Abstract

Contrary to the widely-held view that our conscious states are necessarily private (in that only one person can ever experience them directly), in this paper I argue that it is possible for a person to directly experience the conscious states of another. This possibility removes an obstacle to thinking of conscious states as physical, since their apparent privacy makes them different from all other physical states. A separation can be made in the brain between our conscious mental representations and the other executive processes that manipulate them and are guided by them in planning and executing behaviour. I argue here that these executive processes are also largely responsible for producing our sense of self in the moment. Our conscious perceptual representations themselves reside primarily in the posterior portions of the brain's cortex, in the temporal and parietal lobes, while the executive processes reside primarily in the prefrontal lobes. We can imagine an experiment in which we sever the association fibers that connect the posterior regions with these prefrontal regions and, instead, connect the posterior regions to the prefrontal regions of another person. According to my hypothesis, this would produce in the latter person the direct experience of the conscious perceptual states of the first person.

Highlights

  • Working inward from the sense organs, neuroscientists have begun to isolate those brain areas and processes important for consciousness

  • According to John Searle, their most prominent member, there is a special category of private physical states that includes our conscious states (Searle, 1994)

  • One dramatic consequence of this view is that conscious states are different from other physical states in that a separation cannot be made between their existence and their owners’

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Summary

Introduction

Working inward from the sense organs, neuroscientists have begun to isolate those brain areas and processes important for consciousness These are good days for mind–body materialists, who have held all along that the mind. Revised 22 Oct, 1, 15, 21 Nov 2007, 21 Dec 2007. All of our current research techniques leave the scientiÞc observer of the brain locked out of the experience the subject herself is having Using their new imaging technologies, scientists can observe all sorts of brain activity, but it seems they can never detect the most crucial properties of conscious states, the ones the subject herself is aware of. If someone is looking at a blue sky, for instance, the scientists monitoring her brain cannot detect anything blue This describes the current state of research, but will the scientists of the future ever enter that sacred citadel, the mind itself?

Conclusion
Binding of features into unimodal representations of objects
Concluding Remarks
Why do our minds present themselves to us as non-material?
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