Theories of Everything with Curt Jaimungal - The Consciousness Iceberg [Layer 2]: The Hard Problem, Carl Jung, Nondualism, Buddhism
Episode Date: August 9, 2024Today, we dive deeper into the theories of consciousness in Layer 2 of The Consciousness Iceberg, exploring the Hard Problem, Carl Jung's insights, Non-Dualism, and Buddhism. Layer 1: https://youtu.b...e/GDjnEiys98o Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4gL14b92xAErofYQA7bU4e Become a YouTube Member Here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdWIQh9DGG6uhJk8eyIFl1w/join Patreon: https://patreon.com/curtjaimungal (early access to ad-free audio episodes!) Join TOEmail at https://www.curtjaimungal.org Support TOE: - Patreon: https://patreon.com/curtjaimungal (early access to ad-free audio episodes!) - Crypto: https://tinyurl.com/cryptoTOE - PayPal: https://tinyurl.com/paypalTOE - TOE Merch: https://tinyurl.com/TOEmerch Follow TOE: - NEW Get my 'Top 10 TOEs' PDF + Weekly Personal Updates: https://www.curtjaimungal.org - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theoriesofeverythingpod - TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theoriesofeverything_ - Twitter: https://twitter.com/TOEwithCurt - Discord Invite: https://discord.com/invite/kBcnfNVwqs - iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/better-left-unsaid-with-curt-jaimungal/id1521758802 - Pandora: https://pdora.co/33b9lfP - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4gL14b92xAErofYQA7bU4e - Subreddit r/TheoriesOfEverything: https://reddit.com/r/theoriesofeverything Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdWIQh9DGG6uhJk8eyIFl1w/join #science #consciousness #carljung #buddhism Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome back to the Consciousness Iceberg, a project where we'll explain consciousness from several distinct angles, including the latest theories from the Academy, such as
Integrated Information Theory, even Yoshabok's theories, Pantsichism, as well as other traditions
like insights from the Vedic texts and the different schools of Buddhism.
In Layer 1, we dipped our toes into the waters of consciousness, covering the foundational
aspects such as basic definitions, the mind-body problem and its dualistic challenges, the
nature of sleep dreams and altered states as variations in consciousness, the free will
versus determinism debate with its implications for moral responsibility, and the exploration
of the self and identity questioning the nature of self-awareness and personal continuity.
In Layer 2, which is this layer, we'll explore the hard problem of consciousness, qualia,
non-dualism in Indian philosophy, and even John Verveckis and Carl Jung's ideas, all
explained extremely simply.
My name is Kurt Jaimungal, and ordinarily I use my background in mathematical physics
to analyze theories of everything, however today we have a consciousness iceberg that's
heavily inspired by Robert Lawrence Kuhn's comprehensive behemoth article on consciousness,
which I recommend you check out. The link is in the description and his closer to truth series on consciousness as well.
Now, let's begin with the second layer of consciousness.
The Hard Problem of Consciousness
The Hard Problem of Consciousness was introduced by David Chalmers in 1995.
Since then, it's become a central thorn in the side of the philosophy of mind.
It asks a simple but beguiling question.
Why does subjective experience exist?
More specifically, why does it feel like something to be conscious when what we have is supposed
to be dead matter at the fundament?
This problem is distinct from the so-called easy problems of consciousness. These ostensibly easy ones involve explaining cognitive functions like attention and behavior
control. They are considered easy because they can, in principle, be solved by standard
methods in cognitive science. The hard problem, however, is purportedly entirely different.
At its core, the hard problem highlights something called the explanatory gap
That is to say the difficulty in explaining how or why physical processes in the brain give rise to subjective
experiences while the mind-body problem that we spoke about in the previous layer of this iceberg is
Broader link in the description to that by the way, the hard problem focuses specifically on the subjective, experiential aspects of consciousness.
So let's consider a philosophical zombie, a being that behaves exactly like a human
but lacks inner experience.
The hard problem asks why we aren't such zombies.
Why and how does neural activity supposedly create the taste of chocolate or the experience
of red? Now by the way, there are several approaches that have been proposed to address the hard
problem. Number one is Mysterianism, which argues that human cognitive capacities are fundamentally
unsuited to solve this problem. In some ways, it's like throwing up your hand. Now number two is
Panpsychism, which suggests consciousness is a fundamental feature of
the universe, present in some form in all matter.
Number three is idealism, which we will explore later, and roughly speaking it suggests that
the foundational lithified rock of reality is conscious experience itself, or consciousness
itself.
And number four, illusionism, which argues that the hard problem itself is an illusion.
We'll explore each of these in subsequent layers.
Qualia. So what the heck are qualia? Well, they're the subjective
qualitative aspects of our conscious experience.
