Is Matter Conscious?

Lights of ideas

BQO ROUNDUP

Flickr A Health Blog (CC)

The nature of consciousness seems to be unique among scientific puzzles. Not only do neuroscientists have no fundamental explanation for how it arises from physical states of the brain, we are not even sure whether we ever will. Astronomers wonder what dark matter is, geologists seek the origins of life, and biologists try to understand cancer—all difficult problems, of course, yet at least we have some idea of how to go about investigating them and rough conceptions of what their solutions could look like. Our first-person experience, on the other hand, lies beyond the traditional methods of science. Following the philosopher David Chalmers, we call it the hard problem of consciousness.

But perhaps consciousness is not uniquely troublesome. Going back to Gottfried Leibniz and Immanuel Kant, philosophers of science have struggled with a lesser known, but equally hard, problem of matter. What is physical matter in and of itself, behind the mathematical structure described by physics? This problem, too, seems to lie beyond the traditional methods of science, because all we can observe is what matter does, not what it is in itself—the “software” of the universe but not its ultimate “hardware.” On the surface, these problems seem entirely separate. But a closer look reveals that they might be deeply connected.

One Response

  1. tn says:

    Consciousness is an emergent ability of living matter like the brain`s neurons. The living matter must have acquired certain abilities like self-organizing functionally and further networking (establishing relationships between functions) to experience what is happening within them. Networking ability appears to be the immediate source of consciousness.

Leave a Reply to tn Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *