The Meta-Problem of Consciousness | Professor David Chalmers | Talks at Google

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @kamesh7818
    @kamesh7818 4 ปีที่แล้ว +37

    David Chalmers is one of my favorite philosopher, league of his own, far ahead in field of consciousness.

    • @golemtheory2218
      @golemtheory2218 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      bullshit. he doesn't even know what consciousness is, BY HIS OWN ADMISSION. yet you worship him. here is what I have unequivocally demonstrated (that means PROVED) by my 10 year research program- *Consciousness is not some great magical trick played on us by a cruel, secretive god, but a movie-like subjective process that arises naturally from the objective business of making behaviour. It's complementary state, sleep, is a specific mechanism that consolidates short-term memories into long-term ones, by the appropriate allocation [3] of our limited attentional resources.*

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      He's an interesting thinker, but in mysticism he would be a rank beginner.

    • @hugo-garcia
      @hugo-garcia 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@peterjones6507 Yes begineer in mysticism because he is a scientist

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@hugo-garcia He's not a scientist. Indeed. my complaint is precisely that he doesn't take a scientific approach. The hands-on scientific study of consciousness is called mysticism. DC appears to know nothing about it, which is incredible for a philosopher of mind and an odd approach to scholarship. . .

    • @dango1216
      @dango1216 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      He's made a career out of declaring he doesn't understand something that others do understand.

  • @swavekbu4959
    @swavekbu4959 3 ปีที่แล้ว +75

    Physicists are busy solving the normal science problems of the day. Philosophers are looking at where that paradigm work fits into the biggest picture possible. Love philosophers, they look at the grand scheme of things and put things into context.

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Ah, if only this were true. Academic philosophers do not study the big picture. They study the little bit of philosophy that is respectable within the faculty.

    • @swavekbu4959
      @swavekbu4959 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@peterjones6507 I agree, academia is such a cult.

    • @raphaels2103
      @raphaels2103 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Chalners is not the average philosopher

    • @saimbhat6243
      @saimbhat6243 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I don't think so. A scientist, say 2000 years ago, said something for example principles of archimedes and it was verified by observations, that statement of him, is a piece of knowledge even today. In contrast, a philosopher who presented his metaphysics just a century ago gets his ideas questioned, his premises trashed and his all metaphysical ideas for all practical purposes remain pieces of literature, or just examples of old ideas. What david chalmers is doing is plain old speculative trickery. He is just latching on to a gap in scientific knowledge and bringing in usual mysticism and mysteriousness. Similar bullshit which people have been doing since aristotle. If science cannot explain consciousness, then nothing can explain it. If it is not science nor a strict logical derivation then it is always someone's opinion. David chalmers is doing a disservice to science and humanity by giving his ignorant opinions. Best he can do is just present the problem as clearly as he can do. Adding non-scientific ideas to a clearly scientific problem is an old trickery in the playbook of cons.

    • @althe
      @althe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      But they never answer any questions.

  • @danbreeden5481
    @danbreeden5481 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    One of the best philosophers of today

  • @lyrimetacurl0
    @lyrimetacurl0 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    My argument against illusionism was always "an illusion cannot be experienced without the existence of consciousness to experience it." - I think this really trashes illusionism.
    Recently I have thought maybe what we experience is an instant "state" of existence, so time and space and "other life forms" are all illusions because the current instant is "all there is" and we are experiencing the entire state because the state has an associated experience. Yet that still means consciousness isn't an illusion...

    • @marcodallolio9746
      @marcodallolio9746 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That's the usual line from Sheldrake, the existence of an illusion presupposes consciousness, so the argument is circular

    • @omoshiroi2326
      @omoshiroi2326 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think illusionists would make more sense if they were Buddhists. If consciousness is an illusion, there must exist a state where the illusion can be overcome.

  • @ReasonableForseeability
    @ReasonableForseeability 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Around 1:11:00 he says "consciousness is the only thing that matters". I completely agree.
    It's where philosophy meets ultimate pragmatism.
    We can never KNOW if an entity (human, aniamal, machine) is conscious so, imho, we should give it the benefit of the doubt.
    The series "Westworld" illustrates this moral dilemma.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Whose* Consciousness *Of_what*?

    • @ReasonableForseeability
      @ReasonableForseeability ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vhawk1951kl You're opening a can of worms.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ReasonableForseeability hardly, unless you suggest that these are matters beyond the wits of our less well endowed brethren with no Latin and fewer wits - or just Americans short

    • @ReasonableForseeability
      @ReasonableForseeability ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vhawk1951kl I don't really understand what you wrote. What I was talking about is aka the "Other Minds Problem". I searched in Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_other_minds

  • @小山徹-l9u
    @小山徹-l9u 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I have studied Charmers papers. So, I am pretty familiar with his ideas. This video is very good additional info about the first person view problem.(illusion?) I am developing a Neural Network simulator and a version of this problem(I think), i.e. how the first person view is created from the fired neuron patterns, is the real issue me, now. I am encouraged by his proposal, because the direction of my thinking seems correct so far. thanks!

    • @willmosse3684
      @willmosse3684 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Three years later, how is this project going?

    • @cocoarecords
      @cocoarecords หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@willmosse3684rip

  • @royb3379
    @royb3379 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    one of the most listenable and readable philosophers of science and mind

  • @smrtfasizmu6161
    @smrtfasizmu6161 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    It is funny how this question was put aside by science in the 20th century. I remember my biology classes in midlleschool, we were taught about how serotonin, adrenalin etc. affect how we feel. Those lessons always seemed unfinished to me, I always wanted to ask "and then what?". How and when does it affect my feelings? What are feelings? Back then I didn't know that scientists didn't know how consciousness arises, so I expected to hear the answer to that question and questions like how do these molecules affect how I feel. I never got the answer. The professor only said something like "here these molecules and transmitters start their journey, they go here and there, they do this and that, they have this and that effect and here is where they end their journey". At no point did they explain how that creates feelings. It turns out it is not the fault of my biology professor, the questions that I were asking back in middleschool have never been answered by science. To me, the hard problem of consciousness is a natural thing to ask, Idk whether I was alone in the classroom for wondering about what I later found out was called the hard problem of concioussness, or whether other students also thought what I was thinking. It is funny that I was excited about those biology classes because I expected to basically hear the solution to what today I know is called the hard problem of consciousness.
    Seeing scientists ask the same questions that I had when I was in grade school make me feel like I wasn't crazy for thinking "and then what?" in my biology classes. If I am not a weirdo, that means human naturally ask this question.

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      No, you are not a weirdo. You are just thinking more clearly on the topic than most scientists. The 'hard' problem exists only in the natural sciences. You could read a thousand books on consciousness by people who actually study it and never hear the problem mentioned. It may be defined as the impossibility of explaining consciousness while ignoring what the mystics have to say about it. I suspect that one day the professors will wake up to this fact, but it may require that the current crowd first make way for some younger and less ideologically blinkered researchers. It makes me mad, as may be obvious.

    • @smrtfasizmu6161
      @smrtfasizmu6161 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@peterjones6507 many scientists recognise the hard problem of consciousness mystics are bsers for dupes

    • @fallenangel8785
      @fallenangel8785 ปีที่แล้ว

      Same as you

  • @b.j5847
    @b.j5847 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This is what ancient Indian rishis founded(much more he could ever imagine) way back thousands of year. Advait vedant(adi shankaracharya lineage)- atma/brahman/cosciousness, vishishtha vedant(ramanujacharyaji lineage):we are part of super consciousness,dvait-dvait(madhvacharyaji lineage) and other three darsana's. As expected no references frrom where this source came i.e interpretation by great acharyas in high state of meditations(dharnas). it's good atleast they are talking about it!!

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Nice comment, but you're speaking to the deaf. Most people seem to think Chalmers is an expert, not having been taught about such things at school.

  • @afcademy1463
    @afcademy1463 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Consciousness is the unlimited active relations of < I > in ( n ) directions.

  • @jung.k
    @jung.k 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Prof. David is Brilliant!

  • @toddd2137
    @toddd2137 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I clicked this because I've been having the whole 11:11 thing lately.... And the length of this video made my mind explode.

    • @SetInStoneNow
      @SetInStoneNow 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      What's the 11:11 thing?

