From: The Monastery and The Microscope: Chapter 7: A Strange Loop of Relations: Phenomenology
From: The Monastery and The Microscope: Chapter 7: A Strange Loop of Relations: Phenomenology
From: The Monastery and The Microscope: Chapter 7: A Strange Loop of Relations: Phenomenology
1
target of their techniques, rather than the universal yet
overlooked precondition of any knowledge, which is the lived
experience of knowers. Apart from this bias imposed by the
scientific method, there are no absolutely compelling arguments
in favor of the idea that consciousness derives from a material
basis.
However, let me first state the apparent consensus, which
is that conscious experience derives from a material basis. For
instance, in 2004 Christof Koch said, “The entire brain is
sufficient for consciousness.”1 There is also Daniel Dennett, who
is even stronger in his claim. According to him, “Consciousness
is a physical, biological phenomenon like reproduction.”2
Of course scientists have arguments to back up these
claims. They notice that there are strong correlations between
mental events—the contents of consciousness—and the
workings of the brain. They say (and they are right) that using
these correlations, we can perform “thought readings”—
namely, through brain scans we can know what a certain person
is thinking. We can see if a person is thinking of an apple or a
tennis court or something like that.
1
Christof Koch, The Quest for Consciousness: A Neurobiological Approach
(Greenwood, CO: Roberts and Company, 2004).
2
Daniel Dennett, Sweet Dreams: Philosophical Obstacles to a Science of
Consciousness (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2005).
2
normally ascribe to the presence of consciousness in human
beings.
All these arguments seem to be compelling, yet there is
widespread doubt in spite of them. For instance, there is Gerald
Edelman, a great and important neurologist, who noticed that
describing a certain neural process is not living it.3 It’s not
possible to establish an explanatory connection between the
abstract and structural description of a brain process and the
fact that there is a lived experience correlated with it. There is a
huge gap4 between the two. You could consider any brain
process you wish, but you have absolutely no argument of
principle to explain why they should be associated with a lived
experience at all.
To make this point accessible to imagination, some
philosophers of science of the West imagined the thought
experiment of a zombie. A zombie is a being who behaves
exactly as we do, except for the fact that he or she has absolutely
no experience of anything. This is a logical possibility that is not
precluded by anything in our science. Consciousness is de facto
associated with complex behavior and with intricate
phenomena in the brain, but nothing in science says that it must
be so.
Another person who seems to have doubts (despite his
basic physicalist position) is Christof Koch. In his last book, I
saw this quote that won my heart: “Subjectivity is too radically
different from anything physical for it to be an emergent
phenomenon.”5 I agree with him on this point.
3
Gerald Edelman and Giulio Tononi, A Universe of Consciousness: How Matter
Becomes Imagination (New York: Basic Books, 2001).
4
This is the “explanatory gap” mentioned by Christof in chapter 4.
5
Christof Koch, Consciousness: Confessions of a Romantic Reductionist
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 2012).
3
Figure 7.1: Correlation does not imply causation. There are many possible
causal relationships between two correlated variables, represented here by A
(e.g., brain function) and B (e.g., conscious experience).
4
an alternative illustration of this case. Suppose that on a clear
night you see many stars and it’s very cold. Somebody a little bit
naïve may say, “I understand—the stars are the cause of the
cold.” Obviously, that’s not true. The correlation between the
starry sky and the cold is due to a common factor: the night, the
fact that it’s the night and therefore there is no sun, which
would both hide the stars and radiate heat.
There is also a fourth possibility, which is that neither
consciousness nor brain is a cause of the other, nor are they
caused by a common factor. You could have the case that was
described by William James in which he said that brain and
consciousness can be described as two faces of the same coin, or
two sides of the same curve. Just as the curve could be described
from one side as concave and the other side as convex (see
figure 7.1, bottom right), what there is can be described from one
side as material and from the other side as mental or conscious.
In this case, the relation between consciousness and brain is not
a causal one. Consciousness and neural processes are just two
complementary aspects of what there is.
