2011-09-08

What is Consciousness? (Part One)

It occurred to me tonight, as I was walking the dog...

Consciousness is the transcription of just-past actions (either mental or physical) into the narrative that is used to fashion the model of self.

What, is that it? If I'm right … yeah, that's it. Note that I did not say anything about evaluation of the actions; I mention only the transcription itself. The evaluation can take place as well, but that's not consciousness. The evaluation is a process involving memory, and (I hope it's obvious) any process involving memory is not consciousness itself.

So I don't expect to find consciousness hiding in the amygdala. Indeed, it won't be hiding anywhere; it's a process we can sense, not a thing. (I do not know how senses impinge, and it is indeed an important issue, but as one scientist once put it, “How else should they present themselves?”)

Note that I mentioned that it's actions that are transcribed, not sensations. Unelaborated, unevaluated sensations (pain, taste, smell etc.) are not memory, of course. They are part of what gets transcribed as context for the actions. As such, they are like data; they are not consciousness itself.

So what's the point being made here? It's this:

If consciousness actually works this way it would have evolutionary value.

Before proceeding further I should mention that I accept the scientific evidence that consciousness is an “after the fact” phenomenon. Some have caricatured this perspective by saying that it means we are merely “helpless observers”. Such people are apparently horrified by the possibility. Why else use a loaded word like “helpless”?

Let me digress a moment for the benefit of such people. When my wife is driving me to the store I can relax. That's because I know she's a good driver — better than me in many ways. I am a helpless observer, but not a frightened one. Now if my brain is driving, not “me”, should I be frightened? It has proven it drives quite well. I do like to keep an eye on it, though.

The Survival Value of Consciousness

Why keep an eye on what we are doing? Well, I put it this way:

There is an evolutionary advantage to modeling the self.

Imagine some ancient person planning to kill a lion that has been threatening the village. He can approach the problem via trial-and-error but it's far better if he can model his actions ahead of time. Is it not obvious that this ability has survival value?

Yet how does he know what he can do? Why, by reviewing what he has done before. In order to make certain kinds of plans he must model himself. (For other plans he must also model other people, but that's another issue.)

Okay, so if consciousness is merely the transcription, how does the brain know what to transcribe? How does it know what to hold up as significant so that it focuses the attention as is required to form the clear memories of the narrative?

Well, that's fairly straight-forward:

What has worked before? Keep doing that kind of thing.

This brings us to a slight problem with this way of operating a brain. “What has worked before” is an operation of memory. “What has worked before” might come from one's own experience, or it may come from what one has heard from others. The memory of what has worked before might, in fact, be inapplicable to the current circumstances. It might even be factually (and fatally) wrong.

Is it surprising that consciousness lags behind action? Not to me it isn't.

In the history of the human animal the ability to act preceded modern consciousness.

What seems more likely:  that evolution inserted a step before that which worked well previously, or that it added an extra step afterward?

The Question of Agency

Yes, there is the sense of agency: “I am in conscious control of what I am doing.” But recent scientific data is showing that this is an illusion. It might be more accurate to say that when I do something I recognize that I did it. That is to say, I cannot see the processes that preceded the action, but they are consistent with my model of self. I behave in the way I'm known to behave and don't surprise myself with seemingly random choices.

It's inevitable that what the consciousness transcribes will have a great affinity for the existing model of self. Since that transcription is accorded great significance (to ensure memorization) then it will dominate my sensation. That is to say, I have the strong sensation that I am addressing the model of self. I feel like me.

This brings us to the illusory nature of free will. Many years ago, just after high school, in fact, the following sentence popped into my head:

Free will is the sensation we experience at the interface between what we were and what we are becoming.

I wasn't sure that this was right, but I was loath to change a single word. Now, more than 3 decades later, I suspect that I was on to something. Note the key word in that sentence: sensation. It is not being claimed that free will is real, only that it feels real.

Can I summarize the foregoing? Well, here's a first attempt. It's difficult to distinguish between consciousness and actual agency because we do what we would have done if consciousness had actually been in control.

If you don't believe that, try jumping off a cliff. Unless you're suicidal, you'll be prevented from doing it. Please don't test this, though; you might slip. Instead, consider this: in many suicides using guns the police find bullet holes in the walls. The person would jerk away the gun at the last possible instant. No matter how much they wanted to die, they didn't want to die. This is not a paradox, just a mix-up between processes.

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Part Two of this series of five articles about consciousness can be found here.

6 comments:

  1. Hi Timothy, I agree with what you say above. I tend to put it more starkly though: All sensation, thought, feeling, intention, is just what it is like to be the body/brain/mind system updating its rendition of the self-in-the-world. I believe that consciousness per se, and even more basically *awareness* per se, is the incorporation of _novelty_ into the ever accreting story of self. In other words anything which is an exact repetition of something before, particularly where muscle-motor activity turned out exactly as expected, will not register; it will remain unconscious.

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  2. Mark: It took me a moment to understand what you meant by “exact repetition,” but I suppose you're referring to that which is internalized. I don't have to think, or remember how I type words like “type.” The action is internalized and no longer remarkable. It's not novel any more, and I'm not conscious of it happening unless I make a special effort to do so. And if I do that, it suddenly becomes quite difficult to type!

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  3. What you are saying makes sense, but I have a very different, and in many ways opposite take on this. Starting at the top, with "transcription of just-past actions (either mental or physical) into the narrative that is used to fashion the model of self." seems to contradict "(I hope it's obvious) any process involving memory is not consciousness itself. " that soon follows. I can make sense of it if you are thinking that memory is the name for the retrieval of past experiences and consciousness is the name for writing immediately past experiences, although I don't see why you would want to say that the write is consciousness but the read is not. I also don't understand why actions are only considered consciousness and not experiences.

    (This is Craig from multisenserealism.com btw. The preview looks like it's not seeing my WordPress ID.)

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    1. Craig, I'll attempt to answer each of your points.

      “[The first part] seems to contradict [the second part] that soon follows.”

      This does seem a bit confusing, since I said that consciousness is a significant part of that which feeds memory. However, if you look again you'll notice that I was commenting on the EVALUATION of what is being transcribed — in other words, applying judgments, which are always based upon the past. I said “I hope it's obvious” because judgments (being comparisons with one's models of reality) cannot stem from the present.

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      “I don't see why you would want to say that the write is consciousness but the read is not.”

      The “write” (to use your lovely term) is the leading edge of what is being remembered. The “read” CAN be remembered as being “a read” (for example, “I remember thinking that it was a good idea”).

      However, this level of cognitive complexity (e.g. writing in to memory ABOUT reading out from memory) struck me as too confusing to include in the first part of this series.

      Now that you've commented on the issue I hope it's cleared up for any other people who wonder the same thing. Thanks.

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      “I also don't understand why actions are only considered consciousness and not experiences.”

      In a Part 3 of this episode I expand the basic definition thus:

      “Consciousness is the transcription of just-past actions (either mental or physical) into the narrative that is used to fashion the model of self.”

      I made that change because I realized that some people would think I was referring only to PHYSICAL actions. But as I indicated above (“I remember thinking that it was a good idea”), we can be conscious of mental actions (such as evaluating or modeling something that is happening — “experiencing” as you put it).

      Actually, all actions (mental or physical) begin with a mental action. This is highly significant when you consider the “contingency” I describe in the article “Action Precedes Consciousness.”

      Indeed, the main reason I wrote all these “What is Consciousness?” articles was to lay the ground-work for the “Action Precedes Consciousness” article. What I say there goes right to the heart of the WAY our minds operate, and makes the point that the low-level “software” we take for granted could (and arguably should) work differently.

      I hope I've answered all of your questions to your satisfaction.

