Introduced by David Chalmers, 1994
"Why should physical processing give rise to a rich inner life at all? It seems objectively unreasonable that it should, and yet it does."β David Chalmers
Mechanistically challenging but conceptually tractable
Why is there subjective experience at all?
Neurons fire
Chemicals bind
Signals propagate
Information processes
The smell of coffee
The ache of longing
The taste of honey
The blue of the sky
Beings identical to us but with no inner experience
Imagine a being physically identical to you β same brain, same behavior, same reports β but with no subjective experience. There's "nothing it's like" to be them.
The argument: If zombies are conceivable, consciousness isn't reducible to physical processes. Something extra is needed to explain why we're not zombies.
Nagel's argument for irreducible subjectivity
Thomas Nagel (1974) argued that even complete knowledge of bat echolocation doesn't tell us what it's like FROM THE BAT'S PERSPECTIVE to experience sonar.
The point: Subjective experience has a first-person character that can't be captured by third-person objective science.
The knowledge argument against physicalism
Mary is a color scientist who knows everything physical about color β wavelengths, neural responses, etc. β but has lived her whole life in a black-and-white room. When she sees red for the first time, does she learn something new?
The implication: If she learns something, then physical facts don't exhaust all facts. Experience adds something.
Could your red be my green?
What if your experience of red is qualitatively identical to my experience of green? We'd both call the same things "red" but experience them differently.
The puzzle: No behavioral test could detect this difference, yet there would be a real difference in experience. This suggests qualia aren't reducible to function.
Consciousness is fundamentally non-physical. The hard problem exists because we're trying to derive something non-physical (experience) from something physical (brains).
Property dualism (Chalmers) accepts physical substance but posits irreducible experiential properties. Substance dualism (Descartes) posits entirely separate mental substance.
The hard problem will dissolve when we understand consciousness better. Just as "life" seemed mysterious before biochemistry, "consciousness" will yield to neuroscience.
Reductive physicalism says consciousness IS brain states. Non-reductive physicalism says it supervenes on physical states but isn't identical to them.
Experience is a basic feature of reality, like mass or charge. Complex consciousness emerges from combining simpler experiential properties present in all matter.
IIT's implications are panpsychist: any system with Ξ¦ > 0 has some experience. This avoids the hard problem by making consciousness primitive, not derived.
Human cognitive limitations prevent us from understanding consciousness. Just as dogs can't do calculus, we can't grasp how experience arises from matter.
The problem is real but may be permanently beyond human comprehension β a "cognitive closure" on this domain.
Introspection misleads us about consciousness. What seems like irreducible qualia is actually the brain's representation of its own states β an "illusion" (not that experience doesn't exist, but that it has the properties we think it has).
The hard problem rests on confused intuitions. Explaining why we THINK there's a hard problem IS the solution.