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Consciousness and The Self Joe Lau Philosophy HKU

Consciousness and The Self

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Consciousness and The Self. Joe Lau Philosophy HKU. Readings. Nagel “Brain Bisection and the Unity of Consciousness” on reserve in philosophy dept main office. Online lecture notes at : http://artsci.wustl.edu/~jprinz/cog33.htm. Consciousness. What is consciousness? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Consciousness and The Self

Consciousness and The Self

Joe LauPhilosophy

HKU

Page 2: Consciousness and The Self

Readings

Nagel “Brain Bisection and the Unity of Consciousness” on reserve in philosophy dept main office.

Online lecture notes at : http://artsci.wustl.edu/~jprinz/cog33.htm

Page 3: Consciousness and The Self

Consciousness

What is consciousness? Phenomenal consciousness

Having sensations, perceptions and experiences. “What-is-it-likeness”

Self-consciousness Having a concept of the self and being able to use this

concept in thinking about oneself. “I am happy.” “Something is behind me.”

Page 4: Consciousness and The Self

But what is this “self”?

Unity of consciousness We tend to think that each of us has a

single mind, which is the self. Mental states, emotions and moral

responsibilities are assigned to this self. Nagel thinks that this assumption comes

under challenge from experiments on split-brain patients.

Page 5: Consciousness and The Self

Split-brain experiments

Our brains have two hemispheres (left and right).

The two hemispheres are connected by a bundle of nerve fibers known as the corpus callosum. Information passes between the hemispheres through

these nerve cells. Bisection of CC is sometimes carried out to treat

epilepsy.

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What would happen?

Not much in ordinary activities. Swimming, talking, dressing.

Seems like just one single self. But in special experimental situations …

Page 9: Consciousness and The Self

Optic chiasma

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Page 11: Consciousness and The Self

Left and Right

Left Brain Language Math calculation Controls right side of

body Receives visual

signals from right eye only.

Right Brain Visual and spatial

skills Controls left side of

body Receives visual signal

from left side only

Page 12: Consciousness and The Self

An example

Flash “pencil” on left screen.

E : “Which word is it?” P : “Don’t know”

E : “Pick up the object” (P’s left hand picks pencil.)

Page 13: Consciousness and The Self

Another example

Flash “pencil” on LS and “toothbrush” on RS.

“Pick the object that is named.” Left hand would search for pencil, and

right hand would search for toothbrush.

Page 14: Consciousness and The Self

How many minds?

Nagel : five possibilities : One mind in left brain, unconscious

automaton in right brain. One mind in left brain, some mental events in

the right, not not enough for a mind. Two minds, one can talk and the other can’t. One mind with dissociated contents. Normally one mind, splits during experiments

and combine into one afterwards.

None of these possibilities are plausible. Don’t know how to count…

Page 15: Consciousness and The Self

Against possibility #1

One mind in left brain, right brain an automaton.

Argument 1 : “what the right hemisphere can do is too elaborate, too intentionally, directed and too psychologically intelligible” to be an unconscious automaton.

Page 16: Consciousness and The Self

Against possibility #2

One mind in the left brain, some mental events but no mind in the right brain.

Same as before. Activities due to the right brain are just as coherent and complex as those due to the left brain. Purposeful behavior Process language React emotionally

Page 17: Consciousness and The Self

Against possibility #3

Two minds, one in the left and one in the right.

But the patient’s behavior is tightly integrated and coherent in normal situations.

Unified decisions and reactions with no evidence of dissociation in normal circumstances.

Page 18: Consciousness and The Self

Against possibility #4

One single mind distributed over the two halves.

Dissociated contents in a single mind.

But a single mind should be unified, and it is not.

We cannot imagine incompatible intentions and experiences in a single mind.

Page 19: Consciousness and The Self

Against possibility #5

Normally just one mind.

Splits during experiment.

Merge into one afterwards.

Ad hoc. What causes the split? No anatomical change

during experiment. Patient exhibits

integration even during experiment.

Page 20: Consciousness and The Self

Nagel’s position Argument

Dissociation incompatible with one mind. Integration incompatible with two minds.

Implications Impossible to decide how many minds they have. Mental states do not require unified mind. Perhaps we are like split brain patients in normal

situations. Maybe the idea of a self, a unified mind, is unscientific; it is

an illusion that does not explain anything.

Page 21: Consciousness and The Self

Sperry's tachistoscopic display