Abstract

This paper assesses two different theories for explaining consciousness, a phenomenon that is widely considered amenable to scientific investigation despite its puzzling subjective aspects. I focus on Integrated Information Theory (IIT), which says that consciousness is integrated information (as ϕMax) and says even simple systems with interacting parts possess some consciousness. First, I evaluate IIT on its own merits. Second, I compare it to a more traditionally derived theory called Neurobiological Naturalism (NN), which says consciousness is an evolved, emergent feature of complex brains. Comparing these theories is informative because it reveals strengths and weaknesses of each, thereby suggesting better ways to study consciousness in the future. IIT’s strengths are the reasonable axioms at its core; its strong logic and mathematical formalism; its creative “experience-first” approach to studying consciousness; the way it avoids the mind-body (“hard”) problem; its consistency with evolutionary theory; and its many scientifically testable predictions. The potential weakness of IIT is that it contains stretches of logic-based reasoning that were not checked against hard evidence when the theory was being constructed, whereas scientific arguments require such supporting evidence to keep the reasoning on course. This is less of a concern for the other theory, NN, because it incorporated evidence much earlier in its construction process. NN is a less mature theory than IIT, less formalized and quantitative, and less well tested. However, it has identified its own neural correlates of consciousness (NCC) and offers a roadmap through which these NNCs may answer the questions of consciousness using the hypothesize-test-hypothesize-test steps of the scientific method.

Highlights

  • Integrated Information Theory (IIT) is a major theoretical framework for investigating the phenomenal experiences of consciousness

  • First we find correlations [the neural correlates of consciousness or NCC]

  • This paper examined Integrated Information Theory and compared it to Neurobiolical

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Summary

Introduction

Integrated Information Theory (IIT) is a major theoretical framework for investigating the phenomenal experiences of consciousness. It “attempts to identify the essential properies of consciousness (axioms) and from there, infers the properties of physical systems that can account for it (postulates)” [1]. IIT defines consciousness as the integrated information in a physical system, and that makes it different from other theories. It says more integrated information means more consciousness. IIT and NN have similar goals in that they both seek to understand the puzzling subjective aspects of consciousness, as well as the physical substrates that are responsible for those aspects Both theories are physicalist in that respect. I will consider whether these different constructions make a difference in the relative strengths and weaknesses of the theories, in a way that can improve future investigations in the field of consciousness studies

Strengths of IIT
The Way IIT Was Constructed
Evaluation
Affective Consciousness?
Introduction and Initial Comparisons
Derivation of the Neurobiological Naturalism Theory
Artificial Consciousness
Potential Weaknesses of Neurobiological Naturalism
Conclusions
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