Consciousness 4: What is self-consciousness? (western philosophical perspective) (v1.0)
A key reference is Prof Daniel N
Robinson of Oxford University.
What is self-consciousness? What is it
like to be the subject of the experience (thinking, desire, feelings, etc)? Can
we ever know what it is like to be somebody else - say a bat or even another
person? There are many dimensions to a study of consciousness (like
evolutionary perspective, neurological perspective, philosophical perspective,
and psychological perspective). Here I will focus on only philosophical aspects
- primarily a western philosophy perspective (eastern philosophy perspective is
very different). The views here are not harmonized with views from other
dimensions.
There is a difference between
unreflective and reflective consciousness. The reflective conscious experience
humans experience invariably includes self-consciousness, but also the focus is
the self as the subject. But what or who is this self? One line of thought is
that many things change about us from moment to moment and there should be
continuity across time, therefore there can be no durable self. Another line of
thought is a thing is what it is essentially, even if a number of changes occur
accidentally over time. Let us say Smith, a male, as a young person learnt the
violin. We say smith is a male essentially, and a musician accidentally. John
Locke distinguishes between real and nominal essences. He says personal identity
is not in the identity of substance but in the identity of consciousness
(spatial temporal experiences and memory). A self-conscious being knows
its self-knowledge intuitively. All factual knowledge though comes from
experience. If self-knowledge is intuitive, how can we ever know there are
other minds? Also, to know oneself intuitively leaves room for the possibility
of a mistake. How can we really know if it is necessarily true and real?
The subject of
consciousness is among the most vexing in both western philosophy and science,
and no less tractable in psychology, where the conceptual problems are often
neglected. Philosophers agree that the most important question to be
answered in our era is consciousness. They agree that there is nothing we know
subjectively more intimately than consciousness, but there is nothing that is
harder to explain. Interestingly it is a completely taken for granted condition
for our lives, but explaining it is hugely vexing to philosophers. To
understand why, we need to go back and look at metaphysics.
Metaphysics was invented by Aristotle
and is about what really is. Metaphysics studies the fundamental nature of
reality. Two ideas explored are causation and the essence or substance of a
being. I don’t want to dive deep into metaphysics in this blog, but the net
result is that If consciousness is just a code word for an entity whose
substantial nature or essence is a self-reflecting mental state and is not
reduceable to anything physical, then the problem of consciousness is beyond
the reach of physical analysis, and therefore physics is not complete. So, any
complete definition of reality cannot be rendered solely in physical terms. The
question also arises – what is anything at all if not some representation in
some consciousness? Is the universe really there?
These arguments really cause major
problems for philosophy. Some think we need to bridge the gap between physical
and consciousness to complete physics. But this gap is not just in
consciousness. Everything in social, civic life also has this gap. All of them
resist translation to the language of physics. When real life enters the
picture, we seem to have gaps all over the place!! How do we bridge this
explanation gap? Many philosophers believe the gap needs to be filled by
connecting the neurological physical processes in the brain to consciousness as
experienced by some causal law. They believe these explanations would be much
more foundational and higher quality. But this leads to another apparent gap.
Hume saw causation as a relationship between two impressions or ideas in the
mind. Thomas Reid disagreed and thought the concept of causation is not an idea
copied from a sensory impression in the first place. But one could argue
even causal relationships are based on experience (Hume argued we don't really
"see" causes but attribute that relationship through experience).
Of-course every physicist would vigorously object to the notion that they were
not measuring real causal relationships in the universe! Some philosophers
on the other hand think that the whole gap issue and concern is really a
cognitive illusion. They think of the conscious states as just being the states
of the brain itself. But all these arguments leave one very
uneasy!!
Mental causation is interesting
philosophically. Can we associate a massless, spaceless mental cause (a
thought) as the causation to the physical movement to raise my arm? Mental
phenomenon is those phenomena that contain an object intentionally within
themselves. Mental phenomena are always about something. Physical phenomenon is
not. Sodium Chloride is salt, but it isn’t about anything. That tastes salty is
about the dish you are eating. This gives rise to the question of how mental
thoughts which is about something, be caused by something physical that isn’t.
Conversely how can a mental thought that is about something give rise to a
physical movement that isn’t. Some philosophers have abandoned causal
explanations and gone the route of ordinary commonsense explanations arguing
also that the causal explanation if it exists would be unintelligible. Also, it
would be moving from a philosophical question to a scientific question and may
prove to be just as intractable in science.
How do I know there are any minds
other than my own? This problem is another aspect of how we justify we know
anything at all. I cannot really perceive any mind other than my own directly.
To be exact we cannot perceive even our own minds directly either but loosely
speaking we can say I am aware of certain thoughts and experiences and feelings
as being my own. The only way we know about other minds is a verbal report or a
behavior from that mind. But verbal report implies a common language and
linguistic conventions and what that means. For all I know that person could be
a robot. I have no obligation to accept there is another mind. We have no
direct access to that person’s thoughts, feelings, or experiences. Thomas Reid
offers a commonsense approach. While we don’t have direct access to another
mind, we do observe behaviors. Any social interaction at all presupposes
certain instinctual patterns of behavior, the meaning of which will be
understood by members of that species. All languages are driven by convention
and social rules and local practices and words derive their meaning solely by use.
If direct experience is the only
yardstick used to claim, we know anything then whole realms of what we regard
we know becomes quite obscure. There is also inferential knowledge driven by
past experience and is a prerequisite for reason and perception.
Do our scientific laws express reality
since one’s senses play a big part in scientific observation? This is the
debate between realism and anti-realism. Thomas Reid offers a commonsense
approach. "No man seeks a reason to not believe what he perceives, and if
he did it would be difficult to find one. Though he cannot give reason for
believing his senses, his belief remains as firm as if it was grounded on
demonstration. Sceptics’ arguments do not convince him". He
also relies on the argument that
the sceptics hypothesis is no more likely to be true than the common-sensical
belief that the world is much the way we perceive it to be.
Consciousness is a very problematic
area for philosophy and may remain so.
Sometime later when I
am ready, I will dwell deeper into Indian philosophy. As I illustrated in this
essay, western philosophers don't really have the answers on consciousness and
are still seeking the answers. Understanding the neurological and evolutionary
aspects of what the mind experiences is still very much in its infancy as two
of my essays illustrate. It is amazing to me that such a very long time
ago the Indian sages had such fascinating understandings. The west does
not have a distinct unchanging separate notion of "I" that the east
has that is distinct from mind experiences. The west's literature refers to the
mind experiences including self-awareness experience itself as consciousness.
Given the different definition of consciousness, comparing the two is like
comparing apples and oranges. The two viewpoints are not necessarily immiscible
but approach from different ends.
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