Episode 25: David Chalmers on Consciousness, the Hard Problem, and Living in a Simulation

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  • čas přidán 2. 12. 2018
  • Blog post with show notes, audio player, and transcript: www.preposterousuniverse.com/...
    Patreon: / seanmcarroll
    The "Easy Problems" of consciousness have to do with how the brain takes in information, thinks about it, and turns it into action. The "Hard Problem," on the other hand, is the task of explaining our individual, subjective, first-person experiences of the world. What is it like to be me, rather than someone else? Everyone agrees that the Easy Problems are hard; some people think the Hard Problem is almost impossible, while others think it's pretty easy. Today's guest, David Chalmers, is arguably the leading philosopher of consciousness working today, and the one who coined the phrase "the Hard Problem," as well as proposing the philosophical zombie thought experiment. Recently he has been taking seriously the notion of panpsychism. We talk about these knotty issues (about which we deeply disagree), but also spend some time on the possibility that we live in a computer simulation. Would simulated lives be "real"? (There we agree -- yes they would.)
    David Chalmers got his Ph.D. from Indiana University working under Douglas Hoftstadter. He is currently University Professor of Philosophy and Neural Science at New York University and co-director of the Center for Mind, Brain, and Consciousness. He is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities, the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Among his books are The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory, The Character of Consciousness, and Constructing the World. He and David Bourget founded the PhilPapers project.
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Komentáře • 552

  • @davidg.4943
    @davidg.4943 Před 5 lety +83

    As the only concoiusness that exists in the universe, I really appreciate you making a video specifically for me. Thank you so much! 😅

    • @seriouskaraoke879
      @seriouskaraoke879 Před 5 lety +11

      And I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for including me in your ....whatever it is that you're doing.

    • @jekonimus
      @jekonimus Před 5 lety +3

      @@seriouskaraoke879 yeah my thoughts excactly. What in the world does he need me for...??

    • @bobrobertson3558
      @bobrobertson3558 Před 5 lety +2

      @ David G. Me too 😄

    • @EannaButler
      @EannaButler Před 5 lety +3

      Ah yes, nothing beats a good dose of solipsism..

    • @Homunculas
      @Homunculas Před 4 lety +1

      Isn't your name Dwayne Hoover?

  • @Raptorel
    @Raptorel Před 5 lety +74

    David Chalmers and consciousness... my kind of cup of tea. Thanks!

  • @tookie36
    @tookie36 Před rokem +5

    38:00 Sean’s principle idea on life, consciousness, and exsistence gets shut down and called magic 😂 I love it

    • @johnhausmann2391
      @johnhausmann2391 Před 3 měsíci

      No, not really.

    • @tookie36
      @tookie36 Před 3 měsíci

      @@johnhausmann2391 sort of tho

    • @johnhausmann2391
      @johnhausmann2391 Před 3 měsíci

      @@tookie36 Caroll seems only to believe in weak emergence, so Chalmers' critique of strong emergence does not touch Carroll. Chalmers' critique of weak emergence (that it still leaves the hard problem untouched) is something that Dennett and Carroll dismantle easily (in my opinion).

  • @Cornincarnate
    @Cornincarnate Před 5 lety +73

    Keep it up Sean, these are some of the best science podcasts around.

    • @freeri87
      @freeri87 Před 5 lety +2

      Him and Sam Harris - They are top notch

    • @TheXitone
      @TheXitone Před 5 lety +5

      @@freeri87 sam edgy harris is not in seans league

    • @notexactlyrocketscience
      @notexactlyrocketscience Před 5 lety +2

      freeri87 lol Sam Harris. You probably also think Peterson is an intellectual

  • @maksymaleksandrowicz3125
    @maksymaleksandrowicz3125 Před 4 lety +6

    My jaw is on the floor after hearing this conversation. I have to consider applying for a job in Trump's staff, because they experience this everytime he gives a speech, so i will probably fit in nicely.
    If anyone can give us explanation about conciousness, it will most likely be Carroll-Chalmers duet. I came across dr Carroll's podcast while gathering intel for my SF novel and i'm sure i will stay here for a long time.
    Huge respect for both Gentlemen. Best regards from Poland.

    • @WitoldBanasik
      @WitoldBanasik Před 3 lety +2

      I couldn't agree more on that. Pozdrawiam słonecznie. Cheers.