As you see, there are many alternative possibilities that
allow us to understand these correlations that have little to do
with the standard claim that the functioning of the brain causes
consciousness.
Of course you could say, “Oh, but we have another
argument that is even more powerful than correlation. It is that
we can trigger conscious events by means of transcranial
electromagnetic stimulation.” One can do that indeed. If we
retain Galileo’s definition of a cause, we see this counts as a
cause. Galileo wrote that the cause is that which when posited
the effect follows, and when removed the effect is removed.6
When we do this transcranial stimulation, we have an effect—
we have a certain content of mental experience that follows. Is
this proof that the mental experience is caused by a brain
process?
Here again, it’s not, because if you want to prove that the
brain process is the cause of lived experiences you must have a
one-way relationship between them. But everybody knows here,
especially Your Holiness, that this is not the case. There is brain
plasticity. There is the possibility of mental training, and
therefore there is the possibility of downward, reverse causation
from a mental activity to a brain process. In other words,
6
“Causa è quella, la qual posta, sèguita l’effetto; e rimossa, si rimuove l’effetto”
(“Cause is that which put [placed], the effect follows; and removed, the effect is
removed”). Galileo Galilei, Discorso intorno alle cose che stanno in su l’aqua o che
in quella si muovono, in Opere I (Torino, Italy: UTET, 1964[1612]), 425. English
translation from: Steffen Ducheyne, “Galileo’s interventionist notion of ‘cause,’” The
Journal of the History of Ideas 67 (2006): 450.
5
transcranial stimulation is no proof that a brain process is the
determining cause of consciousness, because the reverse
dependence also holds.
6
what all must link back to, like a guiding thread.”7 We start
from experience. We start our inquiries about material bodies,
about brains, about everything, from experience, from inside
experience. This is the most basic fact of all8.
Christof Koch seems to agree. He said, “Without
consciousness there is nothing.”9 I agree with Christof on this
point, but I think that the latter remark is so crucial, so
important, that it should not be just one among many. It should
be the starting point of the whole inquiry. It should pervade
everything. It should permeate every sentence of a book about
consciousness.
That was exactly what one of the best Western
philosophers, a German philosopher called Edmund Husserl,
did. He started from this remark and wrote not just one book
but nearly 50 books only about that stunning fact of our lives:
about the primacy of experience, about the contents of
experience, and about the structures of experience. He wrote, as
Descartes did before, “Consciousness is what is certain and any
object of consciousness can be a delusion.”10 This table could be
just a hologram, but the experience of seeing it is certain. The
snake could be a rope, but the experience of the snake is real.11
Edmund Husserl started his inquiry from this simple idea, and
he thus founded a new discipline called “phenomenology”: a
discipline that consists of attending to experience as it is (before
any ontological interpretation of its contents) and describing it
carefully.
This being granted—the fact that experience is absolutely
crucial, that experience is primary, that experience is what is
most certain—then we can suddenly realize that science by its
very method has a huge blind spot in the very center of it. To let
you appreciate this blind spot, I’ll borrow a beautiful metaphor
from Ludwig Wittgenstein. Wittgenstein wrote, “Nothing in the
visual field allows you to infer that it’s seen by an eye.”12 The
7
Natalie Depraz, Francisco Varela, and Pierre Vermersch, On Becoming Aware: A
pragmatics of experiencing, Advances in Consciousness Research Series, book 43
(Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2003), 120.
8
Michel Bitbol, La conscience a-t-elle une origine, (Paris : Flammarion, 2014) ;
Michel Bitbol, “Is consciousness primary ?”, NeuroQuantology, 6, 53-71, 2008
9
Koch, Romantic Reductionist, 23.
10
Edmund Husserl, Ideas: General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology (New
York: Routledge, 2012[1913]).
11
This is a commonly used trope in Buddhist and Hindu philosophy to illustrate how
one can have a true experience of a false reality. As Rajesh Kasturirangan says in
chapter 5, “You might see a snake when you actually have a rope in front of you, but
you can’t say that you didn’t see a snake. The actual experience of the snake is not
open to doubt.”
