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Panpsychism and dualism in the science of consciousness.

Sergey B Yurchenko

Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews October 1, 2024 DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2024.105845

Summary

Panpsychism and dualism are gaining traction in neuroscience as they address key questions about consciousness and free will. Integrated Information Theory (IIT) exemplifies how these concepts can coexist, suggesting that consciousness might be a fundamental aspect of reality. In examining 200 theories of consciousness, many lean towards panpsychism when defining consciousness universally. However, those that emphasize emergence risk veering into dualism. A novel approach called "bioprotopsychism" offers a biologically grounded framework, linking conscious states to information processing in the brain through predictive mechanisms.

Abstract

A resurgence of panpsychism and dualism is a matter of ongoing debate in modern neuroscience. Although metaphysically hostile, panpsychism and dualism both persist in the science of consciousness because the former is proposed as a straightforward answer to the problem of integrating consciousness into the fabric of physical reality, whereas the latter proposes a simple solution to the problem of free will by endowing consciousness with causal power as a prerequisite for moral responsibility. I take the Integrated Information Theory (IIT) as a paradigmatic exemplar of a theory of consciousness (ToC) that makes its commitments to panpsychism and dualism within a unified framework. These features are not, however, unique for IIT. Many ToCs are implicitly prone to some degree of panpsychism whenever they strive to propose a universal definition of consciousness, associated with one or another known phenomenon. Yet, those ToCs that can be characterized as strongly emergent are at risk of being dualist. A remedy against both covert dualism and uncomfortable corollaries of panpsychism can be found in the evolutionary theory of life, called here "bioprotopsychism" and generalized in terms of autopoiesis and the free energy principle. Bioprotopsychism provides a biologically inspired basis for a minimalist approach to consciousness via the triad "chemotaxis-efference copy mechanism-counterfactual active inference" by associating the stream of weakly emergent conscious states with an amount of information (best guesses) of the brain, engaged in unconscious predictive processing.

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