Belief in Qualia as Properly Basic (Version 1)
This post has since been updated with corrections and can be read here [https://ghostlightphilosophy.blogspot.com/2021/03/belief-in-qualia-as-properly-basic_20.html]
Introduction
Arguments from eliminative materialists try to claim that
qualia do not exist because they cannot fit within a behaviouristic framework
of mind. Attacks on qualia have grown in recent years as they have tried to be
reduced to mechanical neurological interactions (Dennett, 1991 , Dennett, 1998)
or reduced to feedback of emotions (Solms, 2021). Here, I want to articulate my
view that belief in the real existence of qualia can be defended as properly
basic. I will first outline what properly basic beliefs are and then defend my
view that the existence of qualia can be defended as such. Finally I will
respond to four anticipated objections to my argument.
1 – What are basic beliefs?
Basic beliefs are a key part of foundationalism in
epistemology, as they form the very ‘foundation’ of the belief system that
foundationalists hold. These are the very axioms of a belief system and do not
depend upon justification of other beliefs but on something outside of the realm
of belief. The justification for these is non-propositional. The agent does not
need to have sufficient external justification for their basic belief because
they operate at the very foundation of their belief system. It is perfectly
rational to hold them without being based on other beliefs. Basic beliefs are
usually broken into three categories…
1.
Ones which are directly evident to the senses.
2.
Ones that are incorrigible (necessarily true
simply in virtue of being believed).
3.
Ones that are self-evident.
What follows is my checklist for whether a belief is basic
and then we can compare the justification for qualia to this list…
·
Form the axioms of a belief system.
·
Do not depend upon external justification.
·
Self-evident
·
Directly evident to the senses
·
Incorrigible
2 – When do basic beliefs become properly basic?
A properly basic belief is simply a belief that is held on
good epistemic warrant one which you are warranted to believe. That’s all
really. Properly basic simply means that it is a justified basic belief, but
again the justification does not come from any external source or relation to
another propositional belief.
3 – What are qualia?
Qualia are often hard to define but easy to identify once
experienced. There are many different definitions given in the literature. One
is simply “phenomenal character”. Another is “properties of sense data”. A
third is “intrinsic, non-representational properties”. And a fourth is
“intrinsic, nonphysical, ineffable properties”. What all of these have in
common is that they can characterise qualia as including…
·
Perceptual experiences (seeing red, hearing
glass smash, tasting chilli, smelling farmyards and feeling a cactus thorn).
·
Bodily sensations (feeling an itch, feeling a
muscle spasm, feeling a pain, feeling dizzy, etc…)
·
Felt reactions (feeling delight, lust, love,
fear, etc…)
·
Felt moods (feeling elated, depressed, bored,
jealous, calm, etc…)
In his 1998 essay ‘Quining Qualia’, Dennett says that for
qualia to have any real existence, they must have the following four properties…
1.
Being ineffable (too great or extreme to be
described in words).
2.
Being intrinsic (belonging naturally and
directly to something or someone).
3. Being private (only accessible from the 1st person perspective).
4. Being directly or immediately apprehensible in consciousness.
For example, the quale of experiencing the redness of an
apple. It is too great to be described in words. I can write a whole book on
how the redness feels to me but it will not capture in any sense how it
felt to me. There is an extra dimension to their reality which cannot be
articulated and understood by any reader. The redness of the apple as a quale
would be intrinsic in the fact that it would only be accessible to the
perceiver. I could not in principle access your quale of the redness because if
I did it would become my quale and not yours anymore. The privateness of the
redness also follows closely from this. The redness of the apple as a quale
must also be directly or immediately apprehensible, meaning that I must be able
to directly/immediately become aware of and understand my quale of the redness.
The definition of qualia which I think best encompasses the
truth of their experience and the criteria outlined, is…
Qualia are
introspectively or directly accessible, private, phenomenal aspects of our
mental lives.
Running from Nagel’s “What is it like to be a bat?” essay,
qualia also give us the knowledge of ‘what it feels like to…”.
Now I have given an overview of what qualia are and the
definition of qualia I am sticking to [Qualia are introspectively or directly
accessible, private, phenomenal aspects of our mental lives], I will now get on
to defending my basic thesis that belief in qualia can be defended as properly
basic, contrary to eliminative critiques of qualia from Dennett, Frankish and
the Churchlands.
4 – Why belief in qualia is properly basic.
So can introspectively or directly accessible, private,
phenomenal aspects of our mental lives (qualia) be justified as having real
existence in a properly basic manner? I will argue that they can.
As I briefly articulated in my post titled “The Illusion of
Time”, the proper way to begin to understanding consciousness is what I call the
White Mind state. This is a state where we remove all inferences and models we
use to make sense of things from our minds, and staying right in what are directly
and immediately aware of. We need to remove all explanatory models which rely
on inferences, such as materialism (since the idea of matter is an inference we
use to make sense of sense experience). We should only keep the things which
are so direct and immediate it is impossible to doubt their reality to our
senses. Sense experience, qualia and consciousness are the only things left
when you are in the White Mind state. Therefore, all there is on the White Mind
state is experience and the knowing of experience.
Where do qualia fit in to the WM (White Mind) state? Remember
that qualia are “introspectively or directly accessible, private, phenomenal
aspects of our mental lives.” When we are in the WM state, all we have is sense
experience, qualia and consciousness. Is this not begging the question you may
ask since I assume that qualia are part of the WM state? No it is not because
we now only need to look at the definitions. In the WM state, are there
introspectively or directly accessible, private, phenomenal aspects of our
mental lives? Yes, that is entirely what composes us in the WM state –
experience (phenomenal aspects of mental lives which are directly accessible
and private) and the knowing of experience (introspection and the awareness of
the experience espoused just before). So, when we get ourselves into the WM
state by removing unnecessary inferences and models, the realty of qualia
becomes self-evident. It is a lunatic’s game to deny the reality of qualia when
the most basic aspect of our being is analysed.
But can this be defended in a properly basic way? I will now
refer back to the checklist of what must be fulfilled for a belief to be
properly basic…
·
Form the axioms of a belief system.
·
Do not depend upon external justification.
·
Self-evident
·
Directly evident to the senses
·
Incorrigible
In the WM state, are qualia espoused above the formation of
the axioms of our belief system? Yes! This is because they constitute the most
fundamental aspects of our consciousness – the most basic aspect of ourselves.
All other models (such as materialism) are formed within consciousness. Any theory
which accounts for consciousness must start with consciousness in order to
explain it and in order to start with it you need to see what it is actually
composed of. Both epistemically and ontologically, qualia are the literal basis
of any theory of consciousness. Any theory which begins with matter and tries
to reduce mind to matter is trying to reduce consciousness to an abstraction
made within consciousness in order to explain itself. Any theory which violates the WM state will miss out crucial self-evident, directly and immediately accessible aspects of consciousness. Therefore any behaviourist account of consciousness will be, at the very least, incomplete.
Next, do qualia not depend upon external justification to
believe in their existence? Yes! Matching the third and fourth points to this –
qualia are self-evident upon a close reflection of consciousness and are directly
evident to the senses of our consciousness. What is not more self-evident and
directly evident to the senses than the raw feeling of redness or the raw
feeling of pain? All the phenomenal aspects of our mental lives are self-evident
to anyone with a mind and are directly evident to our senses.
But are they incorrigible? It would mean that they cannot be
corrected or doubted, and are true simply in virtue of being believed. Now one
objection – the illusions and hallucinations objection – could be levelled against
this by arguing that we can be mistaken about the content of our experience and
qualia, but (1) I will deal with this in section 5 and (2) it is not relevant
anyway. Whether what we believe the content of the qualia to be is correspondent
to reality or not, the fact that we are having qualia experience and a
phenomenal aspect of our lives shows that the mere existence of qualia is
incorrigible. One cannot experience qualia and yet rationally doubt their
existence or try to correct the fact that they exist. So yes, the existence of
qualia is incorrigible. This to me seems to satisfy all the necessary components
for something to qualify as a properly basic belief. We have good first-hand
epistemic warrant to believe in the reality of qualia. Therefore, belief in
qualia is indeed properly basic.
5 – Responses to four anticipated objections.
No doubt my argument will have certain responses and
objections. I wish to answer the main four I am anticipating in order to
further defend my thesis.
5A – Qualia do not exist.
This will be the most popular objection I am anticipating to
my thesis that belief in qualia can be properly basic. Eliminativists such as
the Churchlands, Dennett and Frankish argue that consciousness is simply an
illusion created by the brain. They all argue that qualia do not exist in any
real sense. However all arguments against the existence of qualia are
violations of the White Mind state. They have to rely on the unnecessary
explanatory abstraction and inference of materialism and then argue that
materialism is primary and that combinations of matter which produce brains go
on to produce the illusion of consciousness. All of Dennett’s (1991, 1998)
arguments against qualia explicitly assume the truth of the explanatory models
of both materialism and behaviourism – both I heavily dispute. (I will be making
a blog post critique of behaviourism in the future).