You know that there's the redness of red, the painfulness of pain, and the tastiness of say that pizza you had last night. Those are examples of the what-it's-like
of consciousness.
Now, here's where it gets disorienting. Imagine you're looking at a sunset. So you're seeing
these vibrant reds, these oranges and purples. They're painting the sky. But what if, stay
with me here, what if your red is my blue?
So what if we're seeing the same wavelengths of light but experiencing them completely
differently?
This is what philosophers call the inverted spectrum thought experiment. And it's a classic
way to think about qualia. So hold on, you may be thinking, can't we just look at someone's
brain and see what they're experiencing?
Now, this is where we run into that explanatory gap again.
We can map every neuron firing when you see that sunset, but that still doesn't tell
us what it feels like for you to see it.
Now, not everyone's on board with this qualia business.
Some people, like the late Daniel Dennett, see the podcast
in the description, argue that qualia are just an illusion. He says that once we explain
all of the functional aspects of perception and cognition, that there's nothing left
to explain. So it's a tad like saying, once you know how a magic trick works, there's
no real magic left. Indeed, there never was. On the flip side, others take qualia extremely seriously. There's even a view called qualia
realism that says that these subjective experiences are fundamental features of reality. It's
akin to saying that the universe is made of math, matter, and feelings.
Some people like André Gómez-Emelson have this view, though they may not consider math
or matter as part of their ontology, but something derivative.
And in later layers, we'll explore those types of theories in both podcast form and in iceberg
form, so subscribe to get notified.
For now, take a moment to pay attention to your subjective experience, the feeling of
your breath, the sounds around you, the thoughts floating through your mind.
That my friends is the mysterious world of qualia and phenomenal consciousness.
Advaita Vedanta Advaita Vedanta is a school of Hindu philosophy
that proposes a radical idea, non-dualism.
Advaita literally means not two.
But what does that mean?
Well, it's suggesting that reality is fundamentally unified.
There's no separation between individual self, Atman, and the ultimate reality, Brahman.
Now you may be thinking like, hold up bro, I'm fairly certain I'm separate from the
chair that I'm sitting on, and in Advaita Vedanta, they would say that this perception
of separation is an illusion, what they call Maya.
Now this ties into what we've been discussing about consciousness and the nature of reality.
Remember our chat about qualia and the what it's like to be aspect of consciousness.
Advaita Vedanta takes this to the extreme.
It's not just about what it's like to be you.
It's about what it's like to be everything,
because at its deepest level, everything is one,
at least according to this school.
Now, this idea of non-dualism isn't unique
to Indian philosophy.
It echoes in Western thought as well.
Spinoza, for instance, proposed a
form of pantheism where God and nature were one in the same. And more recently, some interpretations
of quantum mechanics have hinted at a deeper interconnected universe. See the Amanda Gefter
podcast in the description about cubism.
But Advaita Vedanta goes further. It suggests that our sense of self, the quote unquote you that you think you are, is itself
an illusion.
This might sound wild, but it's not too far from some modern neuroscientific views that
see the self as a kind of useful fiction created by the brain.
Now, you might be wondering, if everything is one, why does it seem so not one?
This is where the concept of levels of reality come in.
Advaita Vedanta proposes different levels of truth, from the absolute, where everything
is indeed one, to the more conventional, where we experience separation.
It suggests that our everyday experience, so that stream of thoughts,
that set of feelings, the perceptions that we usually call consciousness, is
just at the surface level, and beneath that is a deeper, unified consciousness
that we're just usually not aware of. In later layers, we'll explore how these
ideas connect with other philosophical and scientific perspectives
on consciousness.
We'll look at how they might relate to theories like integrated information theory or even
Donald Hoffman's interface theory of perception.
John Vervecky's Relevance Realization
How do our minds figure out what's important in any given situation?
Think about it. Every second, your brain is bombarded with a tsunami of information.
Sights, sounds, smells, thoughts, memories. It may literally be chaos out there. Though
somehow, your consciousness manages to make sense of it all. That's relevance, realization,
and action.
How does this tie into that whole what it's like to be or first-person experience aspect
that's central to consciousness studies?
Well Vervecki is saying that the very essence of your subjective experience, your qualia,
if you will, is shaped by how your brain determines what's relevant.
He proposes four ways of knowing.
These are crucial for consciousness.
Number one is propositional, so knowing that.
Number two is procedural, so knowing how.
Number three is perspectival knowing, so knowing what it's like.
And the number four participatory knowing, knowing by being.
Instead of getting stuck in what some call the Cartesian dualism trap, John is proposing
something more dynamic,
more process-oriented. There are echoes of integrated information here, with its emphasis
on how information is integrated in the brain, and there's a touch of Leibniz's monads
as well, in the way that Vervecky sees consciousness as fundamentally active and perspectival.