  • @jl8217
    @jl8217 Před 6 měsíci +1

    An excellent discussion, I think I understand what the hard problem of consciousness is at last! Thanks for posting.

  • @SauceGPT
    @SauceGPT Před 5 lety +3

    I know people say this a lot on here, but this is literally the only channel where I leave a like before it starts.

  • @davidfield8122
    @davidfield8122 Před 5 lety +1

    Great topics! Thank you prof Carroll for bringing intellectualism into the mainstream!

  • @ChrisSibley
    @ChrisSibley Před 5 lety +2

    Hi Sean, just a note to say thanks to you and your guests for these excellent podcasts.

  • @geoffreysthebe815
    @geoffreysthebe815 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Beautiful discussion it opens the mind. No dogma .Thanks for arranging that

  • @PeterMcLoughlinStargazer1877

    People like Noam Chomsky argue that our minds may just not be designed to crack the hard problem. We don't expect dogs to understand calculus. Maybe the scope and limits of the human mind make it cognitively impossible for beings like us to able to solve the hard problem.

    • @abiduzair183
      @abiduzair183 Před 2 lety

      We'll edit our genes, amplify our coginitive powers and move beyond our natural capabilities. We also have the ability to design tools to aid our understanding.

  • @mal2ksc
    @mal2ksc Před 5 lety +46

    The simulation hypothesis: We all live in a yellow subroutine.

  • @fs5775
    @fs5775 Před 2 lety

    Sean Carroll is such an amazing teacher and a class act !!! Also, I loved this conversation SO much, thank you SO much for such fantastic content!

  • @xebetax
    @xebetax Před 5 lety

    This is great, thank you! Very much enjoyed the chat about if we were to create our own simulations!

  • @jostanton4445
    @jostanton4445 Před 3 lety +1

    Absolutely fantastic, I feel somewhat quantized after listening to that.

  • @joegaribaldi2892
    @joegaribaldi2892 Před 5 lety +10

    Best podcast for the thinking person. Love your work Sean!

  • @goldensleeves
    @goldensleeves Před 5 lety

    Great discussion. Well done, gentlemen.

  • @smoozerish
    @smoozerish Před 9 měsíci +1

    I am getting into the whole phenomenon of consciousness......to me, it's the fundamental basis of everything.

  • @infov0y
    @infov0y Před 5 lety +3

    Great conversation between a favourite philosopher and a favourite physicist. Good stuff. Obviously Sean has strong leanings on this, but as always he's very fair and open minded. And Chalmers is what I think any true philosopher should be around such open questions: with current preferences but far from committed any way.
    As usual on this topic, the unthinking rejection of the problem by many in the comments is almost as interesting and entertaining as the problem itself, though not as hard to diagnose.

  • @williamlowe5525
    @williamlowe5525 Před 5 lety +1

    Great podcast! As a nuclear engineer who is also deeply interested in philosophy of mind, I applaud you for having these interesting and thought-provoking discussions. If you’re looking for recommendations for future podcasts, maybe you could convince Dan Dennett or John Searle to come on the show?
    As a side note, The Big Picture was a great read. I’ve seen many of your talks and I must say I’ve become a fan. I look forward to your next book!

  • @Yevmeister
    @Yevmeister Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for that great episode, Sean. It’d be great if you could one day interview Chalmers’ advisor, Douglas Hofstadter.

  • @bryanroland8649
    @bryanroland8649 Před 4 lety +4

    Liked the Ian M Banks reference. Some of the best sci-fi ever written.

  • @vladimirradisic
    @vladimirradisic Před 5 lety +6

    Well what a treat! Fantastic interview on a very interesting topic. I am subscriber of soft pan-psychism view due to my subjective experiences of awareness-expanding techniques (zen) and natural substances (Ayahuasca). Going in depth into this view and possible problems it runs into was a highlight of this episode, along with discussing simulation hypothesis and implications.
    Intellectually stimulating, non-attached, inspiring conversation! Your Mindscape project truly delivers 😊⚡️

    • @Justin-st6og
      @Justin-st6og Před 5 lety +2

      Vladimir Radisic what are your experiences, if you don’t mind me asking ?

    • @LO-gg6pp
      @LO-gg6pp Před 4 lety +2

      @@Justin-st6og he's gone 😁 prob astral travelling

  • @frede1k
    @frede1k Před 5 lety +2

    Hi Sean, it could be very interesting if you made a podcast about emergence, since it was only mentioned briefly in this podcast and since you are working with complex systems. In my point of view it explains a lot about our experience of dualism and the disconnect between the the smaller parts and the overall emergent property.

