philosophical and so-called scientific thinking on this issue that a m= ajor source of the hard problem of consciousness is to be found. To understand h= ow conscious experience relates to the brain and physical world, one must first describe the phenomenology of that experience accurately. If conscio= us phenomenology is systematically misdescribed, its relation to the brain and physical world cannot be understood. The empirical fact of the matter appea= rs to be that preconscious processing in the embodied brain interacting with t= he world results in the three-dimensional, external phenomenal world that we experience. In everyday life, it is precisely this 3D phenomenal world that= we see, hear, touch, taste and smell around our bodies that we think of as = the physical world, although we recognise that this experienced physical world only models in a rough and ready way the subtler world described by modern physics (in quantum mechanics, relativity theory, etc.). If so, there never was an explanatory gap between what we normally think of as the physi= cal world, and conscious experience. This phenomenal physical world is part of conscious experienc= e, not apart from it.
It should be apparent tha= t this observation, if true, would alter the nature of the “hard problemR= 21; of consciousness, although, in isolation, it can be no more than a first st= ep on the way to a theory. There= is more than one thing to understand, for example the relation of conscious qu= alia to their neural correlates, the relation of the phenomenal physical world to the world described by modern physics, the causal efficacy and function of consciousness, and so on. I do not have space to present a more detailed theory here, although I have d= one so elsewhere (see, for example, Velmans, 1990, 2000, chs. 6 to 12, 2003). I will, however, try to make it clear why this first step is crucial.
Is the brain in the wo=
rld or
the world in the brain?
Readers familiar with the=
problem
of conscious ‘location’ will recognise that the force of my
suggestion that some experiences have both a spatial location and extension
outside the head hangs on whether the appearance-reality distinction=
can
be applied to conscious phenomenology.&nbs=
p;
Are experiences really where they seem to be or not?
Although various thinkers have noticed the apparent spatial location and extension of some experiences, and have tried to fit t= his into a general theory of mind (see above), few workers in modern consciousn= ess studies have noted the potential consequences of this for an understanding = of consciousness. Of those that have, some have tried to dismiss the significa= nce of spatially extended phenomenology with the argument that, if the neural causes of experience are in the brain, the experiences themselves must be t= here too. However, this presuppose= s the truth of a local model of causation that has long been abandoned by physics (which accepts that electricity inside a wire can cause a magnetic field outside the wire, that planets exert a gravitational pull on each other at great distances, that there are non-local effects = in quantum mechanics, and so on).
Of more interest are a nu= mber of thinkers who take the apparent, spatially extended nature of much of experi= ence very seriously, but nevertheless argue that such experiences are really bra= in states that are by definition in the brain. As it turns out, their attempt to assimilate 3D phenomenology into a form of “biological naturalismR= 21; is highly instructive.
In the modern era, John S= earle was one of the first to address this problem. As he noted,
"Common sense tells = us that our pains are located in physical space within our bodies, that for example= , a pain in the foot is literally in the physical space of the foot. But we now know that is false. The brain forms a body image, and pains like all bodily sensations, are parts of the body image. The pain in the foot is literally = in the physical space in the brain." (Searle 1992, p63)
However, Searle does not wish to dismiss conscious phenomenology. Indeed, later in the same book, he concludes that =
"...consciousness consists in the appearances themselves. Where appearance is concerned we cannot make the appearance-reality distinction because the appearance is the reality." (Searle 1992, p121).
This illustrates the acute
problem that apparent spatial location poses for biological naturalism: If biological naturalism is true,
experiences are states of the brain, which are necessarily in the brain.
Has science discovered th= at (despite appearances) pains are really in the brain as Searle suggests? It = is true of course that science has discovered representations of the bo= dy in the brain, for example, a tactile mapping of the body surface distributed over the somatosensory cortex (SSC). However, no scientist has observed act= ual body sensations to be in the brain, and no scientist ever will, for the sim= ple reason that, viewed from an external observer's perspective, the body as experienced by the subject cannot be observed (one cannot directly obse= rve another person’s experience). Science has nevertheless investigated the relationship of the body image (in SSC) to tactile experiences. Penfield & Rassmussen (1950), for example, exposed areas of cortex preparatory to surgical removal of cortical lesions responsible for focal epilepsy. To avoid surgical damage to areas essential to normal functioning, they explored the functions of these areas by lightly stimulat= ing them with a microelectrode and noting the subject's consequent experiences.= As expected, stimulation of the somatosensory cortex produced reports of tacti= le experiences. However, these feelings of numbness, tingling and so on were subjectively located in different regions of the body, not in the brain<= /i>. In sum, science has discovered that neural excitation of somatosensory cort= ex causes tactile sensations, which are subjectively located in different regions of = the body. This effect is precisely the “perceptual projection” that= the reflexive model describes.