12
Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, 5.633.
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seer doesn’t see itself. The eye doesn’t see itself in the visual
field.
When you see something, you do not see your own eye.
You just see whatever is in front of you. From the first-person
point of view, the seeing eye is never an object of sight. The seer
doesn’t see itself. This is similar to a famous saying from the
Upanishads: “It is never seen but is the seer; it is never heard
but is the hearer; it is never thought of but is the thinker; it is
never known but is the knower.”13
As Nishida Kitarō, the Zen Buddhist Japanese
philosopher, noticed, it’s exactly the same for science. The eye of
science does not see itself. As soon as one has adopted the
standpoint of objective knowledge, Nishida wrote, the knower
doesn’t enter into the visual field. The knower, the seer—
consciousness—is forgotten as a result of elaborating objective
knowledge. It is through consciousness that we are aiming at
objects, but consciousness itself is lost to sight in the process.
Therefore, Nishida concluded, the world of science is not the world
of the true reality. What did he mean by that? He meant that the
most fundamental, the most obvious aspect of reality, which is
experience, is forgotten or neglected by science in favor of its
objects of sight and action.
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experience. Therefore the brain is somehow also dependent
upon the mind. The relation is mutual.
Figure 7.3: The strange loop of relations. At the left is an image of a brain that
is seen by a person’s eye, which is connected to his or her brain. Thus, a
representation of the small brain exists in the visual cortex of the person’s brain
(right). Michel emphasizes the difference between our knowledge of the
process of the brain “seeing” this figure, and the raw experience of seeing.
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brain. What there is now is experience, nothing else but experience.
You believe that this is not the case, that there is now something
other than experience? But even this belief is an experience!
10
Christof Koch: I’m just a simple working scientist, okay? And
you confuse me. What you seem to be saying is that
consciousness is primary, and I agree, but that consciousness
and the brain are intimately linked and that if I don’t have a
brain I can’t have consciousness. Is that true?
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But now, I’d like to illustrate my claim that we should
disentangle neuroscience from its unwarranted metaphysical
overinterpretations. In fact there is the possibility of elaborating
a neuroscience that is relevant to consciousness and yet is not
reductionist or materialist. This is exactly what Francisco Varela
was trying to do. He didn’t intend to elaborate an objective
science of subjectivity (for he immediately perceived that this
project is a non-starter). Instead, he wanted to build a science
that cultivates both the objective and the subjective standpoints
and connects them, a science that puts the objective and
subjective standpoints on the same footing instead of elevating
the former above the latter.
Varela wanted to relate the two standpoints, and I think
that’s also what you are implicitly doing, Christof. In your
work, you cannot completely ignore the first-person standpoint
(because after all, this is your standpoint, and the standpoint of
your subjects). You then articulate somehow the first-person
standpoint of lived experience and the third-person standpoint
of neuroscientific data, but you pay less attention to the first-
person standpoint than to the third-person standpoint. By
contrast, Varela wanted to pursue the strategy of articulating
the two standpoints to its apogee. He wanted to cultivate the
first-person standpoint of phenomenology with the same
methodological accuracy as the third-person standpoint of
neuroscience, and create a new non-reductionist science of
consciousness on this twofold basis. That’s essentially the same
as what you are doing, but without the materialist assumption,
without the bias in favor of the third-person standpoint.
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have no idea. But if the bat has some consciousness, let’s
imagine that even at a basic level, experience is there.
This is the common denominator. We can be assured that
no matter what, we begin with that. That is common sense. The
rest we can explore from there. We might get stuck at some
point, but one thing is sure: that we have this kind of
experience. To acknowledge that fully is a good starting point.
Richard Davidson: That’s true, but the very act of doing that
repeatedly in so many different domains affects your ability to
respond to a question that requires you to interrogate your own
mind.
For example, psychologists like to give out
questionnaires that ask people to rate their subjective well-
being: on average how satisfied are you with your own life?
