What Must a Successful Theory of Consciousness Explain? Mapping the Requirements Across Philosophy, Neuroscience, Physics, and Psychology for a Truly Comprehensive Model of Mind
Abstract
Throughout intellectual history, the relationship between the immaterial aspects of human existence and the physical body has been conceptualized under various guises: the soul-body, mind-body, and most contemporarily, the consciousness-brain problem—symbolized as the psi-phi (ψ-φ) problem. This paper argues that while historical discourse framed the debate in terms of a soul inhabiting a body, modern understanding necessitates greater precision: the central challenge is to elucidate the relationship between consciousness and the brain, as the mind is fundamentally a product of cerebral processes. Despite decades of neuroscientific research, a comprehensive and universally accepted theory of consciousness remains elusive. This elusiveness stems from a core paradox: consciousness, the very phenomenon we seek to explain, is inherently unobservable to the third-person methods of empirical science. Science, reliant on sensory data, can only obtain indirect correlates of conscious experience, leading to a proliferation of theories that remain, as Nick Herbert noted, more akin to fantasies than robust scientific explanations. The foundational axis of the debate revolves around two dominant metaphysical frameworks: monism and dualism. Monism, in its materialist form (Hobbes to Crick), posits that mental states are entirely reducible to physical brain activity—consciousness is an emergent property of neuronal interactions. An extreme variant, panpsychism (Berkeley, Hume), inverts this, asserting that mind is fundamental to all matter.
Keywords:
mind-brain problem, psi-phi problem, Dualism, Monism, reductionism, consciousness illusionDownloads
References
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Penrose R. The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds and The Laws of Physics. Oxford University Press; 1989.
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