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  4. Thanks Timothy,

    There is so much I want to say, but saying it all at once is too overwhelming, and saying it any other way is going to require too much patience since each point really needs to make sense in the context of the others.

    From the perspective that you have developed to get to where I am, you would have to be willing to temporarily suspend a lot of fundamental orientations - almost like writing with the other hand than you use.

    For instance, I agree that action precedes consciousness but only because consciousness is an awareness of awareness and action is the way that awareness changes itself. The underlying awareness actually precedes causality itself. It is more primitive than spacetime.

    It's like how you don't really know where you have been until you leave. Action precipitates awareness of awareness, but it would not be possible in the first place without an inertial frame which is passive relative to the action. You can't have an action unless there is some frame of reference to appear inactive by comparison.

    It's a whole thing. Have a look at my site multisenserealism.com if you are interested. Bottom line is that I think that panprotoexperientialism seems to make more sense than any other option I am aware of, including materialism, functionalism, dualism, computationalism, digital physics, etc. My conjecture I think succeeds in staking an initial flagpole in this new continent, attempting to describe what consciousness and the universe are in the simplest terms without reducing them: Space-Time, Matter-Energy, and Sense-Motive. Sense-motive (read-write, passive-active, afferent-efferent) is proposed as the primordial element of the cosmos, with matter-energy (matter = sense experienced second hand as an external object, energy = motive experienced second hand as external events/changes to matter) and space-time (space = null-matter, time = null-energy) as secondary products of the consequences of motive (action impulse) in dividing the inertia of sense, which divides and multiplies sense by folding it in on itself. A primordial self is born when it discovers that it is a separate subself with its own view of the universe which is of the scope, scale, frequency, and duration that define the conditions of its separation. Not just humans, but stars, atoms, cells, etc. They are all the same thing essentially, but through this folding not just holographically into microcosms and macrocosms of objects in space space, but into holotemporal nested microcosms of time: subjects. We are not time, we are sense and motive, but the gap between selves that share the same inertial frame gives rise to objects (which are all really 'bodies' at different scales and speeds; energized matter). The subject's relation to objects creates the inference of a topological void (space) and an evanescent temporal horizon (the peripheral dissolution of the experienced 'now' into the passive/unconscious inertial frame of 'not now'. In this way, the entire future and past of the universe are already happening, we are just a small sliver of it so our perception is partitioned into a particular frequency/scale that determines the depth of our qualia.

    Sorry if that is incredibly dense - I know what it sounds like, and unfortunately there's a lot more where that came from. Probably each sentence requires several hours of consideration and discussion - not trying to be aloof or obscurantist, it's just not that easy to turn the entire Enlightenment view of the universe inside out in less than 5000 characters.

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    1. “The underlying awareness actually precedes causality itself. It is more primitive than spacetime. .... [Action] would not be possible in the first place without an inertial frame which is passive relative to the action. You can't have an action unless there is some frame of reference to appear inactive by comparison.”

      This is an interesting way of phrasing things. I'll have to let it settle in my mind before I can say more than that.

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      “I think that panprotoexperientialism seems to make more sense than any other option I am aware of, including materialism, functionalism, dualism, computationalism, digital physics, etc.”

      I've adopted panprotoexperientialism as my default position in some cases, digital physics as my default position in others. However, these positions are mere conveniences to me; I do not claim to know the nature of the ultimate reality and I am cautious when people claim they do know. It is not clear to me that we are even able to know.

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      “... it's just not that easy to turn the entire Enlightenment view of the universe inside out in less than 5000 characters.”

      I expect that's so. I notice you listed Space-Time and Matter-Energy along with your new proposal (Sense-Motive). What about gravity?

      More to the point, are any of these proposals of yours non-falsifiable, both now and in the foreseeable future? (Let's rule out tests that require galaxy-sized particle accelerators.)

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      “Have a look at my site multisenserealism.com if you are interested.”

      I will.

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