But why shouldn’t people violate the White Mind state? Is
introspection and direct and immediate experience really enough to tell us
about the true nature of consciousness? Yes. Introspection is the most privileged
access we will ever have to the mystery of consciousness. Any behaviourist
account is watered down and viewed solely from the 3rd person
perspective. How can this be more privileged to knowing the true nature and
qualitative dimensions of consciousness which are so self-evident to all of us.
In short, any argument against the real existence of qualia is
assuming either (1) materialism, (2) behaviourism or (3) both materialism and
behaviourism. Doing either of the three is a violation of the White Mind state
and is therefore an epistemically invalid criticism.
5B – There are no properly basic beliefs.
This objection mainly comes from anti-foundationalists such
as coherentists. They claim that there are no foundational beliefs such as
basic beliefs. One alternative view is to say that beliefs form some kind of “web”
(Quine, 1970) although Quine held that logic and mathematics were at the center
of the web, acting as the pseudo-foundation of the web of belief. However, I
hold that even anti-foundationalism falls back into foundationalism in the
following way. Anti-foundationalists believe that their ‘web of belief’ or system
of coherent propositions is the grounds for their knowledge of whether a new
proposition is true. This is, in my opinion, their properly basic belief. This
axiom forms the foundation of their belief system, it does not depend upon
external justification, and is self-evident from looking at their very system.
Anti-foundationalists cannot doubt that a true proposition is one which coheres
with other propositions. This is their properly basic belief. This objection
will need to be considered in more detail though I think that the majority of philosophers
hold some kind of properly basic belief (logical truths or mathematical axioms
are the most popular choices). In the White Mind state, consciousness, qualia
and sense experience would replace logic as the most properly basic beliefs, or
under anti-foundationalism, they would be what is at the center of the new ‘web
of belief’. In short, every epistemic worldview has some properly basic belief
that almost serves as their dogma. There is no escaping this.
5C – Issues with illusions and hallucinations.
The issue of illusions and hallucinations can be put against
this argument in the following way. Since we know that sometimes we have
illusions and hallucinations with regards to the content of our sense
experience (for example an oasis in a desert or a broken straw in a glass of
water), we could therefore be equally deceived about the existence of qualia
itself. However this objection holds little weight because even if we are being
deceived about the contents of our qualia, it is undeniable that there are
qualia. The White Mind state reveals this to us perfectly through direct and
immediate ideas. The objection may seem stronger with hallucinations because
with those we experience something that doesn’t actually exist in the real
world. However this seems to be assuming some kind of indirect materialist
style realism. Idealism on the other hand would say that sometimes inner
experience and memories can impinge in an outwards direction onto your
dissociative boundary and Markov blanket, and this impingement from the inside
can recreate in low resolution a hallucinatory image. The image is in your mind
as we would usually diagnose it to be but it is more real then in any indirect
materialist style realism. In short, whilst the exact content of our qualia
could be up for debate, there is no doubt that there are qualia and we
experience them directly and immediately.
5D – The justification for qualia given here is not
properly basic.
The final objection I am anticipating is that my
justification given the White Mind state is not actually properly basic because
you need to experience the qualia in order to know that they exist. The
objector may say that belief in qualia depends on an external justification,
mainly the very experience of them. However the objector here is misunderstanding
what ‘external justification’ means. The term ‘external’ refers to another
belief or proposition that you would use in order to justify belief in a new
proposition. This occurs on either a foundationalist account or coherentist
account of justification. When justifying our belief in qualia, we first start
out with a belief in them because we experience them and then our justification
for our belief doesn’t rely on another distinct external proposition. It relies
on the self-evident, direct and immediate nature of qualia. We might be
deceived about their specific contents (5C) but it is undeniable that qualia
exist. The justification is entirely basic and leads to a properly basic belief
in qualia.
6 – Conclusion
Here, I have presented by thesis that belief in qualia (introspectively
or directly accessible, private, phenomenal aspects of our mental lives) can be
justified as properly basic based on the White Mind state and the nature of
properly basic beliefs. I have also considered four possible objections to my view
and offered responses to them. Therefore I believe that belief in qualia can be
properly basic, which serves as a defeater to any eliminativist or illusionist
argument against their real existence.
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