What It Is Like to Be a Bat
There
is a confusion in the philosophy of mind concerning the possibility of offering
a scientific explanation of the nature
of consciousness. As this confusion seems best embodied in Thomas Nagel's famous
essay, “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” these remarks are framed as a direct
response to that question.
The
confusion resides in the distinction between subjective and objective
facts. An objective fact is one that can be completely described by language. A
subjective fact is one that has an experiential aspect to it. Of course, it can
be described by language (since language can be deployed to describe anything);
however, it cannot be completely described by language because there is
“something that it is like” within this fact, and therefore a complete
representation requires the experience as well. (There are, no doubt, tricky philosophy-of-language
issues that are raised by the above, but this simple definition will serve us
for this discussion.)
Qualia
are subjective facts. (Whether all subjective facts are qualia need not concern
us here; the key point is that all qualia are subjective facts.) Hence, qualia
cannot be completely described by language. It is easy to grasp this
intuitively when we think about our everyday experience. For example, when
someone describes some subjective experience, we understand that in order to
grasp more fully what is being described, one must imagine oneself in that
person’s experience. The description facilitates the effort, but the effort is
necessary nonetheless. That we are (sometimes) successful in making this active
effort is explained by the essential similarity we all share as human beings.
Now
comes the confusion. It has become respectable to argue that the subjective
nature of qualia suggests that a purely physicalist account of consciousness
may not (or should not, or cannot) be possible. I believe this is clearly
wrong. It is true that we do not at present have a physicalist account of
consciousness, and may also be true that such an account is far off. (We will almost
surely not have one in my lifetime, for example.) It is even possible
that there will turn out to be some reason why a physicalist account may not
(or should not, or cannot) be possible. But we have no reason at present to
believe that a physicalist account would not be possible. Instead, we have
every reason to believe that such an account should be possible, at least in
principle, because we are all physical beings in the world and consciousness is
a physical phenomenon.
To
further clear up this confusion, let’s describe how we would determine what it
is like to be a bat.
It
is surely undeniable that bats have qualia. But bats, unlike people, cannot
describe their qualia. And furthermore, we are enough dissimilar to a bat (e.g.
we have no sense that is analogous to a bat’s sonar) that even if somehow we
were presented with a description of a bat’s qualia, it seems unlikely that we
could imagine ourselves into a bat’s experience. A more fundamental approach is
necessary.
Before
describing this fundamental approach, it may be useful to elaborate upon the
normal process of imagining what another person’s qualia are like. Let’s take a
simple example, like someone explaining what a meal you did not have tasted
like. She might describe the tastes and compare it to other foods that you have
recently eaten. You might close your eyes to eliminate competing physical
sensations and then direct yourself to imagine the food. Somehow, your
conscious effort might allow you to reconstruct and imagine (albeit faintly and
inadequately) the relevant gastronomic qualia. At the time of this writing, we
do not have anything like a complete physical description for how this process
happens. But does anyone seriously doubt that it is at root a physical process?
The sounds of the words hit the eardrum and are converted into signals that are
processed (somehow) by the brain; the conscious faculty decides (somehow) to
imagine the physical sensations conveyed by the signals; the brain (somehow)
simulates the physical sensations and (somehow) conjoins those sensations to its
understanding of the words, etc. Even though we cannot now provide any sort of
adequate physical description of the entire process, do we have any reason to
doubt that it is entirely a physical process? And furthermore, do we have any
reason to believe that such a description is inherently impossible? I
believe the answer to both of these questions is no.
If
I am right that the last two questions are correctly answered in the negative,
then it follows that we could in principle replicate scientifically what
normal, human empathy approximates interpersonally all the time. Furthermore,
this replication could be applied far beyond the limits of human empathy, both
in terms of scope (applying to bats as well as humans) and representativeness
(going far beyond what our normal imagination is capable of). Of course, there
might be some scientific reason why such laboratory replication turns out to be
inherently impossible. You never know what you will learn until you try: nobody
living before the twentieth century would have been likely to guess the
inherent physical limitations of the speed of light and the uncertainty
principle, for example. Perhaps some physical limitation applies to the
replication of consciousness.
