» Articles » PMID: 25904857

What Makes You Think You Are Conscious? An Agnosticist Manifesto

Overview
Specialty Neurology
Date 2015 Apr 24
PMID 25904857
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The qualitative character of consciousness, its "what-it-is-likeness", is a contested issue, both in philosophy and psychology. I argue that, rather than by conceptual analyses, the status of "what-it-is-likeness" has to be decided by empirical investigation. Pending the outcome, we should maintain an agnostic stance, in order to remove the bias in favor of fictionalism from our study of consciousness,. I illustrate this with the notion of "ownership unity". People adhere to the belief of a single, unified self as the owner of their experiences, in spite of abundant dis-unities in the informational content of their experience. On one reading, this supports the notion that the unity of experience is no more than a convenient fiction, based on an illusory experience of unity. Cognitive neuroscience is slanted in favor of such understanding, insofar it emphasizes functional specialization and localization. To restore the balance, I present a complementary perspective: the view that the experience of unity is afforded by the intrinsic, multiscale brain dynamics. This approach offers a biological substrate for unity of experience as a regular scenario within certain boundary conditions, as well mechanisms that may let it go astray.

Citing Articles

Disrupted development and imbalanced function in the global neuronal workspace: a positive-feedback mechanism for the emergence of ASD in early infancy.

Fields C, Glazebrook J Cogn Neurodyn. 2017; 11(1):1-21.

PMID: 28174609 PMC: 5264757. DOI: 10.1007/s11571-016-9419-8.


System, Subsystem, Hive: Boundary Problems in Computational Theories of Consciousness.

Fekete T, van Leeuwen C, Edelman S Front Psychol. 2016; 7:1041.

PMID: 27512377 PMC: 4961712. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01041.

References
1.
Stam C . Functional connectivity patterns of human magnetoencephalographic recordings: a 'small-world' network?. Neurosci Lett. 2004; 355(1-2):25-8. DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2003.10.063. View

2.
Gong P, van Leeuwen C . Distributed dynamical computation in neural circuits with propagating coherent activity patterns. PLoS Comput Biol. 2009; 5(12):e1000611. PMC: 2787923. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000611. View

3.
Sporns O, Zwi J . The small world of the cerebral cortex. Neuroinformatics. 2004; 2(2):145-62. DOI: 10.1385/NI:2:2:145. View

4.
van Leeuwen C . Chaos breeds autonomy: connectionist design between bias and baby-sitting. Cogn Process. 2007; 9(2):83-92. DOI: 10.1007/s10339-007-0193-8. View

5.
McCann J, Parraman C, Rizzi A . Reflectance, illumination, and appearance in color constancy. Front Psychol. 2014; 5:5. PMC: 3901009. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00005. View