    • @toddd2137
      @toddd2137 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Bryan Grace it’s the phenomenon of seeing 11:11 everywhere you look.
      Usually on your clock.
      You’ll check your time and it’s 11:11 consistently over a long period of time.
      In the TH-cam menu, this video is listed as 1:11:11 long

    • @markpasquerella4567
      @markpasquerella4567 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@toddd2137 holy fucking shit dude I read this at 8:42

    • @taileenalvarez1626
      @taileenalvarez1626 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@toddd2137 so do I..wow . Its what made me click on this video.

  • @prybin
    @prybin 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    To the best of my knowledge, the phrase "Anything you can do I can do meta-" was first used by Daniel Dennett in a conversation with Doug Hofstadter. See D. Dennett, "Intiution Pumps and Other Tools for Thinking".

  • @relaxedguy
    @relaxedguy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Swami Sarvapriyananda Vedanta NYC brought me here. He talks about Mr. Chalmers often. Anyone remotely interested in this topic might want to look into Vendanta, which addressed these topics 700-4,000 years ago.

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes. It's not easy to say why Chalmers takes no notice of the people who actually study consciousness. I put is down to dogmatism and ideology.

    • @omoshiroi2326
      @omoshiroi2326 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@peterjones6507 I am a Vedantin and I think Chalmers is simply approaching this problem as a western philosopher. Vedanta accepts shabda pramana while westerners don't so it is difficult for the latter to authoritatively establish the existence of Cit. In light of this, the efforts of modern academics is certainly commendable.

  • @bianca.y.michaels
    @bianca.y.michaels 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I am very curious about one thing: the evolution of the mind. Geniuses. Once in a while humanity gives birth to an individual who is able to push the evolution of humanity as a whole, whether it's science or art. Most geniuses say the same thing, that the ideas "dropped" in their lap, popped in their head almost out of no-where. It wasn't just the conclusion they got after a long logical process, or a long chain of observations and associations.
    In this case, the "God-like" flow of creativity, could that be attributed to a higher phi? Higher consciousness? Is that why it feels "separate" from us?
    I was lucky to be born during the life of Michael Jackson, who is undoubtably a genius musical artist, among other things. And he repeatedly said "Songs come to me in my dreams. Or when I'm in a tree. Or taking a walk. And they come to me as a whole, the harmonies, the instruments, the words. All at once. The songs just drop in my lap, from above."
    I can't explain creativity through biology. So I assume that is one of the reasons why even some great scientists are religious and they believe in a Greater, Invisible, Omniscient Force.

    • @JaKommenterar
      @JaKommenterar 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      ”Among other things” you got that right.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      " There are no geniuses, there are only dreaming machines"

  • @supersearch
    @supersearch 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Wonderful talk presenting many different and contradictory perspectives. Now we just have to integrate them all into a more cohesive theory.

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All we have to do is study what the people who study consciousness say about it. It doesn't occur to Chalmers to do this. He just studies the theories of people who theorise about it. Then he wonders why he can't understand it. Crazy.

  • @peterstanbury3833
    @peterstanbury3833 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    The problem with consciousness is that there is no way to describe it using terms that don't mean exactly the same thing as consciousness. Thus to say it 'feels like' something to be conscious is really just saying it feels like something to feel like something. Same with 'awareness'...which is essentially the same thing as consciousness. It is this inability to describe consciousness in terms that don't just mean the exact same thing that is the heart of the hard problem.

    • @guillermobrand8458
      @guillermobrand8458 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      consciousness explained, and more facebook.com/guillermo.b.deisler/posts/10222050618470453

  • @MonicaAliciaColunga
    @MonicaAliciaColunga 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thanks Dr. Chalmers. Your ideas are inspiration for me.

  • @billyoumans1784
    @billyoumans1784 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    As a student of Vedanta, the meta question seems to me to be, “what is aware of a meta question?” But this can still be reduced to “what is aware of redness?” And still further to, “what is aware of our subjective awareness itself, our sense that “I AM.”?” If I had to put money on it, I’d bet that consciousness is not created by the brain. This is because I know very credible, morally evolved people who claim with absolute certainty that they know it is not. If you ever meet one in person, you’ll know what I mean.

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Bill - It would not be possible to study consciousness and not be a student of Vedanta. This is the 'hard' problem of consciousness, which arises where we don't study the people who do study it. Note that Chalmers does not study consciousness. He speculates about theories of consciousness. This would why he can entertain so many daft ideas.

    • @Joeonline26
      @Joeonline26 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@peterjones6507 the neuroscientists have no clue about consciousness, where it comes from, how it works, or why we have it. They will even tell you as such. This is because they approach the problem in the wrong way.

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Joeonline26 Yes. Neuroscientists do not study consciousness but brains. The clue is in the name. Likewise 'philosophers of mind'. Chalmers' 'problem of consciousness' does not arise for people who actually study it. It's odd that more people don't notice this and truly weird that Chalmers doesn''t.

    • @ugwuanyicollins6136
      @ugwuanyicollins6136 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@peterjones6507 what about cognitive science, david chalmers is also a cognitive scientists

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ugwuanyicollins6136 Chalmers is better than many, but the idea one can study consciousness while not studying mysticism is blatantly idiotic. It means scientific consciousness studies is a complete waste of time. Lots of words but it has yet even to catch up with William James' tentative musings.

  • @mauricemeijers7956
    @mauricemeijers7956 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Brilliant!! David rocks😀👍 consciousness is key for technological, moral and mental progression

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      It does not seem to have done you much good since you use those asinine and infantile little yellow symbols. Whose* Consciousness *Of_what*?
      Reply

  • @francismausley7239
    @francismausley7239 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Wonderful theme... "He who has the consciousness of reality has eternal life-that lamp which can never be extinguished." - Abdu’l-Baha, Baha'i Faith

  • @lbarudi
    @lbarudi 4 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    I'd love to see a conversation between David and Donald Hoffman someday

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      ...why?

    • @lbarudi
      @lbarudi 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@nickolasgaspar9660 because it would be awesome, that's why

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@lbarudi I understand, people love echo chambers that reproduce their beliefs (the case against reality).....

    • @lbarudi
      @lbarudi 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@nickolasgaspar9660 I never said I necessarily believe in anything, I just think they have interesting ideas that would lead to an interesting conversation. I also happen to be interested in the work and ideas of people that espouse pretty much opposite views, like Max Tegmark or Daniel Dennett - but hey, good luck being low key obnoxious to total strangers on the internet 👍

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@lbarudi lol.....reason is an essential ingredient for the "health" function of our societies. When people "love" irrational ideas...that is alarming.

  • @oraora8214
    @oraora8214 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    38:30 - to be fair problem report is a function of high intelligence. If you consider an average animal then they probably are not puzzled by them being conscious, because they don't even have the language to formulate the problem. So having phi without reports is nothing strange, if we assume that animals also have conscious.

    • @redhen
      @redhen 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Good point.

  • @hellbenderdesign
    @hellbenderdesign 5 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    “If a man's at odds to know his own mind it's because he hasn't got aught but his mind to know it with.”
    ― Cormac McCarthy, _Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West_

    • @LO-gg6pp
      @LO-gg6pp 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      "Naught"?

    • @mattmanpro
      @mattmanpro 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LO-gg6pp "Hasn't got aught" = "has naught." (Just as "doesn't have anything" = "has nothing.")

    • @mattmanpro
      @mattmanpro 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes; this is essentially the same as the idea Chalmers quoted that "if the brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't." His retort was pretty good, I thought: we *do* know a whole lot about the brain, after all. We understand it extremely well from a behavioral, functional perspective.
      But I think there might still be something to this idea. Because really what this all comes back to, maybe, is the brain trying to simulate itself (or another brain). When we're trying to understand how consciousness arises out of a lump of gray matter, what we're really doing is running a super basic simulation. We're saying, "Okay, I'm imagining a bunch of densely connected things sending electrical signals to each other, and I'm not seeing how that leads to there being something it's like to be that thing."
      But maybe that's the problem. Because obviously we can't really run that simulation accurately. I.e., we can't *hold in our mind* a full functional model of our mind; we can't fully imagine billions of neurons sending trillions of signals to each other. We simply don't have the hardware to do that. Our processing power is far too low. Perhaps one day we'll get a supercomputer that can simulate a brain exactly, but even then, it will still be something of a black box. It still won't allow us to *understand* the full extent of what all those connections as a whole really entail.
      My theory is that consciousness is an emergent property of our crazily complex brains, and that our puzzlement about that has everything to do with the limited logical and imaginative capacity of those brains. Our brains are amazing, but not so amazing that we can hope to fully understand them by turn them on themselves.

  • @ST-jb8vz
    @ST-jb8vz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Here after swami Sarvapriyananda's lectures from Vedanta society new York.

  • @observerone6727
    @observerone6727 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There is (must be) a solution to "What is consciousness ?". Two epistemological 'puzzle pieces' are 1) thought is physically made of forces flowing through the brain's neural structures and sub-systems that include loops, comparitors, differencing and summing, and 2) existence is always and exactly now (the duration of every Now is exactly zero). This is why when being in states of flow, the sense of time disappears. Feeling conscious is 'simply' experiencing those changing, merging, and opposing forces in every moment.
    After experiencing this conclusion, and with practice, one can step into this knowable state by simply choosing to BE. The causal continuum of forces (that is the entire universe) is just running; it cannot do otherwise. Enjoy the ride.

  • @borderlands6606
    @borderlands6606 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    If Illusionism were true, how would we know? The person who coined the phrase gained some satisfaction from doing so, perhaps even pride at coining a novel philosophical concept. In doing so they immediately transgressed the illusion. The problem for physicalists is the extent to which consciousness offers redundancy and reflexivity in excess of the means of survival. Adopting parsimony in a process defined by limitless proliferation is never going to yield anything useful.

    • @lenn939
      @lenn939 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      How is that a problem for physicalists? Are you saying that the “redundancy and reflexivity in excess of the means of survival” are not realized in the physical brain? Even Chalmers would not support such a substance dualism as he would consider everything you just mentioned “easy problems.” As for the genealogical explanation for why we have these abilities, there are completely naturalist explanations. Dennett’s “From Bacteria to Bach and back” is an excellent work on exactly that topic.

  • @baptistewxpolpodcast3339
    @baptistewxpolpodcast3339 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Mind-boggling to say the least

  • @nicolasachee9765
    @nicolasachee9765 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Consciousness is just conformational change. If i hit a rock with a hammer, the rock is conscious of the event as much as it is changed by it. I am only conscious of this video as much as the patterns in light and sound have changed my network of conformational changes that rationalizes current change with past change (eye proteins, neural stimulations). When these people speak of "consciousness" they mean ego, which always opposes consciousness as it opposes change within itself. The universe is made of consciousness (changes by interactions), but is indifferent to human ego beyond the impact it makes on the world and the world's impact upon it. Namaste.

    • @golemtheory2218
      @golemtheory2218 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      i'm sorry, but thats bunk. i dont want to be offensive. have a nice day

    • @anestos2180
      @anestos2180 ปีที่แล้ว

      basically yes what they say is about self-consciousness. they only objection i have is the way you translate it. the rock is not conscious of the event because it is consciousness it self. "rock" is a pattern which human thought identifies as it is.without thought no rock. The universe is not made of consciousness but it is consciousness itself.

  • @micahdelaurentis6551
    @micahdelaurentis6551 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I think the problem boils down to this: events in the brain/body underlying "seeing red", for example, are at one level of reality only. But those events also constitute another level of reality: the seeing of red at the level of the organism. Just as a car could be explained in terms of car parts but also "adds up" to a vehicle on another level of reality. The question why the perception of red is "like" anything is misguided because perception is all about what a certain portion of reality is like. The answer i guess is: it's like something because reality itself is like something. It's not "about" what the universe is like, like a sentence in English is about something. It is more like a kind of biologically tuned reflection of an actual aspect of reality, to the best the organism can determine.

  • @adriancioroianu1704
    @adriancioroianu1704 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I think people should start by defining conciousness more concrete. For me, in my understanding of what conciousness means, illusionism is simply impossible. The fact that the "lights are on" as Sam Harris puts it, or if you want that "something is happening" in the most broader way you want is undeniable. In fact is the most indeniable thing possible, its like saying that the ancient problem of "why is there something rather than nothing" is non-sense beause there is nothing and it was never "anything". Even if we live in some kind of a simulation, "the lights are still on", something is definetly happening so conciousness cannot be an illusion, is basically impossible to be an illusion.
    Can someone bring a counter argument to this? I never found any so far.

    • @berthus8402
      @berthus8402 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think the problem is in what is the meaning of real or illusion. In priniple, one can say that all of our existance is illusory, because it is not the real world we see, just our interpretation of it.
      So I agree on the fact that something is happaning. I just think you cant really say that we experience anything apart from our own existance as true. So yeah, "I think, so I am", but I wont ever know for sure 'what' I am. Or if what I experience, even my own consiousness, is actually true. I dont know if my thoughts are mine, even the ones about my own existance. But I for sure I do exist. Might just be not the way I think. I might not be real in the sense that anything I think is really 'me'.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      Yo can start with the etymology which gives you with_knowledge, but well done for not just bleating about whatever consciousness may be as if it were in a vacuum.
      All English words with 'sci in them, such as science conscious or conscience, have to do with knowledge, the sci coming from the Latin infinitive sciere to know and its first person singlar scio -I know
      Whose* Consciousness *Of_what*? Without that the word is utterly meaningless,
      Reply

  • @abc0to1
    @abc0to1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I believe that consciousness is an evolutionary formation. Certain signals (enemies, food, water, mates, etc.) are emphasized and self-referenced in the brain to give us a survival advantage. The so-called manifest and subconscious are not in conflict, they just have different needs to be referenced in the brain.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      You understand that evolve means unroll?
      Apparently not, you just swallow all that religious bunk about unrolling that gets forced down your throat while you were to young to be able to question anything for yourself. Scientism is a religion for sheep that follow the flock because they are too timid to think or question for themselves. Evolve, my arse!.

  • @ToriKo_
    @ToriKo_ ปีที่แล้ว

    Wow, immediately, as the talk begins the framing of the meta-problem as ‘a problem about the problem’ is helping me articulate something very knotted up. I think I would call it the meta-explanation of explanations. Explanations are so tacit and embedded in how we make sense of the world. Why are explanations justifiable as explanative? Any response to that question would be an explanation, and therefore subject to the same recursive issue. This seems pretty Russel-y, in that it really rustles my feathers, and has a big BR paradox element to it. The problem of the meta-explanation; I don’t know how to get around it...

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ ปีที่แล้ว

      I also like his use of ‘genealogy’, it’s how I use the word phenomenology. And he interrogates some of the assumptions about genealogy as a impactful/persuasive response.

  • @CandyLemon36
    @CandyLemon36 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This piece is a beacon of change. Reading a book with similar content was a defining moment in my life. "A Life Unplugged: Reclaiming Reality in a Digital Age" by Theodore Blaze

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ ปีที่แล้ว

    Watched all of it, questions start before 48 minutes

  • @KerriKannan
    @KerriKannan 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you Dr. Chalmers

  • @johnb8854
    @johnb8854 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The greatest difficulty for humans to understand, is *'Consciousness'* is *NOT fundamental,* but instead is made up of *two components.*
    *1/.* An Analytical process, and *2/. AWARENESS.* which is *Non-Dimensional,* and *NOT* a human component, nor does it represent or even look like any species, including the human species...

  • @NavaidSyed
    @NavaidSyed 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    To get to the right destination, you must take the right route. Materialism is certainly not that route.

  • @Achrononmaster
    @Achrononmaster 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @42:40 I agree Illusionism is absurd, but I think Strawson over-stated the case. Looking back to antiquity there were people who thought consciousness was an illusion. Since we lost a lot of books, it is hard to pin down, but you can find it in Protagoras and Plato's accounts of Socrates' arguments with materialists.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      Whose* Consciousness *Of_what*?
      Reply

  • @Valandor_Celestial_Warlock
    @Valandor_Celestial_Warlock 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The obvious problem with "Illusionism" is that, if there is an illusion, there must also be an observer to witness the illusion. Without an observer, there literally is no illusion. Therefore, if consciousness is an "illusion", who is the observer witnessing the "illusion"? The answer: Consciousness.

  • @KateCook7cookka
    @KateCook7cookka 4 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Has anyone else noticed that his speech is exactly 1:11:11 hours long?

    • @ThoughtGaze
      @ThoughtGaze 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I did. I see it everywhere. I see it as 1:11:10 though

    • @abhishekshah11
      @abhishekshah11 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      First thing that caught me eye

    • @ogin6280
      @ogin6280 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, 4271 seconds doesnt look so pretty!

    • @chiraggupta7580
      @chiraggupta7580 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Did you notice it, or were you looking for it?

    • @aryalogo6624
      @aryalogo6624 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@chiraggupta7580 saw it straightaway

  • @NavaidSyed
    @NavaidSyed 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yes, at higher levels of intelligence and skills, the things just come without ever thinking about those.

  • @evanbowser3586
    @evanbowser3586 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Great talk!! Chalmers is awesome.

    • @TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt
      @TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      You'd think he'd have SOME measure of embarrassment for giving the same gawd damn speech for the last 30 years.
      Every comic needs new material. This idiot hasn't had a new thought in at least 20 years.

    • @Maidenfanatic
      @Maidenfanatic 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt Chalmers has worked on issues in philosophy of mind, perception, epistemology, philosophy of language, all in addition to his work on consciousness. This is just one branch of his work, and it is what he typically gets invited to talk about. You can see the variety of papers he has published on his website, consc.net/all-papers/

    • @LO-gg6pp
      @LO-gg6pp 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt yet he is a highly esteemed philosopher and you have profile name like "taste my stunkhole"? 😁

    • @TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt
      @TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@LO-gg6pp
      Ironically your idiotic moniker is no better.
      The difference is, mine was specifically chosen in order to act as a logic test so that illogictards would inadvertantly reveal themselves by equating irrelevant information like my name or pic with my intellect.
      Now on to the good part... Upanishad philosophy has already addressed 99% of the questions you could possibly ask about consciousness and has done so with logical soundness. No faith or belief required. The fact that the materialism worshipper Chalmers hasn't even mentioned the incredible work that already exists on that, and the fact he's too stupid to recognize that matter doesn't exist, he's been chasing his tail and spreading stupidity for decades.
      You'll never, as in ever, answer the question of consciousness with materialism. Start with Donald Hoffman's consicous agents videos to dip a toe in the water of truth, and when you're ready for a mental ass whooping, find a master of Upanishad philosophy to show you why everything you believe is complete horse shyyt.

    • @LO-gg6pp
      @LO-gg6pp 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt I've just listened go D Hoffman. Thanks... maybe that's why Chalmers is so well regarded by dogmatic mainstream science - bc he just posits the questions and dances around the consciousness issue😊. ... can't find any accessible upanishads explanations on YT so if you have any good sources will be much appreciated.

  • @FabiFuu
    @FabiFuu 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great speech!

  • @paulk8224
    @paulk8224 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You said that those theories (integrated information, global workspace etc.) cant explain why there are (problem) reports about consciousness, right? Well those theories are about pure consciousness I think. Thus they´re not about computation and as you argued at the beginning, to give such problem reports about consciousness is in principle an “easy problem”, a computation and thus not explainable, not to be explained by a theory about consciousness. (it’s a computation in terms of wondering and there is probably nothing special about wondering about consciousness in contrast to wondering about anything else)

  • @JoeDoig
    @JoeDoig 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    ..it be because you are aware of it and you are aware of it because it be...you be it and it be you...I am that I am...

  • @martinwilliams9866
    @martinwilliams9866 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    One could argue that your podium does have first person subjectivity, as it "experiences" or responds to any knocks, etc upon it.
    Whether consciousness is an illusion or not, there is a referent, a word that relates to something, if an illusion, then a real illusion.
    One doesn't "see" consciousness at all, that's reducing it to its contents.
    Being absurd isn't equivalent to being non-existant, there are many absurdities in Physics for example, that are accepted to exist.

  • @Pedro-te7xr
    @Pedro-te7xr 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think what Chalmers is saying is not new. It is the central problem in Kant’s philosophy of phenomena and noumenon distinction.

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ ปีที่แล้ว

    Questions were really really good

  • @Divinescribe3
    @Divinescribe3 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Consciousness can not be aware of Consciousness like a knife can not cut itself. One is Consciousness.

  • @J.T.Stillwell3
    @J.T.Stillwell3 ปีที่แล้ว

    How could one explain a “conviction” that we are conscious without consciousness? Convictions are mental states which is contingent upon minds existing in the first place?

  • @jamesmoffat8577
    @jamesmoffat8577 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    You think!! Therefor YOU are Confused!!!!

  • @heywayhighway
    @heywayhighway ปีที่แล้ว

    Wait a minute. The only thing we can experience is consciousness. “The brain” is in our consciousness. Thus it’s conscious. Why is this so hard?

  • @futurehistory2110
    @futurehistory2110 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    IMO part of figuring out what consciousness is may involve developing new hypotheses/theories about reality; going beyond space, time and even hyperspace. New ideas about the varied ways in which reality exists may emerge than then help us to understand consciousness within a new paradigm. After all, how would you explain a supernova before you even knew that the lights in the sky are stars?

  • @ramseypietronasser2
    @ramseypietronasser2 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Awesome talk

  • @AllanHawke
    @AllanHawke 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This understanding of consciousness will only be possible when another dimension is included, that dimension of near-death experiences, the NDEs.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      Not only are there no so-called " near death experiences" there could not possibly be any such thing as a near death experience any more than there could be such a thing as a near standing on your own shoulders experience.
      Consciousness which translate as with_knowledge is like knowledge itself - utterly meaningless unless you specify *whose* knowledge and knowledge*Of_What* with ou sprcifying that you would be better of replacing consciousness with stuff, which is equally vague and meaningless. Ooo spooky... stuff; what fools you creatures make of yourselves by speaking of consciousness (of which you are totally incapable)without having any clear idea of to what you are referring , having absolutely no experience of it.
      Why not just say stuff, you would convey as much? You heard the word with which you are familiar by its consonance but have not the faintest idea what you mean by it. To help you it is derived from two Latin words: Con-which means with and sciere-which means to know, thus giving with knowledge which is meaningless without specifying *whose* knowledge of what; surely even a complete halfwit can grasp that, but you would get just as far as if for consciousness you substituted stuff or bla. Go about it methodically systematically and ask yourselves:" Exactly what do I mean or what do I seek to convey by the word knowledge; what would be a clear example of knowledge, and remember that your definition must be good for al instances of whatever you mean by knowledge?
      Know ledge is direct immediate personal experience, as direct immediate and personal as pain, is it not?If not, come up with something better than that. It is foolish to witter and bleat about consciousness if you have not the faintest idea what you mean by knowledge

    • @AllanHawke
      @AllanHawke ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vhawk1951kl In my understanding, yes there are NDEs. And ultimately, there is only one real consciousness, called many names, namely God.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl ปีที่แล้ว

      @@AllanHawke Your understanding is clearly very limited because you simply cannot grasp why what you call near death experiences are exactly as impossible as standing on your own shoulders is impossible, but there are few depths to which men(human beings) will not sink in order to deceive themselves; they don't just lie to others they lie to themselves as you illustrate most vividly

    • @AllanHawke
      @AllanHawke ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vhawk1951kl Hundreds of reports using lie detectors about NDEs have convinced me, I respect your opinion, but my understanding remains the same

    • @AllanHawke
      @AllanHawke ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vhawk1951kl Since your intelligence is so superior, don't waste your time here, isn't that contradictory?

  • @rockapedra1130
    @rockapedra1130 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Chalmers is the only theorist of consciousness that I bother listening to. Dennet? Forget it. He does not even appear to be able to see the problem. It appears to be a form of selective blindness on his part. Very mysterious and perhaps worth studying.

    • @johnhausmann2391
      @johnhausmann2391 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Dennett can explain exactly why Chalmers thinks what he does about consciousness and where Chalmers goes wrong. He has done this many many times. How can you say he doesn't see the problem? Dennett just thinks it's not a real problem.

