Dualism Revisited: John R. Searle
Dualism Revisited: John R. Searle
Dualism Revisited: John R. Searle
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Dualism revisited
John R. Searle *
Department of Philosophy, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, 94720 CA, USA
Abstract
The problem of consciousness should eventually receive a scientic solution, but there are a number of scientic and philosophical
obstacles along the way. I oer solutions to the philosophical problems and proposals for approaching the scientic problems.
2008 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Keywords: Consciousness; Dualism; Materialism; Biological naturalism
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and sunsets, so the story goes, can be reduced in an eliminative fashion. Another kind of reduction does not show
that the phenomenon does not exist but that it is really
something else. Thus apparently solidity of objects can
be reduced to the behavior of molecules. Material objects
can be reduced to their constituent molecules. But we
cannot reduce consciousness in either of these ways.
We cannot show that consciousness is an illusion like
sunsets or rainbows because, where the very existence
of consciousness is concerned, we cannot make the distinction between reality and illusion. If I consciously
have the illusion that I am conscious, then I already
am conscious. Traditional eliminative reductions rest
on a distinction between reality and illusion, but where
the existence of consciousness is concerned, the conscious illusion is itself the reality of consciousness.
We cannot do a non-eliminative reduction of consciousness to some third-person phenomena, because if we did,
we would leave out the essential rst-person qualitative
character of conscious experiences. Because consciousness has a rst-person ontology, it cannot be reduced
to anything, such as neuron rings, that has a thirdperson ontology. Indeed, for consciousness, we cannot
even make the distinction between eliminative and noneliminative reductions. The non-eliminative reductions
end up being eliminative, because they deny the essential
dening characteristic of consciousness. They deny the
existence of any qualitative, subjective, unied phenomena; but unied, qualitative subjectivity is the dening
feature of consciousness. All reductions of consciousness
to third-person phenomena end up being eliminative,
because they eliminate the essential rst-person ontology
of consciousness.
2. All conscious states, without exception, are caused by
neurobiological processes in the brain. We now have
an overwhelming amount of evidence for this, and it is
no use looking for some spiritual or other sort of origin
of consciousness. If the brain processes are functioning
right, the subject will be conscious; if not he will not
be conscious. This means that everything in consciousness, from the taste of the beer, to the sound of the
music, to feeling the angst of post-industrial man under
late capitalism, is caused by lower level neurobiological
processes in the brain. This is an amazing fact and we
ought to try to appreciate its importance. The key
notion is the notion of causation. All of our conscious
states are caused by neuronal processes. That means
that we can do a causal reduction, but not an ontological reduction of consciousness. There is nothing to the
causal power of consciousness which cannot be
explained by the causal power of the neuronal base.
That is why consciousness does not stand apart from
the rest of the world but is an ordinary part of our
human and animal biology. The causal reduction, however, does not lead to an ontological reduction, because
consciousness, as a rst-person phenomenon, cannot be
ontologically reduced to third-person phenomena.
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3. Consciousness, so dened and as caused by brain processes, is entirely realized in the brain. Now what does
that mean? It means that all conscious states exist in
the brain as higher level features of the neuronal system.
By higher I mean, for example, that my conscious
thoughts about my grandmother cannot be a feature
of a single neuron but only of a system of neurons.
We dont yet know how big the system has to be, but
we think the thalamocortical system has a special role
to play in causing and realizing consciousness. The point
for the present discussion is that consciousness exists as
a feature of the brain without being a feature of any
individual neuron or synapse by itself. Propositions
two and three amount to saying that consciousness is
both caused by and realized in the brain.
4. Consciousness functions causally in producing bodily
movements and other physical eects in the world.
Again, this is often denied. There is always some philosopher who will tell you that conscious states cannot
aect the physical world. But always remember that
when I decide to raise my arm the damn thing goes
up. And, notice we do not say, Well, that is the thing
about the old arm. Some days she goes up and some
days she doesnt go up. My arm goes up when I want
it to go up, when I decide to raise it. To put this more
technically, my conscious intention-in-action causes the
bodily movement of my arm raising (Searle, 1983).
Why would anyone want to deny the obvious fact that
consciousness functions causally in producing our behavior? The answer, as usual, is that we are in the grip of certain traditional philosophical categories. If consciousness is
not reducible to third-person phenomena, then to many
people it seems that consciousness is not part of the physical
world. But surely, so the story goes, the physical world is, as
they say, causally closed. What does that mean? It means
anything nonphysical can never have any eect on the
physical. But if consciousness really exists as a subjective
phenomenon and cannot be eliminated or reduced to something objective, and if for that reason it is a nonphysical
phenomenon, then it seems that it cannot aect physical
reality. On this understanding we have a mysterious
ghost-like phenomenon in the world that cannot have any
real causal eect on the physical world. And the logical consequence is, to use the jargon of the philosophers, epiphenomenalism. Consciousness is there alright, but it doesnt
make any real dierence to the real physical world. It just
goes along for the ride. This argument for epiphenomenalism can either be taken to show that, if my account is right,
then epiphenomenalism follows, or, if you suppose, as I do,
that epiphenomenalism is not true, then my account must
be wrong. I want to reject both of these conclusions. I think
my account is right and I think epiphenomenalism is wrong,
and I am going to answer this objection later on.
The conjunction of these four claims consciousness is
real, it is caused by brain processes, it is realized in the
brain, and it functions causally constitute an approach
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procedure very well. And there are some remarkable experiments done on the building block model.
I will discuss three of these types of experiments very
briey.1 First, binocular rivalry. If you show the left eye
a set of parallel lines and the right eye a set of horizontal
lines, the subject typically does not see a grid, rather the
visual system switches back and forth between producing
a visual experience of parallel lines and a visual experience
of horizontal lines. There is a rivalry between the two stimulus pathways, and rst, one side wins and then the other
side wins. Now, if we could nd the exact point in the brain
where the horizontal lines triumph over the vertical lines,
or where the vertical lines triumph over the horizontal
lines, it would seem that we have found the NCC for that
particular experience.
Similar considerations apply to Gestalt switching. If you
consider Wittgensteins famous DuckRabbit example
(Wittgenstein, 1953) (originally due to Jastrow), the stimulus is held constant, yet now I see a duck, now I see a rabbit. Once again, if we could nd the point in the brain
where the perception switches from that of the duck to that
of the rabbit, it looks like we would have found the NCC
for either the perception of the rabbit or the perception
of the duck. In both of these experiments the stimulus is
held constant, yet the same stimulus produces dierent
experiences. We want to know exactly where in the brain
the experience occurs, and then exactly how the brain
determines that you will have one experience and not the
other.
A third sort of experiment, equally famous, is the
research done by Weiskrantz (1986) and others on blindsight. There are patients with damage to visual area 1
(V1) of the visual cortex which is such that they are unable
to see in a certain portion of their visual eld. Nonetheless,
in some experiments the subject can report events occurring
in the blind portion of his visual eld even though he
reports no visual experience of the event. So it seems there
must be some pathway in the brain that is producing conscious experience, and another pathway in the brain that is
giving the subject visual intentionality which is unconscious. If we could nd the distinctive features of the conscious as opposed to the unconscious pathway, it looks
like, once again, we might have the NCC for that sort of
consciousness.
Finally, of course, the most natural way of pursuing the
building block model is simply to follow out the stimulus,
say, the stimulus of the color red, until it actually produces
the perception, the experience of red (Koch, 2004).
I am very enthusiastic about all these lines of research
but I fear they may be making a fundamental mistake: In
all of these cases, the subject is already conscious. That
is, it is only a conscious subject who can experience binocular rivalry, the Gestalt switch, blind-sight, or the experi-
1
For more detailed discussion together with references see (Searle,
2002).
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Material world
Ontological
subjectivity
Qualitativeness
Intentionality
Not spatially
located/extended
None of force,
mass, etc.
Ontological objectivity
Quantitative measurability
No intrinsic intentionality
Has spatial location(s)/dimensions
Force, mass, gravitational attraction
and electrical charge, etc.
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7. Conclusion
I said earlier that both materialism and dualism are trying to say something true and we need to rescue the truth
from the urge to falsehood. Materialism tries to say truly
that the universe is entirely material, that it is made up
entirely of physical particles in elds of force. And dualism
tries to say truly that subjective, qualitative states of consciousness cannot be reduced or eliminated in terms of
any third-person phenomena. Materialism says falsely that
consciousness, as irreducible, qualitative subjectivity, does
not exist. Dualism says falsely that irreducible, subjective,
qualitative phenomena are something in addition to, something over and above, the real, physical world. Now I think
we can see how to say what is true in both without saying
the false part. The world does indeed consist of physical
particles in elds of force (or whatever the ultimate entities
of the true physics turn out to be). But among the higher
level features of these, entirely caused by the behavior of
the lower level elements, are consciousness with its qualitative subjectivity. These are causally, but not ontologically,
reducible to the behavior of the neuronal substrates. But
they are part of the ordinary physical world like any other
biological phenomenon.
References
Gazzaniga, M., 1985. The Social Brain. Basic Books, New York.
Koch, Christof, 2004. The Quest for Consciousness. Roberts & Company
Publishers, Englewood/Colorado.
Searle, J.R., 1980. Minds, Brains and Programs. In: Behavioral and Brain
Sciences, vol. 3. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 417457.
For an explanation of intentions-in-action and how they relate to
intentionality and actions in general, see Searle, J.R., 1983. Intentionality. An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind. Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge (especially chapter 3).
Searle, J.R., 1995. The Construction of Social Reality. The Free Press,
New York.
Searle, J.R., 2002. Rationality in Action. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
Searle, J.R., 2002. Consciousness, Annual Review of Neuroscience, 23/
2000. Reprinted in: Consciousness and Language. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Searle, J.R., 2004. Mind: A Brief Introduction. Oxford University Press,
Oxford.
Weiskrantz, L., 1986. Blindsight: A Case Study. Clarendon Press, Oxford.
Wittgenstein, L., 1953. Philosophical Investigations. Blackwell, Oxford.