Topics we'll explore in detail later. But perhaps the most earth-shattering aspect of Vervecky's theory is how it deals with the self.
Remember how we talked about in Invita Vedanta they suggest that the self is an illusion?
Well, Vervecky doesn't quite go that far.
Instead, he says that our sense of self emerges from this ongoing process of relevance realization. It's not a fixed
object, it's a dynamic and ever-changing process. In later layers we'll delve
deeper into how Vervecky's ideas connect with other theories of
consciousness, from the neuroscientific to the mystical. But before we move on to
the next topic, I'd like you to pay attention to how your mind decides what's relevant.
I understand you may find my sultry voice is the most relevant thing in this moment
currently and I don't blame you.
But the point is, are you choosing to pay attention?
Or does this selection process happen prior to the process of noticing itself. Vervecki would say that relevance realization is pre-egoic, meaning it's prior to even
the construction of you.
Panpsychism and the combination problem Panpsychism proposes that consciousness is
a fundamental feature of the universe, present in some form in all matter.
It's not saying that your coffee mug, say, is sitting there contemplating its existence,
but rather that the basic building blocks of reality have some rudimentary form of experience
or subjectivity.
This idea gained traction recently, with philosophers like David Chalmers and Galen Strassen arguing
that it may offer a solution to the hard problem of consciousness we discussed earlier.
The reasoning is as follows. If we can't explain how consciousness emerges from
non-conscious matter then perhaps consciousness was there all along.
But panpsychism faces its own challenges. Chief among them is the combination problem.
If tiny bits of matter have tiny bits of consciousness, how do these combine Panpsychism faces its own challenges. Chief among them is the combination problem.
If tiny bits of matter have tiny bits of consciousness, how do these combine to form the rich, unified
conscious experience that we have?
So it's not just about adding more and more little consciousnesses together.
That would be like saying you can understand a novel by looking at the individual letters.
Some thinkers, like Philip Goff, podcast with him in the
description, have proposed versions of panpsychism that try to address this. Cosmopsychism, for
instance, suggests that the universe as a whole is conscious and our individual consciousnesses
are somehow derived from this cosmic mind. Now, this sounds like a variation of what
Bernardo Castro believes in his analytic
idealism, which will be discussed in later layers, so subscribe to get notified, but
Castrop dislikes panpsychism for some subtle reasons that, again, we'll get to next time.
Interestingly, panpsychism resonates with some of the interpretations of quantum mechanics,
such as the idea that consciousness plays a role in collapsing the wave function. It also echoes certain Eastern philosophical traditions,
like the Vedantic concept of universal consciousness we touched on earlier. Critics argue that
panpsychism merely pushes the explanatory burden back a step. Instead of explaining
how consciousness emerges from some non-conscious matter, we now have to explain how it all
combines and evolves into this
complex form that we experience. However, as neuroscientist Christophe Koch puts it,
the only thing we know about consciousness is that it exists.
Buddhist Consciousness, Yogacara and Madhyamaka Views Yoga Kara, often translated as mind only or consciousness only, posits that we perceive,
posits that what we perceive as external reality is actually a perception of consciousness.
Now this doesn't mean that the physical world doesn't exist, but rather that our
experience of it is shaped entirely by our minds. It's reminiscent of the idealist philosophers we touched on earlier, but with a Buddhist flavor.
Mariamika, on the other hand, emphasizes the concept of emptiness, or sannyāta.
This isn't nihilism. Instead, it suggests that all phenomena, including consciousness,
lack inherent existence and are interdependent. It's somewhat like saying consciousness isn't a thing but a process.
Now it's this process view that Buddhists derive their notion of the self is an illusion.
It doesn't mean that the self doesn't exist or that you're an illusion,
that's a common Western misunderstanding. Buddhists tend to believe that what's
non-illusory must be non-changing.
So since you're a process, we have to abandon the notion of a permanent, unchanging self.
The Yogacara view of consciousness as fundamentally constructive echoes modern predictive processing
theories, while the Madhyamaka's emphasis on interdependence resonates with inactive
and embodied cognitive
approaches.
You can hear more about these two types of theories, the predictive processing type and
the inactive embodied cognition type, by clicking in the description for a podcast with Karl
Friston.
Interestingly, these Buddhist perspectives give a different take on the hard problem.
Instead of trying to explain how subjective experience arises from objective matter, they question the distinction of subject and object itself.
This approach sidesteps some of the conventional traps we often fall into when thinking about consciousness.
In later layers, we'll explore how these Buddhist concepts relate to other theories of consciousness, from panpsychism to integrated information theory. For now,
consider this. If, as these Buddhist schools suggest, our usual sense of self and reality
is fundamentally mistaken, what might a more accurate understanding look like?
