It is strongly implied that dopamine causes pleasure, but to be honest we don't know how the particles that interact in the different parts of the brain (such as the nucleus accumbens for example) give rise to what we experience as pleasure. Dopamine is simply a neurochemical and that neurochemical attaches to different post synaptic receptors resulting in electrial spikes which give us what we call pleasure. But how those electrical spikes give rise to the inner subjective experience is absolutely unknown. You cannot claim that dopamine causes pleasure, you can simple say that there is a very strong correlation between dopamine and pleasure. You can even say that there is some sort of causal relationship between dopamine and pleasure, but it is partial. To say that dopamine causes pleasure is to bypass the entire ontological gap between physical processes and conscious experience.
It's logically causal. Meaning X -> Z, if dopamine is X and pleasure is Z. Now, there can be extra steps in there for the full precise description of the chain of events that is currently poorly understood, like X -> Y -> Z. But it's clearly not just X & Z correlated together, or Z -> X. It's X -> ? -> Z.
Again noone is denying that the brain is one of the components involved in the formation of our conscious experience. This proves that the brain is intricately involved in the formation of conscious experience but we're not debating that. We are debating whether the very essence of the property itself is physical or non physical.
Actually I think quite a number of people on RF believe in a meaningful afterlife.
It varies a bit, because some people believe that only a stream of consciousness persists, while others believe they'll get to keep their consciousness and some subset of other things such as personality, memories, etc. Many people also believe that they'll have senses in the afterlife, and moods such as pleasure or bliss.
But then if it's found that dopamine and other chemicals lead to pleasure, deficiencies in those chemicals deny pleasure (clinical depression), senses require complex input systems that lead to the brain, memories and personality can be erased through physical damage, then what is it that can persist outside of the brain, when the brain is dead?
The nature of what consciousness is is itself an interesting question, but the number one application people often want to use the answer for, is whether there can be an afterlife or not. Almost by definition, anyone who believes in an afterlife, believes that consciousness and possibly some of these other aspects can continue to be experienced after death, even though you can shut off someone's consciousness while they're still alive.
Software is algorithmic. Starcraft is algorithmic. As such if something is algorithmic it's reducible. It's easy to break down the software and game into certain patterns which are mapped. Consciousness is non algorithmic because all our perceptions are completely subjective and novel properties which we experience inside and are completely different from the physical processes tied to them.
And a guy shooting a gun in a virtual world is disconnected from the pieces of silicon in the computer. Electricity flows through the silicon in certain ways, and many steps later, the guy shoots a gun.
With consciousness, electricity and chemical signals flow through the brain in different ways. And consciousness is correlated with measurable brain activity- physical changes are occurring when a person is conscious.
What makes you so sure that a form of dualism won't be widely accepted in the future?
I never said that consciousness is surely not something other than the brain. All I've seen though is that people are not able to answer the types of questions that I've been asking in this thread, and that the evidence seems to strongly point to consciousness being an emergent property of the brain that requires the brain to exist in a functional state.
What alternative hypotheses have been proposed with any degree of detail? Discussions about an emergent mind can point to individual brain regions that are causal with our various aspects of consciousness and sapience, where if taken away, those things go away too, in a piecemeal fashion. What similar level of detail has been applied to competing theories? What are the ideas for a mysterious quantity X that also has to be present for consciousness to exist? And what are the qualities of X?
It's not the degrees of perception itself, but the nature of qualia which cannot be reduced. Yes you can feel less love, or hate, or hear different sounds. But how do you break sound down? Or emotions down? They can't be broken down any further because we don't even know what builds them in the first place. You can break down a pyramid into blocks, the blocks into atoms, the atoms into waves or wtv. But you can't break down red into anything because we don't know how energy becomes red.
You can say that, but I've described otherwise. There's a difference between saying we don't know how something is generated, and saying that it's not reducible. Those things are all reducible in terms of precision, amplitude, and complexity. Some sorts of emotions are constructed from multiple emotions, and individual emotions can be experienced with different levels of complexity. They're also reducible in terms of physical processes. Like, you can partially damage a certain part of the brain, and thereby reduce but not eliminate a certain type of inner experience. Or, you can damage that part more thoroughly or remove it entirely, and take that type of experience away or alter it entirely. In other words, partial physical changes can lead to partial reductions in types of qualia. And it's roughly mapped out, like certain brain regions are involved in certain emotions, certain functions, etc.
It depends on how you define consciousness. I define it more along the lines of sentience. You seem to be defining it more along the lines of awareness. Consciousness may be broken down into lesser forms but it comes to a point where it can't be broken down any further because it's very nature is unknown.
Both awareness and sentience can be reduced along a spectrum. In terms of sensing the environment, you can gradually turn down the amplitude and complexity of a person's ability to sense things, from perfect sensing down through partial sensing down to being completely unreactive to stimuli. And in terms of thought, you can turn down a person's ability to concentrate, recall facts, think clearly, down to nothing.
I think it's premature to claim that consciousness just arises out of the brain magically out of completely different properties simply because we have evidence that the brain is tied to conscious experience. The brain is simply electrical potentials and neuro transmitters. If these physical properties give rise to what we experience inside, then to me that either
a) matter has astounding aspects to it which give rise to non matter (property dualism)
b) all matter has mind (neutral monism/panpsychism)
In anyway material monism is impossible to defend.
But there's quite a bit of causal evidence, including piecemeal evidence, and reducibility (like partial damage leading to partial loss in some cases).
Then on top of that besides fringe paranormal researchers, there's no mainstream/repeated/high-quality evidence of a case of consciousness existing without a brain.
Then, from what I've seen at least, there's a lack of a similarly well-evidenced alternative theory for what is causing consciousness, if not the brain.
One can argue back that the brain is a filter, which channels the consciousness of the universe into our reality.
But that's specifically why I mentioned the part about inner experience being shut off by anesthesia. If for most people, anesthesia shuts off their awareness and they wake up 8 hours later and say that they thought they were just put to sleep a second ago, they experienced nothing for 8 hours as far as they can tell, even the perception of time itself, then that contradicts the brain-is-a-filter idea. Because if the brain is a filter rather than the generator, then shutting off the filter would mean that the person can't
express consciousness, but that they should still be able to subjectively
experience consciousness. But, certain ways of shutting off the brain seem to lead the person to not even having a subjective experience of consciousness, as far as they can tell (and if someone can't tell they're conscious themselves....then basically by definition that's not consciousness).
I don't agree with that notion fully, but then again if you study NDEs and OBEs in enough detail, there are some extraordinary cases where people have conscious experiences for a long time after their brains have no oxygen. The brain is involved in creating what we know as human consciousness, but there might be lesser forms of consciousness as well. For all we know, with anesthesia perhaps we do have a very minimal level of consciousness, incomparable to what we experience now.
I've looked at some of those in considerable detail and a major red flag about this is that there's not much evidence for
when they experienced what they claim they experienced. Like, if some guy went into cardiac arrest and then his heart stopped and then he was brought back and said he had tea with Jesus while he was flatlined, we actually have no proof of when he experienced that tea-with-Jesus moment. Maybe he experienced it when he was on the verge of losing consciousness and his brain was hectic. Maybe he experienced it when his heart started again.