In recent years the spati= ally extended nature of visual experience has once more become a topical issue. = For example, Pribram (1971, 2004), one of the first scientists to address this problem, has continued to develop his earlier theories of holographic representation in the brain; Revonsuo (1995) developed the suggestion that = the phenomenal world is a form of virtual reality (see also Velmans, 1993); and Lehar (2003) in a recent BBS target article has attempted to develop= a mathematical model of how objects appear as they move in phenomenal space (as opposed to how they really are as they move in phenomenal space). As these, and other scientists (such as Gray, 2004) have pointed out, the 3D nature of the phen= omenal world is likely to have important consequences for neuroscience, for the obvious reason that the brain has to be organised in a way that supports su= ch spatially extended experiences.
However, these theorists = remain divided on the issue of whether some experiences are really outside the brain. Pribram (2004) takes t= he view that they are, and outlines a broad theory of perception that he explicitly links to the reflexive model developed in Velmans (2000). Revonsuo, Lehar and Gray adopt a f= orm of biological naturalism, arguing for example that the entire 3D phenomenal wo= rld, stretching to the horizon and the dome of the sky, is a form of virtual rea= lity that is literally inside the brain.
Paradigm crunch
Lehar (2003), however, po= ints out that if the phenomenal world is inside the brain, the real skull must be outside the phenomenal world (the former and the latter are logically equivalent). Let me be clear:= if one accepts that
a)&n= bsp; The phenomenal world appears to have spatial extens= ion to the perceived horizon and dome of the sky.
b)&n= bsp; The phenomenal world is really inside the brain.
It follows that
c)&n= bsp; The real skull (as opposed to the phenomenal skull)= is beyond the perceived horizon and dome of the sky.
Although Lehar accepts th= is conclusion, he admits that this consequence of biological naturalism is “incredible”. In = my view, this casts an entirely different light on the so-called ‘scientific’ status of biological naturalism and the so-called ‘unscientific’ claims of the reflexive model. Put your hands on your head. Is that the real s= kull that you feel, located more or less where it seems to be? If that makes sen= se, the reflexive model makes sense. Or is that just a phenomenal skull inside = your brain, with your real skull beyond the dome of the sky? If the latter seems absurd, biolog= ical naturalism is absurd. Choose for yourself.[11]= a>
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[1] For a more detailed cr=
itique
of Dennett’s views on the existence of qualia see Velmans (2001).
[2] The
[3] See Velmans (1991) for an extensive review.
[4] I am= not suggesting that functioning can be completely dissociated from accompanying experience in normal human beings. It is unlikely for example, that experiences can be carved off from a normally functioning brain with a surgeon’s knife, without in some way disrupting that functioning. But that does not settle the quest= ion of how functioning relates to the accompanying experience—or even, whether the functioning (enactive or not) somehow explains the experience.
[5] See detailed discussion of this and related points in Velmans (2000) chapters 4= and 5.
[6] See = for example the classical studies of temporal lobe stimulation carried out by Penfield & Rassmussen (1950).
[7] Alth= ough I accept that preconscious perceptual processing may also involve dynamic sensory-motor interactions of the kind suggested by the enactive approach above.
[8] Note, however, that the
reflexive model is not externalist (for any doctrinal reason) about all
experiences. Whether an experience is located in external phenomenal space,=
on
the body surface, or nowhere, is an empirical matter that is entirely depen=
dent
on its phenomenology. For exa=
mple,
the phonemic imagery that accompanies the thought that 2+2=3D4 does not hav=
e a
clear location, or might seem, at best, to be roughly located, “inside
the head” (see Velmans, 2000, ch6).
[9] There are of course alternative representations of space suggested by physics (fo= ur dimensional space time, 11 dimensional space of string theory, etc) and non-Cartesian geometries (e.g. Riemann geometry). A comparison of phenomena= l to measured (Cartesian) space is all that we need however to decide whether a = pain in my foot or this perceived print on this page is, or is not, really in my brain.
[10] Although it is not germane to the issue under discussion, it should be noted that the reflexive model adopts a form of critical realism, which accepts t= hat the phenomenal world represents an autonomously existing world itself with varying degrees of utility and accuracy—and that phenomenal space, measured space, and the various conceptualisations of space developed in physics are alternative representations of space itself whose utility and accuracy can only be assessed in the light of the purposes for which it is = to be used (cf Velmans, 2000, ch7).
[11] For further discussion, see Velmans (2003b).