Global Workspace Theory Global Workspace Theory, proposed by Bars
in 1988, is about the cognitive
architecture for understanding consciousness. This is different from
explaining consciousness. It more presupposes consciousness and then
attempts to understand its inner workings as they relate to the brain. It suggests
that our brain has a quote-unquote global workspace where information is
broadcast widely to many unconscious
specialized processes.
The theory uses a metaphor of a theater of consciousness.
So now imagine a dimly lit theater where only the spotlight content is consciously perceived.
This stage represents working memory with the spotlight controlled by attention.
The audience consists of unconscious specialized processors like those for language, emotions,
or sensory experience.
Global workspace theory proposes that consciousness emerges when information gains access to this
global workspace and is broadcasted widely.
This broadcasting allows for the integrated information across different brain regions,
leading to coherent behavior and subjective
experience.
This view aligns with some neuroscientific findings.
For instance, studies have shown that conscious perception is associated with long-range synchronization
of brain activity, which could be the neural basis of the broadcast in global workspace
theory.
In this way, we focus here on the functional role of consciousness in cognition rather
than the hard problem.
It says, hey, here's what consciousness does, even if we fully can't explain what it's
like to be something.
As usual, critics argue that global workspace theory doesn't address the explanatory gap.
How does this broadcasting of information create subjective experience? However, proponents like Stanislas Dehaan have developed a more detailed
neurobiological model based on global workspace theory, providing testable
predictions about conscious processes, such as the idea that conscious
perception would be associated with a late burst of activation in a
distributed network of brain regions. If consciousness is indeed a global workspace, then what determines what information gets
access to this workspace and why do some contents of consciousness feel more vivid or even more
real than others?
Carl Jung's explanation for consciousness. Carl Jung proposed a model of the psyche that includes both conscious and unconscious elements.
According to Jung, the conscious mind is just the tip of the iceberg, pun intended.
Beneath lies the personal unconscious, containing forgotten or repressed memories and experiences,
and even deeper, the collective unconscious. A repository of universal, inherited
patterns of thoughts, experiences, even personalities that he called archetypes.
Central to Jung's theory is the concept of individuation, the process of integrating
unconscious contents into consciousness. Jung's idea resonates with some Eastern philosophies that we've touched on.
His concept of the collective unconscious, for instance, has parallels with the Vedantic
idea of a universal consciousness.
However, Jung's approach is distinctly Western and grounded in his clinical work and personal
experiences.
Also, the collective unconscious of Jung is less of a unified source of consciousness
from which we all spring, and is more akin to a reservoir that we have in common.
So the difference is that in the Eastern case, you're seen as the ripple on the ocean,
with little distinction between the ripple and the ocean, since they're both of the
same medium, namely water in this case.
Whereas for Jung, the collective unconscious is more akin to
a shared ancestral memory or inherited evolutionary wisdom that influences our psyche, but Jung
doesn't negate individual consciousness.
So the collective unconscious is a common stockpile of archetypes and instinctual patterns
that we all draw from, but we still remain delineated individuals.
For Jung, subjective experiences aren't seen as issues to be resolved like the hard
problem suggests.
Instead, Jung sees experience as being informative of elements of the psyche that require exploration
and integration in the process of something called individuation.
Now individuation means the process of becoming a whole, differentiated person by integrating
conscious and unconscious aspects of one's psyche.
This is in contrast to the oneness of the other theories of consciousness.
In Carl Jung's view, individuation literally aids in becoming more distinctive, rather
than becoming more the same.
In order to accomplish this, you would need to confront and integrate your shadow as part
of your journey towards psychological wholeness.
The shadow being the aspects of yourself you've repressed or denied.
For instance, you may need to confront the part of you that's deeply envious when others
succeed or gain accolade. Or you may need to confront your urge to falsity, that is, your tendency to bend reality by
telling even the tiniest white lie.
Those are aspects that need to be acknowledged, understood, and then integrated into your
conscious self, rather than suppressed, denied, or even worse, unacknowledged.
And this will allow you to become a more complete individual.
Jungian analyst James Hollis suggests that consciousness, in Jung's view, is not just
awareness, but the carrier of meaning.
This shifts the focus from what consciousness is to what consciousness does. That is to say, how consciousness creates
and interprets meaning in your life.
And there you have it. Layer 2 of the consciousness iceberg. We've explored quite some heavy
concepts from the hard problem to Carl Jung's collective unconscious. Remember though, we're
still just scratching the surface.
In layer 3, we'll delve even deeper into the murky depths of consciousness theories. If
you found this intriguing, then feel free to subscribe to see the next layer. And if
you need a refresher, layer 1 is linked below. Let me know what you'd like to see in layer
3 by leaving a comment. Also, if you're interested in the technical details of string theory, I've done a 3 hour deep dive into the mathematics of it in the string
theory iceberg, also linked in the description. Thank you to our partner, The Economist.
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