  • @chewyjello1
    @chewyjello1 Před 3 lety +2

    I don't understand the argument that consciousness doesn't have effects on the world. Of course it does! Just on a psychological level we know that emotions have effects on behaviors. Pleasure and pain have effects on behaviors. How can anyone argue this isn't so?

  • @steveseamans9048
    @steveseamans9048 Před rokem

    Revisiting in 2022 after reading David’s Reality +. Intriguing stuff!!

  • @eddieking2976
    @eddieking2976 Před 4 lety +4

    I give this podcast 2 simulated thumbs up.
    👍😃👍

  • @KitsuneWithin
    @KitsuneWithin Před 5 lety +1

    Really enjoyed this talk. One of the things that makes human consciousness so great is our ability to imagine the neverending possibilities of what was, what is, and what could be. Although I personally am a strong proponent of realism and science, I believe that philosophers are a sign of a healthy ecosystem of ideas. I think there is great evidence to support that allowing people to think out side the box can give rise to truly astounding solutions. Talks like these are fun and have value in there entertainment and artistic nature. That being said most of what comes out of philosophers mouths is complete and utter nonsense and should never be taught or even entertained as fact until proven and verified through scientific processes.
    Thanks Sean and David for entertaining me on a long drive.

    • @millenialmusings8451
      @millenialmusings8451 Před 3 lety

      Check out Richard Feynman a short clip on CZcams where he talks about why philosophy is important in science.. The example he gives is of a Mayan astronomer

  • @HammerChen
    @HammerChen Před 5 lety

    Thanks! Love this episode

  • @LightshamanaDhyana
    @LightshamanaDhyana Před 3 lety +2

    Just think about your driving. Sometimes you are driving and your mind is somewhere else, you still stop at red light, slow down when someone crosses the road, an automated process without being conscious about it. Sometimes we don't even remember, know anything when we arrive.
    And when you did started to drive you remembered every car passed you, the we hole trip, because you were conscious about the whole experience.
    You can drive without conscious presence. But you cannot have experience of driving without being conscious.

    • @Csio12
      @Csio12 Před 26 dny

      Hope youre still alive.

  • @salidut
    @salidut Před 5 lety

    Great discussion!

  • @mykobe981
    @mykobe981 Před 5 lety +9

    That was a qualia episode! :D

  • @stephensackett8920
    @stephensackett8920 Před 5 lety +1

    I would like to suggest a way that a simulated universe can be more complicated than the supporting universe. Assume that universe A (UA) produces a simulation of universe B (UB) and UA is itself a simulation, though this is not necessary. One of the laws of UA is that objects can only rotate to the right, none-the-less in UB objects can rotate both left and right by the following mechanism: UA controls the progression of time in UB by calculating the next state of UB and updating that state anytime it wants. As far as UB is aware one state follows another in an uninterrupted progression and time advances at a constant rate. This allows UA all the time it needs to calculate the next state of UB. In UA in order to rotate an object 90 degrees to the left it is not possible to go directly to that position because UA allows only right rotation, on the other hand it is possible to arrive at the same position by rotating to the right 90 degrees three times. So UA is able to produce left rotation in UB by rotating right until it reaches the desired position prior to updating the state of UB. As far as UB is concerned the left rotated state follows directly the previous state even though it required several states of UA to produce the effect. By this mechanism UB has a degree of freedom that UA doesn't and is thus more complicated.

  • @LeGrandColbert
    @LeGrandColbert Před 5 lety +2

    Absolutely fascinating. I'm halfway through this one and on the edge of my seat. A bit skeptical about the illusionist hypothesis of consciousness though. It seems an illusion still presupposes a subjective, first person observer to view the illusion. And nor would a zombie ask questions about something they don't have i.e. consciousness. No I think zombies would resemble us only in ways which are unaffected by our being conscious. But in the hybrid phenomena produced by both factors shared by persons and zombies (physiology, cognitive networks, survival functions and behaviors, etc.) and factors unique to us conscious persons (existentialism, philosophy, introspection, etc.) I think our divergence from zombies would be clear.

  • @robertblonski2098
    @robertblonski2098 Před 5 lety

    Hi Sean, I learn alot from You.

  • @weverleywagstaffe8490
    @weverleywagstaffe8490 Před 3 lety

    LOVETHISPODCAST!!

  • @chasekanipe
    @chasekanipe Před 5 lety +1

    You got Chalmers!

  • @Pyriold
    @Pyriold Před 5 lety +20

    Before this talk i was largely dismissing chalmers theories as wishfull thinking. After this podcast i am still with Sean in that i think consciousness is completely emergent, but i do have respect for chalmers position. He is much more critical of his own ideas then i thought and in the end, maybe there is something to it.

    • @TeodorAngelov
      @TeodorAngelov Před 3 lety +2

      IMO, As elaborate, precise and complete physics models are, they couldn't possibly explain the non-behavioral part of the subjective experience. In other words it is simply not possible to model a mechanism for subjective experience. Only the behavior/the illusion can be modelled.

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Před 2 lety

      @@TeodorAngelov you're suffering from assertion-itis. time will tell who is correct, so far though we live in a world that is purely material.

    • @TeodorAngelov
      @TeodorAngelov Před 2 lety

      @@HarryNicNicholas Yes, I do general conclusions all the time

  • @gsilcoful
    @gsilcoful Před 5 lety

    Thank you very much.

  • @binaryalgorithm
    @binaryalgorithm Před 3 lety +1

    I think there is one way to kind of solve it; they did studies of people that have had the left and right sides of the brain separated, where they could often act like different individuals. If the reverse is also true, multiple minds can meld together, or machine/mind can be melded together over time to create new emergent consciousness. If we can experience each other's subjective experiences by extension or connection we can perhaps verify the other is not a zombie.

    • @nabuk3
      @nabuk3 Před 3 lety +1

      They have cut the brains of some people in half (for certain medical conditions) and they did not act like two people, just had some odd perceptions.

  • @olinater5
    @olinater5 Před 5 lety +2

    Hey Sean, absolutely love the podcasts. Please don’t take this the wrong way but could you try not to breathe into the mic when the guest is talking? Again I mean this to be constructive and not an insult in any way. Keep up the good work!

  • @perjespersen4746
    @perjespersen4746 Před 5 lety

    32:20 list three things about your self and this is what comes to mind. Rock n Roll Sean 😉

  • @paulanderson3772
    @paulanderson3772 Před 4 lety

    Thank you Sean.

  • @Emilis2023
    @Emilis2023 Před 4 lety +3

    Somewhere out there in No Man's Sky npc's have become conscious, developed scientific observation and philosophy, and are sitting back in a podcast saying "yeah, but if this were a simulation, why would it be so dang big?".

  • @eigenman30
    @eigenman30 Před 5 lety +5

    Sean speaking of hard problems when are you going to have Scott Aaronson on?

  • @onionpsi264
    @onionpsi264 Před 7 měsíci

    This is the greatest conversation i've ever heard on youtube, maybe irl too ha. I wonder what he would say about LLMs, seeing as how he basically described them verbatim.

  • @tthd
    @tthd Před 5 lety +1

    Pure gold!!!

  • @benwilliams868
    @benwilliams868 Před 3 lety

    The best podcast.

  • @DrDress
    @DrDress Před 5 lety

    David always refer to Maxwell defining the property of electric charge. I haven't heard or been able to find this anywhere else and I though charge goes back to Coulomb.

  • @PiousParable
    @PiousParable Před 4 měsíci

    The coolest part of this conversation was the simulation hypothesis. What if we're all living in an Apple simulation to test which iPhone sells the best 😂

  • @darrylcalder
    @darrylcalder Před 5 lety

    I love how both David and Sean both started going 'errr' in the simulation discussion! Dark energy is just the overhead computer process required by the higher plane entities that generate our gigantic simulated universe. :-)

  • @thewiseturtle
    @thewiseturtle Před 5 lety

    I also have a general psychological question for Sean, based on the approach he says he has: Why aim for being conned/convinced about anything? Why choose to narrow your understanding of reality as opposed to being the scientist type who aims to broaden the view, *adding* different perspectives to generate a more multidimensional picture? Rather than dismissing some perspectives (data), a scientific approach welcomes *all* of the data and uses it to map reality and all of it's complexity.

    • @scottmiller4295
      @scottmiller4295 Před 4 lety +1

      internal bias? age limiting flexibility? tunnel vision?
      all things we see in people you get a thing in your head and for one reason or another you feel its correct or you get tribal about it and you start insulating yourself from new things.
      einstein suffered this as he got older he was the avant guard free thinking dreamer when he was young and when he was old he was very much opposed to some of the new ideas being proposed by the kids.
      you see this played out in string theory vs loop quantum theories the old guard segmented into camps and refused to even talk to each other.
      the new kids coming up in both fields started working with both and found ways to unify loop theory in higher dimensions and with super symmetry on some level at lest opening the door to unification or something new.
      takes new ideas and new thinking to often make breakthroughs and it get harder as you age to keep on that stuff.

  • @zadeh79
    @zadeh79 Před rokem

    Great talk!

  • @chrisrecord5625
    @chrisrecord5625 Před 5 lety +1

    Stimulating torture with multiple challenging topics once you get pass the easy problem😉. The simulation postulate is a useful gedanken but it leads to so many further thoughts and questions. After listening to the podcast and reviewing many of the 500+ comments, I had to refresh myself through Chalmers' Wikipedia summary and again recognized any podcast/Wiki note that includes zombie references and philosophy of science is a priority.

    • @chrisrecord5625
      @chrisrecord5625 Před 5 lety

      I now believe Trump is the master programmer controlling our present simulation, however, he is 13, in his world.

  • @tysparks598
    @tysparks598 Před 4 lety +3

    Made my GF listen with me as we lay down to go to sleep... She didn't stay awake to the end, but had a dream that she was Rosencrantz & I was Guildensturn & we were dead, so at least I know he unconscious mind paid attention to the end...

  • @ASLUHLUHCE
    @ASLUHLUHCE Před 3 lety

    Loved this

  • @michaeljmorrison5757
    @michaeljmorrison5757 Před 3 lety +1

    Our own brain is certainly creating the simulation we experience by the "I" circuit in our neural networks. The basis of the material reality is ultimately the Wave Function not an illusion which includes our neurons and biology etc etc.

  • @ronking5103
    @ronking5103 Před 3 lety +1

    Listening to this made me wonder if consciousness is fundamental as a field. Much like the Higgs giving rise to mass, perhaps it's interactions with this field that gives rise to consciousness. Instead of releasing fermions or bosons when the field is excited, it releases an observation or measurement unit. Of course even the smallest would collapse the wave function. Enough of them together could create subjective experience.

  • @hmdshokri
    @hmdshokri Před 5 lety

    Rock star of consciousness!

  • @robertglass1698
    @robertglass1698 Před 5 lety

    I often wonder what it must be like to be the Sicilian Defense. Though recently I've thought more about the Caro-Kann...

  • @AstroFerko
    @AstroFerko Před 5 lety +2

    3:35 Love the content

  • @dr.satishsharma9794
    @dr.satishsharma9794 Před 4 lety

    "EXCELLENT"... thanks.

  • @felipeblin8616
    @felipeblin8616 Před 5 lety

    What is the novel mentioned at the end about simutaions rights?

  • @dustysoodak
    @dustysoodak Před 4 lety

    As technologies like Neuralink is developing get better, I wonder if questions of comparing different people's experiences of colors, etc., will become testable.

  • @bluediode2000
    @bluediode2000 Před 5 lety +7

    Please have a chat with Stanislas Dehaene . thanks

  • @dalriada
    @dalriada Před 4 lety

    How realistic does a simulation have to be before we can define it as reality? In other words if there are no qualitative differences between 'simulation' and 'reality' what physical or philosophical difference is there between them?

  • @pseudo-coding5339
    @pseudo-coding5339 Před 5 lety

    I am sure many listeners of MindScape podcast would have noticed that Lisa Aziz-Zadeh interview had made "hard problem" not so hard anymore. The subjective experience of seeing red could be very similar or at least explainable with "embodied cognition". Do we still need to appeal to qualia?

    • @myothersoul1953
      @myothersoul1953 Před 5 lety

      Yea, your right, we don't need to appeal to qualia.

  • @danbreeden1801
    @danbreeden1801 Před 3 lety

    What he proposes a understanding of protophenomenal properties behind a property dualism that mental properties can exist as emergent

  • @tiborkoos188
    @tiborkoos188 Před 3 lety

    If only proteins, which ones ? Only the ones that are involved in neuronal computations, like ion channels ? How do those atoms know what information (mental content) is associated at a given moment with the state of the protein ? Every 7 years the atoms are replaced in my body. How do the new atoms "learn" about my memories that are older than that ? When the atoms leave my body do they carry my mental content(s) ? What happens when I incorporate an atom that used to be in someone else brain ? How does the atom know which info belongs to which person ?...