    • @rockapedra1130
      @rockapedra1130 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@johnhausmann2391 can you give me more info? I've listened to a lot of Dennett talks/interviews. I'm very interested in this one you mentioned where he addresses Chalmer's view. From the other ones I thought he wasnt understanding the Hard Problem. He seemed to talk around it. Very frustrating.

  • @yankleber
    @yankleber 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The reason why we cannot explain consciousness is because it's virtually impossible to ask the box to think outside of the box to explain the box.

    • @5piles
      @5piles 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      a religious way of believing you have talked your way out of the hard problem

    • @eathanarnold4060
      @eathanarnold4060 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think Richard rorty would agree

  • @dosomething3
    @dosomething3 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Consciousness is not even an illusion.

  • @ethanconnelly8794
    @ethanconnelly8794 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The mind is the sea of potential that collapses into its chosen qualia.

    • @ethanconnelly8794
      @ethanconnelly8794 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Oners82 I wasn't trying to answer that question as I believe trying to find subjective truth is absurd. I was merely stating that when the wave function collapses we choose our chosen experience or qualia creating our path in reality. We are a summation of chosen sentiment selections. It appears paradigms bring new sentiment towards a story or narrative that causes potential bliss. But no subjective qualia can be accessed to be understood by an independent agent. This is why love is the ultimate subjective goal because it connects agents in a new eternal way that may lead to a divine spirit and character selected for. Buddhism could have found the most divine archetype but it is inaccessible to outside agents. Once you find it you truly know this is your last life. Not sure if this made any sense but make of it what you will.

    • @fineasfrog
      @fineasfrog 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Oners82 Maybe it answers 'precisely nothing' but it might leave us with the question. Some such question as: what is potential and/or is potential a part of reality? If not why not? And to be sure about this we need to ask something like: what is reality and what are the limits of experience of reality? There is subject-object experience aka subject-object consciousness which gives us a view of self and other. This mode of consciousness is very early on (first 2-3 years of life) learned due to impressions made in consciousness introduced by the outer five senses which are implicitly organized into a template or overlay that is also a veil over consciousness. The infant-child implicitly learns: "I am 'in here' in this separate body and mother or significant other is 'out there' in that separate body. This establishes a mode of perception and knowing, a mode of consciousness that sees the world as made up of separate bodies or separate objects. And we assume this must be the only way to see reality because I don't find anyone 'in here' with me and in fact everything I need seems to be 'out there'. This mode of knowing is necessary but not necessarily the final and deepest version of knowing that is available to consciousness. Thanks for you and for your remarks.

  • @Achrononmaster
    @Achrononmaster 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @45:55 you need to include in the Meta-Problem research program *all alternatives* if you are going to be truly neutral. That has to include the approach I would advocate, which is considering the possibility physical processes cannot generate qualia, since they are the wrong type of process (being objective, or whathaveyou), and so what gives rise to conscious qualae is something much more complicated and although interactive with our physical processes is something beyond them, something metaphysical. If you can ever augment physical laws with these extra interactions, then you ca redefine what you mean by "physics" and hence incorporate conscious minds into physics, but you have to be clear that would not be current physical laws of the *type* we understand.
    Mind--Body Interaction is not difficult to grok btw. There are simple analogies if you are prepared to use some imagination, for instance: imagine the QCD (strong force) sector has no interaction with leptons. Yet quarks and electrons do interact. Thus suppose our "laws of physics" were _only_ the laws of QCD, and they were the *_only_* laws discoverable by objective science. Then we'd be frickin' baffled when the "subjective" (let's say) weak or gravity or EM interactions started moving quarks around. This analogy tells you that panpsychism is not a necessary hypothesis for someone who dislikes dualism but takes qualae seriously. You can easily imagine physical processes and fundamental particles in a spacetime also have additional "Platonistic" attributes that allow interaction with completely different categories that we refer to as "consciousness". This raises the fascinating topic of mental causal efficacy, which is another essay.... no space here for that, but for my money that story has to involve closed timelike curves on the Planck scale, to get microcausal backwards causality (because I do not believe in any literal version of my above analogy). Feel free to run with that crazy idea! I'm not copyrighting it.

  • @suncat9
    @suncat9 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Answer: Physical processes DO NOT give rise to conscious experience. That's a false assumption based upon the paradigm known as materialism. Materialism is an immature view of reality. There is no matter as such; everything that we think of as matter are actually objects within consciousness. The brain DOES NOT give rise to consciousness; consciousness gives rise to the brain. Max Planck: "I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness."

  • @jozsefnemeth935
    @jozsefnemeth935 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sensations are rather deterministic. Whereas our experience of free will is much more complex.

  • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
    @REDPUMPERNICKEL 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    An intuition: the hard problem will evaporate completely from the minds of anyone who attains a sufficiently deep understanding of the existential nature of both 'metaphor' and 'process' which are like a pair of sparkling jewels nestling in a velvet context made from a thorough knowledge of everything relevant to sense organs, neural discharge frequencies and synapses.

  • @ethanconnelly8794
    @ethanconnelly8794 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The entanglement of two quantum states is simply the mixing of their individual qualias into a wave of both possibilities. Upon observation, the states are differentiated into their individualities. But the two colours of reality are merged into possibilities of imagination before 'measurement' (defined into abstraction). This may be closely related to quantum Darwinism as the best-fitted qualia are selected to exist in the subjective reality of the whole consciousness that makes the categorisation into its own personal abstracted reality. This may not solve the hard problem but certainly gives an explanation for its existence.

    • @ethanconnelly8794
      @ethanconnelly8794 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Oners82 Yes. It brings me much-needed solstice.

  • @Rotceev
    @Rotceev ปีที่แล้ว

    7:40 Why experience? Of course such a question can be asked by a quite limited being... but the answer is simple.
    The ultimate reason, why nothing is happening "in the dark" and has to be experienced by an experiencer is because the fundamental basis of reality is the subjective experience. Reality exists only to be perceived and experienced. To reverse the question I would ask "why we experience objective matter?"

  • @NavaidSyed
    @NavaidSyed 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Illusion is a highly subjective term. Everything is an illusion. We arbitrarily label some experiences as "real" or "illusory".

  • @jozsefnemeth935
    @jozsefnemeth935 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Imagine that one day we find a reductionist explanation to the hard problem of consciousness, i.e. our sensations (pain, colours, ...). Wouldn't it also be the proof of strong emergence? A non physical quality emerging from physical ones that we can only observe from various experiments and the corresponding predictive scientific models.

  • @scientious
    @scientious 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Some of this is already known, but isn't publicly available. It may be released in the next couple of years.

