<p><span>Explanatory Optimism about the Hard Problem of Consciousness</span><span> argues that despite the worries of explanatory pessimists, consciousness can be fully explained in “easy” scientific terms. The widespread intuition that consciousness poses a hard problem is plausibly based on how co
Explanatory Optimism about the Hard Problem of Consciousness
✍ Scribed by Josh Weisberg
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 191
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Explanatory Optimism about the Hard Problem of Consciousness argues that despite the worries of explanatory pessimists, consciousness can be fully explained in “easy” scientific terms. The widespread intuition that consciousness poses a hard problem is plausibly based on how consciousness appears to us in first-person access. The book offers a debunking argument to undercut the justificatory link between the first-person appearances and our hard problem intuitions.
The key step in the debunking argument involves the development and defense of an empirical model of first-person access: Automated Compression Theory (ACT). ACT holds that first-person access to consciousness is accomplished by automated accessing of compressed sensory information. Because of the distorting nature of this compressed access, it seems to subjects that consciousness possesses “exceptional” properties―properties leading to the hard problem―even though no such properties are present. If there are no exceptional properties to explain, then an explanation in easy terms can fully account for conscious experience. The book presents a range of empirical evidence for ACT and concludes that the burden of proof is now on the pessimists to show why we shouldn’t be optimistic about explaining consciousness.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Epigraph
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Explanatory Optimism
1.1 Explanatory Pessimists vs. Explanatory Optimists
1.2 Undercutting and Debunking
Notes
Chapter 2: The Hard Problem and Qualitative Inaccuracy
2.1 Chalmers’s Five Ways and their Universal Source
2.2 Hard Problem Intuitions
2.3 Pereboom’s Qualitative Inaccuracy Hypothesis
2.4 Type-Q Materialism: On the Line between Elimination and Reduction
2.5 Weak vs. Strong Illusionism
2.6 How Serious Are You?
Notes
Chapter 3: The Appearances to be Explained
3.1 Doxastic and Phenomenal Appearances
3.2 DISC Appearances
3.3 DISC Appearances and the Roots of Explanatory Pessimism
3.4 Revelation
3.5 Phenomenal Intrinsics and “What it’s Like”
Notes
Chapter 4: Present and Past Debunkers
4.1 Present Debunkers
4.1.1 The Phenomenal Concepts Strategy
4.1.2 The Evidential Strategy
4.1.3 Attention Schema Theory
4.2 Past Debunkers
4.2.1 David Armstrong
4.2.2 Daniel Dennett
4.2.3 Frank Jackson
4.3 Chalmers on Explaining Hard Problem Intuitions
Notes
Chapter 5: Automated Compression Theory
5.1 Building a Better Brain: Automation and Compression
5.2 ACT and the DISC Appearances
5.2.1 Automation and Directness
5.2.2 Compression and Indescribability, Simplicity, and Contingency
5.3 The Automated Mind
5.4 The Compressed Mind
Notes
Chapter 6: ACT, Expertise, and First-Person Access
6.1 ACT and Expert Perception
6.2 Chess Expertise
6.3 Easy Reading
6.4 The ACT Model of First-Person Access
6.5 ACT and Optimistic Theories of Consciousness
Notes
Chapter 7: Optimistic ACT at Work
7.1 Mary, Mary, Why Ya Buggin’?
7.2 The Problem of Higher-Order Qualia
7.3 Recapping the Argument
7.4 Type-Q Postscript
7.5 Where to?
Notes
References
Index
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