100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

IBP Consciousness Summary of Lectures

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
18
Uploaded on
16-02-2022
Written in
2021/2022

summary of all lectures for the second year IBP course consciousness

Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
February 16, 2022
Number of pages
18
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Consciousness Lecture Notes:
Lecture 1- The Problem
Ch 1-3 (pg 11-51 & 63-68)
What is consciousness?

• No accepted definition of consciousness
- Experience qualia
- Mind vs body
- Self
- Real vs Illusion
- Physical vs mental
• Studied among many disciplines→ philosophy, neuroscience, artificial intelligence and
evolution
• Psychoanalysts like Freud and gustav young- we only see the surface of what drives us
- Freud→ individually based subconscious that drives impulses
- Young- collective unconscious- reoccurrence of dreams
• Dual process theories→ fast and slow thinking
- Fast (unconscious)- automatic, emotional- impulses, drives, habits, beliefs
- Slow (conscious)- effortful, logical- reflection, planning, problem solving
• Consciousness is the basis of psychology
• Studying consciousness provides basic insight in the workings of the human mind
Philosophy of Consciousness:

• Dualism→ people reason dualistically across many ages and cultures- mind and body
are different
- Nature vs nurture debate- intuitive dualist vs cultural learning
- People are inclined to say that mental states continue more strongly after death than
physical states
• Descartes→ skeptic- how can we be certain that we know anything at all? I think
therefore I am
• Substance dualism→ the world consists of 2 different substances – Descartes
• Property dualism/ dual aspect theory→ the world consists of 1 type of substance but can
be described using both physical and mental terms
• Cartesian theatre→ Critique of dualism- if you think about consciousness its like a
person inside your head that observes what happens in the brain- Daniel Dennett
• Gilbert Ryle→ critique on dualism→ the dogma of the ghost in the machine
• Physicalism (materialism)→ conscious states are identical to particular arrangements of
physical stuff
- Patricia Churchland
• Idealism→ consciousness is the ultimate source of reality, not physical stuff
- George Berkeley
• Dualism→ conscious mind and physical matter are separate substances
- Rene Descartes

, • Functionalism (type of physicalism)→ consciousness does not depend on what a system
is made of but only what it does
• Panpsychism→ consciousness is a fundamental property of the universe- physical stuff
is also conscious
- David Chalmers, Giulio Tononi
• Mysterianism→ a physical understanding of consciousness lies beyond our
understanding
- Colin McGinn
• The explanatory gap→ the gap that there is between different levels of explanations
• The easy vs the hard problem→ how do we get consciousness from the brain?
- Easy problems→ the mechanisms which can be addressed by mainstream
cognitive science
- Hard Problems→ how physical processes in the brain give rise to subjective
experience
- Responses→ hard problems cannot be solved, try solving, first try to tackle easy
problems, identify more hard problems (question distinction), no hard problem
Qualia

• Qualia= subjective experiences- linked to hard problems
• Thought experiments→ typically used in philosophy to make arguments, to clarify and
debunk reasoning fallacies
- Conducted for the topic of qualia- Mary, the color scientist, what is it like to be a bat?,
zombies
• Mary the color scientist→ Mary knows everything about colors and color perception but
Mary has been locked in a black and white room for her entire life
- If she were to leave her room do you think she would think oh I knew all this already
or would it make a difference seeing color herself for the first time
• What is it like to be a bat? → can we understand and know what its like to be a bat- they
see the world in a completely different way
• Qualia→ a quality or a property as perceived or experienced by a person
- Subjective experience
- The fundamental building blocks of sensory experience
- Little disagreement about the existence but strong disagreement about properties,
nature
- Eliminative materialists→ same as physicalism but refers to the idea that mental
concepts should be eliminated
Illusions

• Is it possible to have a different subjective experience of who you are?
• Illusions teach us something about the way we perceive the world
• Dissociation between perceptual input and subjective experience- useful in the quest for
the neural correlates of consciousness (NCC)
• Perception vs cognition (cognitive penetrability)
• Intuitions about visual perception
- Visual experience is richly detailed
- Vision operates by representing the outside world in the brain

, • Illusions- filling in the gaps in our perception
- Blind spot
- Saccadic eye movements
• Change blindness→ we often do not note very apparent changes in visual scenes
• Inattentional blindness→ we fail to notice very obvious changes as we are focus on
something else




Lecture 2- The Brain
Ch 4-6 (pg 77-96, 103-117, 128-135, 138-141, 143-152)
Neural Correlates of Consciousness:

• The brain→ the physical footprint of consciousness
• We don’t fully understand consciousness and where it comes from yet
• Can we understand consciousness with the brain?
- Identity theorists and eliminative materialists→ yes- because consciousness IS brain
activity
- New mysterians→ No- we can never understand consciousness, even with the most
understanding of the brain (dualistic ideas)
- Extended Minders→ No- consciousness must include the person’s history, the world
around them and the brain’s interactions with the world- consciousness does not
happen in the brain
• How do we study the brain? → during certain behavior or during certain conscious states
- Single cell recordings in animals- uses electrodes- can target brain areas very
specifically- not ethical for humans and how useful is it actually to study a single cell?
Is consciousness even there in animals?
- fMRI- functionality of the brain, blood oxygen level in specific brain areas- related to
neuron connection, non-invasive, high temporal resolution, high spatial resolution
- PET- neurochemical communication in the brain- neurotransmitters, low temporal
resolution, more invasive as uses radioactive fluids
- MEG- uses and measures magnetic fields in the brain, electrical currents causes
magnetic fields
- EEG→ electrical activity is measured- similar to single cell in animals but no
invasion, measures entire network not just one cell, but low spatial resolution
• Where should measure in the brain in terms of space and time?
- The entire brain, brain networks, brain areas, brain modules, neurons?
- Which time scales? Seconds, milliseconds, weeks? Years?
• Which brain area?
- Medulla, pons, midbrain (brainstem)→ cardiac and respiratory functions- essential
for life
- Cerebellum→ basal motor functions
- Thalamus→ relay station for all sensory information
- Hippocampus→ stores all memories
- Amygdala→ essential in emotions

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
mariannedahler11 Universiteit Leiden
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
35
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
28
Documents
14
Last sold
11 months ago
IBP student

3.3

3 reviews

5
1
4
0
3
1
2
1
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can immediately select a different document that better matches what you need.

Pay how you prefer, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card or EFT and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions