Consciousness science: a science of what?
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Authors
Irvine, Elizabeth
Abstract
While the search for scientific measures, models and explanations of consciousness is
currently a growing area of research, this thesis identifies a series of methodological
problems with the field that suggest that ‘consciousness’ is not in fact a viable scientific
concept. This eliminativist stance is supported by assessing the current theories and
methods of consciousness science on their own grounds, and by applying frameworks
and criteria for ‘good’ scientific practice from philosophy of science.
A central problem consists in the way that qualitative difference and dissociation
paradigms are misused in order to identify measures of consciousness. Another problem
concerns the wide range of experimental protocols used to operationalise consciousness
and the implications this has on the findings of integrative approaches across
behavioural and neurophysiological research. Following from this the way that
mechanisms of consciousness have been inadequately demarcated, and how this affects
whether ‘consciousness’ refers to any scientific kinds, is discussed. A final problem is
the significant mismatch that exists between the common intuitions and
phenomenological claims about the content of consciousness that motivate much current
consciousness science, and the properties of neural processes that underlie sensory and
cognitive phenomena.It is argued that the failure of these methods to be appropriately applied to the concept of
consciousness, both in particular cases, and in the way that these methods fail to fulfil
their crucial heuristic role in the practise of science, suggests that the concept of
‘consciousness’ should be eliminated from scientific discourse. Aside from the purely
negative claim found in eliminativist accounts, the strong empirical grounding of this
eliminativist claim also allows positive characterisations to be made about the products
of the current science of consciousness, to (re-)identify real target phenomena and valid research questions for the mind sciences, and to suggest how the intuitions that ground
the confused research program on consciousness result from real features of our
cognitive architecture.
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