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Summary of Lectures, Book, and Articles: Consciousness and Perception (SOW-PSB3BC45E)

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This summary involves the lectures, but also the mandatory chapters from Consciousness (Susan Blackmore), and the mandatory articles.

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SAMENVATTING CONCIOUSNESS AND PERCEPTION


Lecture 1
Chapter 1: What’s the problem?


Monists theories = mind and body are the same
 Materialism = there is one material, physical universe. Consciousness is coming from
the brain (identity theory = the mental state is identical to the brain state,
functionalism = the mental state is identical to the functional state)
 Neutral monism (William James) = the world is made of one thing, but we cannot say
if that is mental or physical
 Panpsychism = all material things have souls


Dualistic theories = mind and body are different
 Substance dualism (Descartes) = identity (soul) and separate physical body.
Interaction between pineal gland.
 Property dualism = a substance (physical) van be described with mental or physical
terms, these cannot replace each other
 Dualist interactionism = non-physical mental self can influence neural synapses
 Naturalistic dualism = try to explain how experience arises from physical processes
(bridging principles)
 Cartesian materialism = a time and place where ‘consciousness happens’ with a
‘Cartesian Theatre’.
 Epiphenomenalism = physical events generate mental states in the brain -> but these
do not have an effect on these physical events.
 Modern view = mental activities are processes, functions which the brain exercises.
 Eccles = ‘the self controls the brain’
 Libet = a non-physical conscious mental field allows for the gathering of a subjective
experience and free will.


Consciousness in psychology =
 Psychology (William James) = science of mental life is about phenomena and their
conditions, primarily based on empirical data.
 Psychophysics = relationship between physical stimuli and noticeable sensations
 Helmholtz = measurement of velocity of conduction of nerve signals
 Freud = unconsciousness consists of id, ego and superego.

,  Phenomenology (Husserl) = philosophy and psychology, based on subjective
experiences
 Brentano = conscious experiences are about things, unconscious are not (this is called
intentionally)
 Introspectionism (Wundt) = study on subjective experiences
 Behaviorism (Watson) = only objective and experimental
 Connectionism = networks are interconnected and change over time like 4e cognition
(embodied, enactive, embedded, and extended)
 Predictive processing = brains match incoming sensory information with expectations
or predictions


The explanatory gap = the metaphysical gap between physical phenomena and conscious
experiences. Easy problem: not understanding involved mechanisms. Hard problem: how do
physical processes in the brain provide a subjective experience.


Chapter 2: What is it like to be?


 Nagel = something is conscious when the organism has a point of view, like: what
is it like to be a bat?
 Phenomenal consciousness = describe the color red


Qualia = ineffable experiences like the way coffee smells
 Substance dualism = qualia are part of a separate mental world from physical objects
(like actual coffee)
 Epiphenomenalists = qualia exists but not causal for behavior
 Idealists = everything is qualia
 Materialists = qualia do not exist


Thought experiments:
 Mary the color scientist = lives in black and white room and has never seen color, but
has learned a lot about color. Will she learn something new when she sees color or
not?
 The philosopher’s zombie = a person without consciousness. A zimbo is a person with
unconscious higher-order informational states that are about its lower-order states.

, 5 ways of responding to the hard problem of consciousness:
1. Impossible to solve: Our intelligence is not designed in a wat that we can understand
consciousness
2. Try to solve: only solvable with fundamental rethinking of the nature of the universe
3. Tackle the easy problem: make the problem clearer by first solving the easy problem
4. Identity more hard problems: split into two problems (1 why and how do we have
phenomenal consciousness? 2 why does a particular brain activity feel a particular
way?)
5. There is no hard problem: when we first solve the easy problem, we will maybe look
different to the hard problem


Chapter 3: The grand illusion


Three basic assumptions on how vision works:
1. Visual experience is richly detailed
2. There are things that are in and out of our visual experience
3. Vision operates by representing the world in the mind or brain


Filling in the gaps
 Isomorphic filling = the brain fills in all details as if a photo is finished in the brain
(lower levels of the visual system)
 Symbolic filling = conceptual filling (higher levels of the visual system)
 Sceptical view = there is no need to fill in things


Change blindness = change in visual stimulus, and observer does not notice (New York)
Inattentional blindness = unseen stimuli when focusing on something different (Gorilla)


Implications for theories of vision
 Gist = during a single fixation, we have rich visual experience from which we take the
meaning of the scene. When we move our eyes we have a new experience, but if the
gist stays the same, we also think the details stay the same.
 Virtual representation = our brains are constantly filtering out irrelevant parts of the
world
 Sensorimotor theory = the world is an external memory. Without it, you cannot see
anymore.
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