But
the possibility of a physical limitation of our ability to replicate qualia is
completely different from the philosophical claim that “every subjective
phenomenon is essentially connected with a single point of view, and it seems
inevitable that an objective, physical theory will abandon that point of view.”
[Nagel, http://organizations.utep.edu/portals/1475/nagel_bat.pdf,
page 2] I contend that this seeming inevitability stems simply from a lack of
philosophical imagination.
So
now let’s describe the fundamental approach that would result in a physical
theory that would meet our needs.
The
first step is to develop a sufficient understanding of a bat’s brain (and
associated neurological system) to create whatever qualia are desired. Let us
suppose that we want to know what it is like for a bat to perceive the wall of
a cave using sonar. Then we must understand the bat’s brain in sufficient
detail to know precisely what physical processes are associated with
“perceiving this wall under these circumstances using sonar”. In doing so, we
must learn precisely where the conscious states that are associated with such
perception are located, and we must identify every single relevant feature of
the brain that is associated with such conscious states.
Of
course, we are nowhere close to being able to do anything of the sort. It would
require a body of knowledge and an empirically verified theory of bat brain
physiology that is completely beyond us today. But I do not know any reason why
this would be inherently impossible; it just means that our science is many,
many years away from such understanding. And anyway, this is the easy part! For
once we have a complete physical description of bat qualia in question,
verified (however it would be verified) by experiment and theory, we must move
to the second step. The qualia must be replicated in a human brain in such a
way that it can be experienced by a person.
The
hypothesis here is that bat brain physiology and human brain physiology are sufficiently
similar that specific bat qualia can be recreated in a human brain. Of course,
this may not be true: but again, we have no reason to assert with any
philosophical justification that it cannot be done. The key would be to
identify whatever bat stimuli are associated with specific conscious states and
then reproduce those stimuli under conditions that are both theoretically
justified and empirically verifiable. Under such conditions, we would have at
least some reason to believe that whatever qualia would then be perceived by
our human subject would represent how the qualia are perceived by the bat. Our
human subject would know what it is like to be a bat.
The
question at hand was whether it is possible to provide a justified physicalist
account of conscious mental states. Our answer is as follows. “In practice: not
today. In theory: we have every reason to believe so and no obvious reason to
think not, although we won’t know for sure until we try. Of course, since
subjective facts cannot be fully described objectively, our objective, physical
theory will require a subject to experience the qualia, and only that subject
will have the experience. But that is just the nature of subjective facts.”
What
is it like to be a bat? We don’t know today, but we have every reason to
believe that it is in theory knowable. More importantly, until we learn far
more than we know today we are wasting our time raising philosophical
objections to the possibility of such knowledge.
4 comments:
What bothers me about qualia is that we assert that they exist but can't describe them or define them except privatively - they are what language can't describe about our experiences. It looks for all the world that we are making inferences from locutions like "what it is like to be" as if that had to have some denotation. Subjectivity is not all that mysterious - it is a perspectival property of observer systems. The added weight that qualia are supposed to bear is where a hard problem becomes Hard, but why think it has any traction at all?
It seems to me that this is what Wittgenstein would have called a case of being bewitched by language. If we do not assume there even is a "what it is like" apart from just being that observer, the issue dissipates.
I think this piece has a rather large problem, in terms of formally begging the question.
"But we have no reason at present to believe that a physicalist account would not be possible. Instead, we have every reason to believe that such an account should be possible, at least in principle, because we are all physical beings in the world and consciousness is a physical phenomenon."
The precise question at hand is whether or not consciousness is a physical phenomenon, and so relying on this claim as a premise is question-begging.
"Even though we cannot now provide any sort of adequate physical description of the entire process, do we have any reason to doubt that it is entirely a physical process?"
Certainly - the failure of a physicalist account to adequately deal with qualia problems (e.g. inverted qualia), and the empirical experience of mental states as not being physical both give us at least some reason for such doubts.
On a related note, regarding assumptions/stipulations:
"It is surely undeniable that bats have qualia."