  • @Zummbot
    @Zummbot Před 5 lety +1

    To say that unconscious zombies that act exactly like conscious people are possible is also to say that consciousness is superfluous, is it not? It seems to me that we should assume the opposite, that consciousness is absolutely essential to us as gene replicators, otherwise apes such as ourselves wouldn’t have evolved to be conscious. We pay too high a price (via pain and suffering) for it not to be essential in some way.

  • @waerlogauk
    @waerlogauk Před 4 lety +3

    If your zombie believes itself to be conscious and has all the necessary internal states and self-awareness to maintain that belief then it is conscious.

    • @zak2659
      @zak2659 Před 6 měsíci +1

      What does "believe itself" to be conscious even mean? A zombie is defined as a being who does not experience a subjective point of view, and "believing" is a conscious subjective experience. So what you've said makes no sense whatsoever. What you're really trying to say is "well the zombie told me that its experiencing a subjective point of view" which is not the same as it actually having the experience of belief.

  • @PeterMcLoughlinStargazer1877

    I find many worlds interpretation and the hard problem interesting ideas. Just speculating out loud but how about self-locating observer in a many-worlds interpretation measurement combined with the idea of Wigner's friend. something like consciousness having a role on where an observer finds themselves on which branch of a measurement outcome. Could consciousness play a role in self-locating on an Everettian branch? I am just throwing stuff against a wall here but it is a thought.

  • @anthonyward8805
    @anthonyward8805 Před 5 lety +3

    I wish they talked more about Sean’s favorite interpretation, many worlds theory! Specifically, if all physical states are real, and consciousness traverses those states based on some rule like similarity of conscious state

    • @joshuacornelius25
      @joshuacornelius25 Před 5 lety

      I'm waiting on that conversation as well. Id also like to hear some intergrated information theory paired with the many worlds theory as well.

  • @arileopold923
    @arileopold923 Před 5 lety

    Wouldn't uncomputable numbers and quantization error be obstacles to digitizing an organic (numerically continuous) consciousness? My digital camera doesn't have an "infinity-P" resolution! This problem seems non-trivial, specifically in "where does consciousness act on the physical world?" because the amount of physical energy it would take to willfully influence reality is vanishingly small. Anybody else agree that this is an under-explored set of questions?

    • @yurona5155
      @yurona5155 Před 4 lety

      Possibly. However, keep in mind that simulation/emulation does not necessarily require digitization. But yes, there appears to be a hidden assumption (shared by most people who engage with this topic) that these hypothetical obstacles will prove irrelevant given sufficiently fine-grained discretization/quantization. I do think the latter view can be a well-justified one, but I also agree that it's an area which warrants further inquiry (although the potentially applicable methodology seems completely non-obvious to me).

  • @drzecelectric4302
    @drzecelectric4302 Před 5 lety +1

    Chalmers!!!!!! Fun!

  • @tomekczajka
    @tomekczajka Před 4 měsíci

    David Chalmers says consciousness is some phenomenon totally separate from anything behavioral, but even he keeps slipping from that view into conflating consciousness and certain types of behavior. For instance, he says there is research about NCCs, "neural correlates of consciousness", where they take people, look at which neurons fire, and correlate that with what the person feels. Well... how do the researchers know what the subject consciously feels? They presumably look at some sort of physical behavior! Maybe they ask them, and the subject tells them. That's behavior!

  • @LightshamanaDhyana
    @LightshamanaDhyana Před 3 lety

    For me consciousness( the global, not personal level) is the same as the quantum field, the base fundamental of existence of anything, material or energetic.

  • @ALavin-en1kr
    @ALavin-en1kr Před 4 měsíci

    One view is that we are in a dream similar to entities being in our dreams at night. If we are in a Mind that allows us to share in its consciousness and gives us free will with an individuality that will never be taken away we are lucky. Luckier than the entities in our dreams which do not have individuality or soul or whatever one wants to call it.

  • @ALavin-en1kr
    @ALavin-en1kr Před 4 měsíci

    If it a dream, like our nightly dreams, then we will wake up unharmed. Duality is necessary for there to be anything and that involves suffering. We suffer less if we use our free will to cooperate with reality. If we fail to do so we suffer and we learn from that.

  • @ushiferreyra
    @ushiferreyra Před 5 lety +2

    Dualism isn't 'the other side' of materialism/physicalism. Idealism is.