  • @coudry1
    @coudry1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My Personal Conclusions about who we are all from many sources "We Are All One Consciousness" for the following reasons:
    1. In this world everything must have a cause, so that something exists because of something else, as well as ourselves.
    2. It will be very saturating / boring if we have only one physical form in this world.
    3. It will be very saturating / boring if all human beings have the exact same physical form behavior.
    4. Try to imagine emptying all the physical things around us only the remnants of humanity, then eliminating all human beings leaving only their memories, then removing all their memories leaving only their consciousness, then connecting that consciousness, feel who we are ??.
    5. Body, mind, feelings, emotions and everything in this world is always changing, so what never changes ??, that is our true self, which is true consciousness. If everything changes2 / moves who observes, there must be something fixed to be able to observe.
    6. All human beings communicate with each other is the beginning of the beginning / the future of human beings unite, only electronic devices today can unite all human beings, one day the device is implanted in the human mind and eventually man will open all access to his mind.
    7. Our body is a group / accumulation of memory accumulated brought from the beginning of the birth of the first human in the world through continuous DNA binding.
    8. Twins are born at the same time, what if all human beings are born at the same time ??. What happens if the birth of all human beings is not influenced by the dimensions of space and time ??
    9. The twins are identical to A and B, if the whole memory of A is copied to B, what is the difference ??
    10. The law of attraction (law of attraction) that our minds will attract whatever we think, because we are all like one part of the body.
    11. Like some of the video recordings of ourselves there is a video as a vocalist, a video as a violinist, as a pianist, as a drummer, etc. The video2 is made into one in one video then it will produce a more interesting orchestra, something new and more productive. our world.
    12. Man's greatest enemy is himself, at this time man is fighting against himself. By believing that we are all one, then the ego will fade because there is no difference between us.
    13. That is why the teachings of religion command us to be grateful and beneficial to many, If you are hurting others you are actually hurting yourself, just as if you are doing good to others you are actually doing good to yourself.
    14. Could it be that we are all dreaming and our dreams meet each other at the same frequency in parallel. Have you ever, when sleeping dreamed of moving roles as someone else, it is because we are all one.
    15. We are not immortal as human beings so that we have time for us to scroll through all of life.
    16. "We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience" ~ Stephen Covey, Have you ever felt that our age is too short, could our consciousness be immortal ?.
    17. We are one, only the role is different, the memory block between life is what makes people feel different / separate. Just by brainwashing / erasing his memory then someone will be a different person but his consciousness actually remains the same. One consciousness experiences various perspectives of reality.
    18. The lucky thing for us is ... awareness is always towards / seeking / having intentions / desires towards good / positive / happiness despite experiencing various mistakes.
    19. When we die the body and memory are destroyed, how can we remember ever being dead. Even a few years ago your real body was lost by being replaced by new cells you don't remember.
    20. Why do we have to die? ", When we are told to die, later this eternal question will be asked again and we will always be there." The world is a sustainable life".
    21. In the beginning we were one, but split through a big explosion or bigbang to become different and separate as it is now, but we are provided with a sense of love for us to be able to be reunited later.
    22. There is only us and the mirror of ourselves in this world, yet there is another world out there.
    23. We will always smile happily seeing each other as ourselves "How beautiful I am" seeing a different self.
    24. If all consciousness is told now that they are all one if the experience gained is enough, the consciousness designed from the beginning is so different that there is so much intrigue, consciousness is created differently so that when it comes together it has an incredible consciousness experience.
    25. We are indeed alone in this universe, but there are still many other universes with their own laws of nature.
    26. Have you ever felt to come to a place that has never been visited but feel familiar with that place, as if we have lived in that place sometime.
    27. The world is like a script of a story that is being written by the author, sometimes changed at the beginning, sometimes changed in the middle, sometimes changed at the end it all depends on us as writers, and every story has wisdom that can be taken as a lesson.
    28. Hair grows on its own, heart beats on its own, blood flows on its own, ideas emerge on its own, etc., are we involved ??.
    29. Imagine today there was an event that caused only you to live in this world, then who are all the people yesterday ??.
    30. "If Quantum Mechanism cannot surprise you, then you do not yet understand Quantum Physics. Everything we have considered real all this time, turns out to be unreal." ~ Niels Bohr.
    31. In the scale of quantum physics we are all connected to each other, even in double gap experiments proving that particles change when observed or in other words awareness is able to change reality, this has been repeatedly proven by Nobel laureate in Physics.
    32. Everything we experience by our senses will eventually only be an electrical impulse in the brain, is it all real ??. We are beings who realize that we are conscious.
    33. We are closer than the veins of his neck.
    He breathes some of His spirit on you.
    Knowing oneself means knowing one's God.
    Indeed, we will return to HIM. You are far I am far, you are near I am near.
    I am everywhere.
    Before the existence of this world there was no material other than Him.
    The True Spirit is only One, the Creator.
    I agree with your prejudice.
    34. Whether the Creator is only tasked with creating, is it possible that the creator does not want to try the results of his creation through another perspective.
    35. There is no reincarnation, it is possible that our consciousness is synchronized and evenly distributed at the speed of light through energy, and that is why we need sleep, that is why we are often not aware of something, ourselves are like some chess pieces played by a player, that's why if we moving at the speed of light we can penetrate the dimensions of space and time, when we die then wake up and we will regain consciousness as humans.
    36. Have we ever had a problem and suddenly someone came to provide a solution to the problem we are experiencing, as if someone was sent by the universe to help us in solving the problem, which is actually our own awareness that sends that person to us.
    37. A thousand years ago did human beings see, hear and be trapped in their hearts about current technological advances ??. If we all tend to sin (damage) then it will be the world of hell, if we all tend to do good then it will be the world of heaven.
    38. Knowledge learns objects, God who created our consciousness, it is impossible for God to be the object of knowledge.
    39. It is not possible for human creation which is only in the form of words / symbols to represent true truth.
    40. Is there a meaning of being without consciousness ?? then we are adventurers of this existence.
    Sy
    41. The life of the world is just a game and a joke, the one who wins the game of the world is the one who finds his true self.
    42. When the existence of the world ends we will know everything.
    43. My consciousness undergoes a very extraordinary life experience, feeling life experience with different forms and different places even though in fact my consciousness is always the same, wow .. I was surprised !! how wide I am.
    44. Consciousness in fact does not know the concept of time, consciousness can experience / undergo into another physical form because the dimension of time can be penetrated by consciousness, as when we imagine we can act as anyone without time bound, because in this universe time can in fact materialize free, time can move straight, curved, rotate, etc. Our time travel is when our consciousness moves to a new physical experience.
    45. We are an awareness, a concept that is able to answer various things.
    46. ​​Remember when you were going to leave, you were worried about losing me ??, calm down .. I was everywhere and we would always be able to meet again, believe me.
    47. Without searching what is the difference between us in this world and us in a dream while sleeping just passing by without meaning.
    48. In conclusion, whatever role we play, it is all our own design, so just enjoy.
    49. I never said that self is God, I thought that self is one consciousness, God should be higher and perfect than consciousness.
    50. God created us to be Happy, so do not disappoint God. Understand it and be Shining.
    inspired source of :
    th-cam.com/video/LtT8pWIYL4Q/w-d-xo.html
    th-cam.com/video/h6fcK_fRYaI/w-d-xo.html

  • @Achrononmaster
    @Achrononmaster 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    @43:30 that's kinda' funny. Chalmers doesn't choose to defend his Zombie Argument. But the whole point of TZA is that it is _supposed_ to be absurd, but just still conceivable. Consciousness involves _something_ non-physical precisely because Chalmers Zombies are metaphysically conceivable, the fact epiphenomenalism seems entirely absurd is then reason to believe both zombies are absurd and epiphenomenalism is false, contingently. It's not establishing an empirical truth, it's establishing intuitions that you do not get if you only think in materialistic terms. One way to put it is that dualism or metaphysical pluralism is at least possible. To avoid epiphenomenalism one can assert physics is not causally closed, which is almost trivially true. Physics can be nomically closed, but if spacetime has boundaries (even if at spacelike or timelike infinity) then physical reality can never be thought of as closed to external influence (at the boundaries). Boundary/IV conditions always matter, ad for spacetime as a whole that's where to find non-physical causality.

  • @truthseeker2275
    @truthseeker2275 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    @36:01 I think it is important to recognise that many people do not do much introspection/are not aware of the hard problem until they study the field. The philosophical discussion is thus not self-evident in our daily life and is actually quite abstract. So if people unprompted do not issue the philosophical problem reports does that mean they are not conscious, if we claim the same for AI?
    A bit more direct- the awareness of the hard problem may have come about by accident a few years ago and evolved from there, and if it was not for that no one would ever issue the problem reports.

    • @ForOrAgainstUs
      @ForOrAgainstUs 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I think the question "how do I know the red I see is the red you see?" is an example of the hard problem that a lot teenagers will eventually come across. They may not explore it, but I think maybe more people than you think are familiar with the hard problem, even if they don't know it by its moniker.

    • @truthseeker2275
      @truthseeker2275 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ForOrAgainstUs The point I was making is that using " problem reports" as a measure of consciousness in AI would be invalid if we sometimes miss it in natural intelligence.
      Qualia, the theory of mind and many philosophical issues are worked into early childhood education in the forms of stories, fairytales and religious education. If we do not afford AI the same education then don't get the same behaviour we should not be surprised.
      It may seem I am contradicting myself here, but I mean the first group may not have had the education, or may not quite have grasped the implications of their education.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 ปีที่แล้ว

    if consciousness more fundamental and real than physical or matter, how would consciousness interact with physical?

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 ปีที่แล้ว

    maybe subjective experience is a separate phenomenon that happens in conjunction with conscious perception, cognition and other easy problems of consciousness?