It doesn't appear to be. Certainly we have no way of testing whether bats have qualia. It seems very likely that they do, but a high likelihood is not the same as being undeniable.
Further:
"Let us suppose that we want to know what it is like for a bat to perceive the wall of a cave using sonar. Then we must understand the bat’s brain in sufficient detail to know precisely what physical processes are associated with “perceiving this wall under these circumstances using sonar”. In doing so, we must learn precisely where the conscious states that are associated with such perception are located, and we must identify every single relevant feature of the brain that is associated with such conscious states."
There are more potential problems here, mostly epistemic. Given that we do not have access to the bat's qualia to begin with, how are we supposed to know what conscious states are present, let alone which brain states are associated with them. And even if we did know this, we would still need to show that the brain states fully explained and caused the mental states. I do not say that this is utterly impossible, but it certainly isn't obviously possible, even in principle.
"But the special epistemological status of one’s own mental states has been known since Descartes, yet the general response is not to slide into solipsism. Even if I taste the food that my friend raved about, all I can really know is what it tastes like for me; I can never know for sure what it was like for her. So what?"
So, it presents a problem for physicalist accounts.Currently the physicalist 'gold standard' in terms of philosophy of mind is functionalism, and functionalism has notorious problems dealing with qualia issues. If a better physicalist account were to be developed, we could engage with it - but currently, the lack of a good physicalist account of these issues is a good reason not to believe that physicalism is true.
This is not the stronger claim that physicalism is impossible in principle - just that we do not currently have a convincing argument that it really is the case.
"What is it like to be a bat? We don’t know today, but we have every reason to believe that it is in theory knowable."
This just hasn't been established. We have reason to believe that it may be knowable, i.e. reasons not to dismiss the concept out of hand, but physicalism also has difficult problems which have not been adequately dealt with.
"More importantly, until we learn far more than we know today we are wasting our time raising philosophical objections to the possibility of such knowledge."
Nonsense. If we were to show that physicalism contains a contradiction in itself, that would prove that it is impossible. And even if this is not the case, we might learn something about epistemic limitations, or find a good a priori argument for physicalism (or against the other contenders).
Dear Wolff,
I've been reading your blog for about a year now and although I've never commented, I come back faithfully almost everyday, and always enjoy what you have to say.
I just wanted to say, in reply to Eggs Maledict, that I don't think the arguement in this post is begging the question. Yes, Patrick Wolff assumes that physicalism is true, presumably because he is convinced by good and ample evidence. But that physicalism is true is not a premise of his argument. All he's saying is that for all we know, physicalism might be able to explain qualia.
I also wanted to ask a question to R. P. Wolff himself: I was reading Rawls and an old post of yours came to my mind, where you said that once his project of providing a theorem in game theory failed, Rawls's attachment to his two principles was only comparable to faith in the Biblical word. My question is: doesn't the Difference Principle have a strong 'intuitive force'? I don't mean it in the sense in which the first principle might have intuitive force. The latter could simply be due to the 'success' of liberalism in the last few hundred years. What I mean is that if you think inequality is bad, it's prima facie a brilliant solution to allow inequality only if it benefits those that are worse off (incidentally, it might turn out that virtually no inequality at all is the only situation that satisfies this requirement; I actually think that the greatest problem with Rawls is that to know which economic system satisfies his requirements, we would need a 'scientific' economics AND we would need perfect knowledge of the present situation, of how different situations affect judgements, etc., which just seems to be impossible).
Anyway, I just assume that inequality is bad (I do not care for Nozickisms, and I don't understand why you call his a 'delightful book'; it's simply evil, because it represents the sort of thought that made it ok once again to blame poverty on the poor. Although it didn't CAUSE it, it is complicit in the destruction of the welfare state all over the Western world), and I just think Rawls's proposal 'sounds good'.
Again, thanks for your blog. It's great to have the oppprtunity to discuss these things with you!
For a rather excellent example, we *used to* not know how to describe other animals' perception of colors.
But now that we have analyzed their eyes and brains in great detail, we actually can construct a picture of how other animals *see* the world.
We know now.
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