    • @myothersoul1953
      @myothersoul1953 Před 5 lety +1

      Idealism and materialism are both monistic. Idealism or materialism could be formulated is such a way as to make one indistinguishable from the other. That is to say one could come up with theories of mind that exactly mirrored theories of matter and only the names given to things would change. Dualism on the other hand doesn't produce good theories of either mind or matter.

    • @ushiferreyra
      @ushiferreyra Před 5 lety +1

      @@myothersoul1953 I agree. That's why I stated dualism isn't the opposite. It's not even the middle.

  • @steliosp1770
    @steliosp1770 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant

  • @LuisRomeroLopez
    @LuisRomeroLopez Před 5 lety +1

    32:31 Sean Carroll owns a cat. How much awesome can he be? :D

  • @danbreeden5481
    @danbreeden5481 Před 2 lety

    We shouldn't give up on trying to explain consciousness we shouldn't embrace mysterianism like some have

  • @JosephFlatt
    @JosephFlatt Před 4 měsíci

    As subjective experience can’t be derived from physics (because physics is behaviouristic), I assume that Carroll is suggesting ontological rather than epistemic emergence. He seems to see the ontological emergence of subjective experience as no big deal, but I think that’s no explanation at all. Why should there be any ontologically emergent phenomena?

  • @chewyjello1
    @chewyjello1 Před 3 lety +1

    Say you have a philosophical zombie and they step on glass and cut their foot, and all the same nerve impulses etc work the same way as for you and I, with the only difference being they have no subjective experience of pain. What would cause them to react to the cut foot in the same way you or I would?

    • @rahulbedarkar9178
      @rahulbedarkar9178 Před 3 lety

      Exactly point Sean made when he said zombie watching movie n crying just like us..I think there can't be a zombie person if it's exact replica of person right down to subatomic level..it's just our wishful thinking tat we r uniquely abled to experience consciousness..but I agree with David tat current way of explaining it won't get us anywhere near to it's answer

    • @nabuk3
      @nabuk3 Před 3 lety +1

      There could still be nerves hardwired to react to cuts in the skin and pull the limb away, without the being being conscious of this. Likewise one could theoretically build a robot that would have similar reactions, but not experience pain or anything else.

    • @chewyjello1
      @chewyjello1 Před 3 lety

      @@nabuk3 There could be. But if they were to react unconsciously and reflexively only they would not learn from the painful experience not to step on glass again in the future. So they would not behave in the same way as you or I. Maybe it's possible with a lot of extra wireing and programing to make a unconscious being that behaves in the same way that a conscious being would, but I think consciousness the most efficient way to produce those behaviors.

  • @e-t-y237
    @e-t-y237 Před 3 lety

    What about quantum mechanics as a computer itself generating a simulation universe?

  • @pdelong42
    @pdelong42 Před 10 měsíci

    I'm actually mildly surprised that solipsism didn't get a mention in this conversation (because I know that _I_ have experience of qualia, but I just can't prove that anyone else is). Perhaps it's not a very productive idea in the first place (I could see that being a good reason for it not coming up).

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Před 2 lety

    we are already talking about the implications of AI, such as would it be right to turn them off if they are conscious, one of the pointers that this isn't a simulation is that we get turned off, we die, surely that would be unethical in a simulation where we are conscious?

  • @mrb532
    @mrb532 Před 5 lety

    You should get Rupert Sheldrake on the podcast. He’s a very interesting individual and very well credentialed biologist.

  • @psyopsnews
    @psyopsnews Před 5 lety

    Absolutely the best conversation I have ever heard on this subject. I am more or less in Chalmer's camp, but have to give high marks to Sean Carroll for having a rational discussion of the subject.
    I haven't lsitened to all yet, but must poin out that Chalmers missed the appropriate response to Carroll's doubt that he himself is conscious (32:05 and following).
    Carroll confuses behavior with being consciousness. They simply are not the same. This mistake (which seems to sten from personal temperament, in my experience) is the root of the pure materialist-behaviorist's misunderstanding. He believes that all 1st person experience can be reduced to 3rd person descriptors because he really cannot "see" any difference between their own 1st person experience and descriptions of others behavior. (the philospher Chalmer's describes who doubts that some philosophers are conscious was probablyt extrapolating from this glaring lack of insight.)
    I will keep listening, but so far, Chalmers is too agreeable.

    • @johnhausmann2391
      @johnhausmann2391 Před 3 měsíci

      I don't think that's what Carroll is saying. He's saying that if there's a world of zombies that have no qualia but say they do act like I do in every way and can convince other people of it, and are self-convinced of it, then maybe everyone is a zombie. And maybe I'm a zombie too. It's more of an emphasis on self-doubt, not some kind of proof that behavior equals existence. That actually would be facile, and Carroll is way to smart.

  • @Ockersvin
    @Ockersvin Před 8 měsíci

    I think the fact that life on a fundamental level is predicated on suffering (animals have to eat and get eaten by other animals), is a pretty strong defeater for the simulation hypothesis. Any civilization capable of simulating all of this, would have gotten nowhere near that level of techological sofistication if they had an ethics system that would allow for this in the first place. It's one thing for a god (the simulator) to allow suffering; it is another entirely to make it a base premise for life.

  • @unclebirdman
    @unclebirdman Před rokem

    The problem I see in what Chalmers is saying is that it reduces to... something can't be explained (consciousness) therefore we need a new property. But nature doesn't care I we can explain things or not. Just because we can't explain something doesn't mean we should introduce a fudge (new property).

    • @unclebirdman
      @unclebirdman Před rokem

      If his [hypothetical zombies] behave exactly like [people with his brand of hypothetical consciousness]... he must conclude that his [brand of hypothetical consciousness] has no effect on the world... otherwise the [hypothetical zombies] would not behave exactly like [people with his brand of hypothetical consciousness]. So we are once again by back to Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia original objection. Quantum wavefunction collapse by this [brand of hypothetical consciousness] does not get you out of this problem because that would give [people with his brand of hypothetical consciousness] a way acting differently than these [hypothetical zombies] by collapsing the wavefunction. Also there is no evidence that people can actually control that collapse with their consciousness.

    • @unclebirdman
      @unclebirdman Před rokem

      Consciousness doesn't need to resist superposition, many body systems cause decoherence in isolated systems when they interact with them, so that superposition is undetectable.

  • @ukgav
    @ukgav Před 5 lety

    My subconscious gives a shout out

  • @rifleattheplayground
    @rifleattheplayground Před 5 lety +1

    14:56 - Who is to say that humans are really conscious and not just mimicking consciousness, also?

    • @grumpytroll6918
      @grumpytroll6918 Před 5 lety +4

      Elliott Fields because my consciousness is the only thing I can say it’s real or at least have more confidence of. Cogito ergo sum.

    • @LO-gg6pp
      @LO-gg6pp Před 4 lety +2

      Consciousness is self awareness. We are aware of ourselves. Ergo we are conscious.

    • @rifleattheplayground
      @rifleattheplayground Před 2 lety

      @@grumpytroll6918 I came back to listen to this conversation because I am an idealist now. Saw my comment and chuckled.

  • @SolSystemDiplomat
    @SolSystemDiplomat Před 5 lety

    But I’m stuck at work and can’t listen 😢

  • @bingbong4729
    @bingbong4729 Před 4 lety

    Conciousness is as hard a problem as un-conciousness is easy.

  • @LightshamanaDhyana
    @LightshamanaDhyana Před 3 lety +1

    Does a self evolving system can be simulated? It would be a run away train. And would take enormous amount of time to simulate our world. Definitely not 13 billion years.
    Another interesting issue is can we humans be truly objective. It wouldn't mean we are looking our world from outside of our system, which is impossible. So we really only can be approximately objective. We always have subjective consciousness, so our perception and understanding also subjective. That why we see things differently.
    Scientific knowledge also continuously evolving, but always subject to our individual acceptance and understanding.

  • @LightshamanaDhyana
    @LightshamanaDhyana Před 3 lety

    The global consciousness is undetermined, and human consciousness is an interface between global consciousness and physical body.
    The first split/entanglement happens between awareness and unconsciousness. And our inside world stems from there.

  • @samo4003
    @samo4003 Před 5 lety

    The Buddha basically taught that we are living in a simulation of our (all sentient beings in this world) own creation. It is a pity that this possibility was never considered by western philosophers.

  • @LightshamanaDhyana
    @LightshamanaDhyana Před 3 lety

    We find what we are looking for not solutions to hard problem.
    Or another world there is no predetermined solution we have to find. We are looking for a certain direction and we will find what we are looking for. That is how many theory born. And reality follows suite.