People tend to give a report in response to those kinds of
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questions that often doesn’t reflect what’s going on in their
mind.
Arthur Zajonc: There are two ways that this particular issue has
been dealt with. One of course is familiarizing yourself with
your own mind through meditative practice of the sort that
Francisco advocated, and did himself.
There’s another second-person or dialogical method that
is being explored now in a systematic way in Paris. Michel,
maybe you could just say a word about this way of exploring
the mind with the help of a partner.
Tania Singer: You had a quote saying the only thing we have is
experience, and everything can be an object of delusion.
Michel mentioned the snake and the rope. One’s
experience may be that he is afraid of the snake, but that’s a
delusional subjective experience, because the reality is the snake
is just a rope. But the person is still delusional in his subjective
perception of the reality.
What I understand is that mental training, meditation,
helps your understanding to get to a deeper level, and to get rid
of delusion. How do you know when you are delusional and
when you are not delusional in your subjective experience, if
that’s the primary mode you have?
15
Claire Petitmengin, Anne Remillieux, Béatrice Cahour, and Shirley Carter-
Thomas, “A gap in Nisbett and Wilson’s findings? A first-person access to our
cognitive processes,” Consciousness and Cognition 22 (2013): 654–669,
doi:10.1016/j.concog.2013.02.004.
14
Dalai Lama: It’s actually the subsequent realization that it is
something else that will dispel the fear that you have, but as for
whether or not you could react in the same way in the future,
that problem needs some other work.
Thupten Jinpa: Michel, I really take your point that just because
there is a correlation doesn’t necessarily mean there is causation.
That I think is a very powerful point, because often people who
are not trained in philosophy tend to have a naïve
understanding of causality and correlation.
But there’s one thing I’m not very clear about. Is the point
you are making a methodological one? Where you are arguing
that this more foundationalist approach of trying to reduce
conscious experience—even down to the cellular and genetic
level—is not a very helpful one?
Just as we can do a lot of things by taking matter as
primary, we can also do a lot of things simply by taking
consciousness as a primary phenomenon, like Matthieu-la was
suggesting. Simply making that assumption is a much better
approach than trying to reduce one into the other—is that the
point you are making? Or are you making an ontological point?
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easy to manipulate consciousness. This is rather the job of the
Buddhists and psychologists. Because of that, because of this
easiness, they tend to think that the brain is more fundamental.
However, as I said previously, this thought is just the byproduct
of a methodological bias.
16
The architecture and principals and laws will be elegant,
powerful, beneficial, and in some ways will ultimately give us a
more elegant treatment of this subject.
17
complex systems have experiences. That’s possible. It may just
be a brute fact of nature.
Michel Bitbol: We agree about that. But then you should take
phenomenal consciousness as a primary feature of the universe.
Christof Koch: But that won’t give me a theory that tells me,
does this system experience? Does it feel like something to be a
bunch of water molecules in a glass? I want a theory. At some
point I want a principal theory, just like relativity, quantum
mechanics, that says yes, it feels a little bit like something to be a
glass of water or no, it doesn’t. A theory that tells me whether
this fly that’s bothering me has conscious feeling or not. I want a
theory like that. I believe that science, in principle, will have
such a theory in the fullness of time.
Michel Bitbol: In that case, how will you test your theory?
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and vigor with the light-hearted nature of the whole exchange. The
debate is often interrupted by genuine laughter, reminding spectators
and participants alike that philosophical debate shouldn’t be taken too
seriously.
The questioning in monastic debate is also often accompanied
by prescribed movements—most commonly, a particular kind of
sweeping arm motion punctuated by a clap of the hands, to emphasize
the question. His Holiness and Jinpa joked that Michel and Christof
should employ this kind of clapping to make their points, and the
monastic audience erupted in supportive laughter.
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one point everybody agrees and says, “Oh, yes, wonderful,”
then there will be no further discussion, no further
investigation. I really enjoy this freedom of expression, freedom
of thought, different views. It’s very good—wonderful!
16
Wylie bsdus grwa.
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