  • @dr.satishsharma9794
    @dr.satishsharma9794 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent... thanks

  • @pranavbiraris7034
    @pranavbiraris7034 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Advaita vedanta solves this problem
    प्रज्ञानं ब्रम्ह

  • @pknwr3
    @pknwr3 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Man i am so confused right now. I don't get this theme at all. Does anyone else feels confused as well after this?

  • @bianca.y.michaels
    @bianca.y.michaels 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    As someone who has studied neuroscience, biology, psychology, psychiatry and anthropology, from my personal limited perspective, the problem of consciousness feels fairly simple. It doesn't exist outside of a biological system. Whether it's intrinsic or separate, it doesn't matter. Whether it's an illusion or not, it doesn't matter. Once a biological system is dead, it can't exist any longer. Consciousness is like a force. It's the result of math, biology, physics and chemistry all together. When one piece isn't working, the whole concept collapses. You can't measure it, explain it, but you can recreate it if you can recreate a biological system like a brain.
    It's an elevated wholeness. It's what happens when it becomes more valuable than the sum of its parts. Like the movement of a car. It's a force. You can't have the movement of a car in space and time without physics, mechanics, fuel, and the impulse of the driver (be it human or AI). Once the car has no fuel (aka our brain dies, can't receive blood from the heart) the movement stops. Consciousness stops existing.

    • @bianca.y.michaels
      @bianca.y.michaels 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      So I guess it's a fundamentalistic view?

    • @pandawandas
      @pandawandas 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@bianca.y.michaels The issue is that there is nothing about physical parameters in terms of which we could deduce the qualities of experience, even in principle. That's the problem. Saying that consciousness is a result of physical parameters does nothing to solve that problem.

    • @jamesking2439
      @jamesking2439 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@pandawandas Define "qualities of experience".

    • @pandawandas
      @pandawandas 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jamesking2439 The smell of vanilla, the taste of a chocolate cake, the pain of a bellyache.

    • @jamesking2439
      @jamesking2439 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@pandawandas I don't see why that information can't be represented by a physical system.

  • @NavaidSyed
    @NavaidSyed 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Consciousness is the subject. It cannot have its own objective view.

  • @ethanconnelly8794
    @ethanconnelly8794 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    AI will only be conscious if it is integrated within base reality. That may be possible using quantum machine learning as qualia may be the wave of past possibilities determining the outcome. You cannot, however, assess the qualitative experience because you would have to collapse the wavefunction to observe the state. This is a paradox that has been around in the east for centuries however the west needed to exhort the scientific method to come to the Taoist revelations. In a world where future observation affects the past physical state, anything is possible, you just have to put your mind to it.

  • @modvs1
    @modvs1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Dave's _meta problem_ is that: it is empirically vacuous.

    • @5piles
      @5piles 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      oh no, empirically vacuous meaning not 3rd person falsifiable, whatever shall we do.
      lets definitely not approach it another way in fact lets not even have or a build a clue as to what that looks like.

  • @marktomasetti8642
    @marktomasetti8642 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The illusionist view of consciousness seems to suffer from an inherent contradiction: If consciousness is an illusion, then what’s left to experience the illusion? In other words, to have an illusion there must be a subject to experience the illusion, that’s what an illusion is. An illusion is the experience by some consciousness of something that is not really there. For example, free will is probably an illusion. Our experience is that we can choose our voluntary actions, but as far as we know we live in a deterministic world, so we cannot actually have free will. But still, my experience is that I have free will; it’s an illusion. Without the “experiencer” there cannot be an illusion. Who is the “experiencer” for the illusion of consciousness?

    • @varunachar87
      @varunachar87 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Mark Tomasetti This objection came up in my mind, but I realize there doesn't have to be a subject in the sense of "one who experiences"; it suffices for there to be a reasoning mechanism that arrives at a delusional model of the state of affairs.
      Edit: to clarify, I am appealing to the empirical data that all we know for sure is that "thought occurs": that we have no evidence for the existence of any "experiencer of the thoughts" than that thoughts to the effect of the said existence occur.

    • @marktomasetti8642
      @marktomasetti8642 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@varunachar87 - I listened to another lecture (I think by Graziano) and came-up with a different understanding:
      Consciousness is analogous to proprioception but for our mental apparatuses rather than for our body parts. It allows us to hold in mind a model of our mental faculties so we can influence them. It has a degree of detail that is good enough for that purpose. So, I no longer think that the illusion to which Chalmers refers means that he thinks there is nothing there (like it's a mirage), I now think he means that how we experience consciousness is just a sketch of our mental life; because it doesn't need great detail to work correctly (i.e., to give us some evolutionary advantage over not having it). It's an illusion (or approximation) of our mental life because it only includes stuff that makes us more adaptive in the world.
      I think I'm saying something similar to what you expressed with: "[a brain-based] mechanism that arrives at a delusional model of the state of affairs"; except I would replace the word "delusional" with "incomplete." I think of the internal experience of our mental life (consciousness) as a sketch, leaving things out; not really out of touch with reality (as a delusion would be) but rather based on reality and informed by reality, but not all-inclusive. Something like human vision which does not include the detection of ultraviolet light because, I guess we never needed it (even though bees have it, so we might have been able to evolve with it).

    • @guillermobrand8458
      @guillermobrand8458 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      consciousness explained, and more

    • @guillermobrand8458
      @guillermobrand8458 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      facebook.com/guillermo.b.deisler/posts/10222050618470453

    • @purpose6113
      @purpose6113 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The idea of consciousness being an illusion is absolutely ridiculous. It's impressive how "science" people who claim "wherever science takes you" try to force fit this into their dogma so hardly

  • @RealLordGaga
    @RealLordGaga 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    There is no 'hard' consciousness problem beyond the fashionable need to create one. Once the fashion has passed, people will ask how and why the fashion arose in the first place. Maybe take a look at self-conciousness instead.

  • @randyyates9837
    @randyyates9837 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    In a scientific study such as this, shouldn't you first define what consciousness is? (Or whatever specific form of consciousness you want to focus on, such as phenomenal consciousness)?

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      CORRECT!!!! this is an indication of a pseudo philosophical approach on this subject.

    • @stillnesssolutions
      @stillnesssolutions 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I think part of the problem of defining what consciousness is is that we all have it, but we don’t know what it is in a way. I think ‘experience’ is the most relevant thing here; it’s the fact we phenomenally experience things
      I think I’ve also heard it argued that science at least as it exists today can’t explain consciousness because science deals with things that are publicly observable but consciousness itself is not publicly observable

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@stillnesssolutions "I think part of the problem of defining what consciousness is is that we all have it, but we don’t know what it is in a way."
      -The first problem is that people assume consciousness is a "thing" (substance, deity, force,agent). Consciousness is nothing more than the abstract concept of the quality of a brain property.
      Science has a great and simple definition about this mind property.
      "Consciousness is an arousal and awareness of environment and self, which is achieved through action of the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) on the brain stem and cerebral cortex "
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3722571/
      SO its the ability of our brain to direct its attention and process environmental and organic stimuli.
      -"I think ‘experience’ is the most relevant thing here; "
      -Yes, conscious states allow us to have subjective conscious experiences that are registered by the rest of our mind properties(memory,reasoning, intelligence, ) and are used to construct our mental model of reality.
      -" it’s the fact we phenomenally experience things"
      -Sure, our Cataleptic Impressions are affected by the way our sensory systems interact with the world and the way phenomena emerge in the observable (by us) scale.
      -"I think I’ve also heard it argued that science at least as it exists today can’t explain consciousness because science deals with things that are publicly observable but consciousness itself is not publicly observable"
      -That is an Ambiguity fallacy. Consciousness refers to our ability to be aware of things, our self and our thoughts....not about an substance...doing enabling us to be conscious!
      People are still fixated in an obsolete way of thinking with a historical negative record in our epistemology! Phlogiston , Caloric, Élan vital, Orgone and Ordic energy, are some of the made up "agents" hold responsible for the qualities of a phenomenon.
      First we need to stop creating mysterious entities (unparsimonious) in order to explain mysteries . Secondly we need to avoid logical Fallacies. (Special Pleading). We don't assume any substance/entity/agent/force for Digestion or Mitosis or Photosythesis or Wetness so why we should assume that for Mind properties like consciousness?
      Now something that many ignore. We have the technology to accurately decode complex conscious thoughts by just reading brain scans.
      www.cmu.edu/dietrich/news/news-stories/2017/june/brain-decoding-complex-thoughts.html

    • @badmittens5160
      @badmittens5160 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@nickolasgaspar9660 None of what you said addresses of qualia, how do any of these links explain the emergence of qualitative experiences?

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@badmittens5160 Qualia is nothing more than a word representing the phrase "individual conscious experiences".
      So our experiences rise from external and internal (environmental and organic) arousing our Ascending Reticular Activating System or any other more specific, smaller area that we have found out in our latest scientific investigation.
      The subjective qualities of our experiences are defined by how our glands' production work, how many receptors we have available to receive the produced hormones, our homeostasis setup, our previous experiences about any specific stimuli.
      i.e. If my sugar levels are low and I enjoy sugars and I have previous experiences of enjoying apples, my qualia about having an apple will be different to yours....based on poor previous experiences of eating apple or having less taste buds on your tongue or having elevated sugar levels etc etc.
      Our Qualia are defined by parameters provided from our body functions, by previous experiences (inputs) and our biological setup....a pretty complex system that enables subjective qualities in our experiences.

  • @alcosmic
    @alcosmic 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Oppenheimer didn't seem to have any regrets. I'm sure this will work out fine, too. /s

  • @NavaidSyed
    @NavaidSyed 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    One ruler measuring the other ruler does not apply to consciousness because it is all one consciousness.

  • @jackcody459
    @jackcody459 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I watch. I read. I am not convinced of simulation hypothesis yet, but I am convinced that my perception of reality has been limited and therefore incorrect. But what happens now? Does this free me in some way? Are we different kinds of conscious species from elsewhere occupying human life forms? Are all humans subjective creatures? Some seem unwilling but I may be misinterpreting this and it is really inability because they are not really the same as me. Like a different kind of symbiotic creature than I am but living in a similar host. If evolution is survival then I am trying to grasp the benefits and advantages of some being the first to realize that reality is different than we have perceived.

  • @xzh2270
    @xzh2270 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    How about an interesting transcendental argument:
    thinking about the meta problem of consciousness is possible
    Consciousness is a necessary condition for the possibility of thinking about the meta problem of consciousness

    • @xzh2270
      @xzh2270 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      However, god is possible, but god is not a necessary condition for the possibility of thinking about god

  • @sowjaqnyagoteti
    @sowjaqnyagoteti ปีที่แล้ว

    Linguistic content is the problem of consciousness . Sound + symbol + syntax = consciousness

  • @mad-bhaktimlabhateparam2592
    @mad-bhaktimlabhateparam2592 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Consciousness = Atman. Atman = Real Self. Real Self = (sorry about this, materialists) Spirit.

    • @suncat9
      @suncat9 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Materialists need to grow-up.

  • @nathanketsdever3150
    @nathanketsdever3150 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    What does Chalmers mean in terms of the easy answers? How do they compare to those outside a "science only" view? That is does a multi-disciplinary approach have a better answer than materialist science?
    I'm guessing it does. I'm guessing it provides a fuller and more robust and more contextual (rather than reductionistic perspective).
    Further, are there answers beyond AI, neuroscience, and psychology to these questions? How does that inform our perspective, approach, and understanding moving forward?
    If philosophy is the branch of wisdom, it has to move beyond simple materialist reductivism. It's primarily relying one side of the brain, rather than both. Not to mention, the survival skills it provides.
    Human decision-making, as even the behavioral psychologists admit is both emotional and rational. The very crude story we are told about the Enlightenment is just that a crude story. For instance, Adam Smith's second book on ethics speaks of sympathy, which seems to explain the ways in which ethics is both emotional and rational.
    Iain McGilchrist has written extensively on this question. Specifically, the Master and His Emissary in 2009 and The Matter of Things more recently in 2021. In my opinion McGilchrist re-frames these understandings. He provides a more coherent and less fragmented view.
    Why is McGilchrist's view necessary. Understanding human experience from the historical and literary, and artistic perspectives is important if we are to integrate our science and/or materialist understandings into something larger.
    I appreciate that Chalmers is perhaps more open to these discussions perhaps than others, being perhaps more honest about the problems posed for a materialist view of reality.

  • @karamitros20
    @karamitros20 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I think You can debunk any illusionism argument if you replace the word "you" with the word "consciousness"

    • @lenn939
      @lenn939 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      Care to provide an example?

    • @karamitros20
      @karamitros20 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@lenn939 Illusionist : "it is always the case that it introspectively seems to us as if there is a phenomenal state although no phenomenal state is there.". Debunk : "it is always the case that it introspectively seems to our consciousness as if there is a phenomenal state although no phenomenal state is there."

    • @lenn939
      @lenn939 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @kara mitros I don’t see any contradiction. Lots of reductionists are sympathetic to keeping the term consciousness to describe all the complex processes which Chalmers dubs the easy problems. I think I would sign off on the second statement if by “phenomenal state” you mean irreducible qualia.

    • @karamitros20
      @karamitros20 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@lenn939 The first quote is taken from illusionism theory, which tries to prove that conscious experience is an illusion so the hard problem is to them an illusion (I googled it to give you an example). The second quote debunks it since there must still be a real consciousness to experience the illusion . Most illusionists I've heard (if not all) speak about the hard problem with easy problem understandings , they forget that the "you" or "us" part is actually the hard problem, since "you" is your consciousness . If you replace "you" with "consciousness" in these arguments then consciousness is something that still needs an explanation

    • @lenn939
      @lenn939 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @kara mitros “there must still be a real consciousness to experience the illusion”
      I think that’s a conceptual error. Remember for a moment that the proposed philosophical zombie also thinks that it experiences qualia even though it by definition doesn’t. How can that be? The reason is quite simple. The intentional objects of beliefs do not have to be rendered anywhere to make the beliefs possible. You can believe that Odin wears an eyepatch even though there is no Odin, he simply doesn’t exist. Likewise, you can believe that there is an irreducible red quale which causes you to say that there’s a red quale even though that’s not how it works.
      I do agree that lots of aspects of consciousness need explaining, but I see no principled reason to suggest that an answer to the “meta problem” will leave open the hard problem.

  • @Zarathustran
    @Zarathustran 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Perhaps the evolutionary purpose of consciousness is to mediate the rationally contemplated initiation effectuation and examination of volitional intent. In the absence of free will god and an afterlife it seems (to me at least) the only thing of any value is the integrity of one’s intentions (mutuality, objectivity). Though we can only ever know some relative fraction of it at any given time…truth is absolute, so whether objective reality is theoretical I think doesn’t matter so much as the potential it contains

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 ปีที่แล้ว

    does talking about hard problem of consciousness have different characteristics than other cognition and perception in brain? do the neural correlates of speaking about consciousness / hard problem do something different than neural correlates of easy problems in brain processes?

  • @xyzoopsie7804
    @xyzoopsie7804 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Why does arrangement of molecules in specific way create living cells? I think that's the same reason that arrangement of these complex physical structures in brain gives rise to conscious experience. I think, It's property of matter, how it behaves when it's arranged in different ways. But what are the laws that decide what different arrangement of matter produce? We need a unified theory of matter which tells us how arrangement of matter in different ways leads to automatic processes/cells/ complex life/ Consciousness.

  • @HomelessHomeowner617
    @HomelessHomeowner617 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    its like the soul of the 21st century

  • @NavaidSyed
    @NavaidSyed 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There is no physical phenomenon causing consciousness. Consciousness makes the experience of physical phenomena possible.

  • @jamesking2439
    @jamesking2439 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I don't think qualia are an illusion, but I suspect the belief that they're fundamental rather than emergent is an illusion.

  • @jbrownjetmech-4783
    @jbrownjetmech-4783 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Consciousness is the minds ability to plan TO PLAN, a self reinforcing feedback loop that results in the illusion of being something more than it actually is....when all other explanations are discounted then the most simple explanation, no matter how improbable, must be true.

  • @hkumar7340
    @hkumar7340 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Is Dave Chalmers somehow related to Sasi Tharoor, who is a Member of Parliament in India (and who was Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations)? They look a lot alike!