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الوعي: دليل موجز للُّغز الجوهري للعقل

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في هذا الكتاب، تطوف بنا «آناكا هاريس» حول ما استجدَّ من تعريفاتٍ وفلسفات ونتائج علمية تُسلِّط الضوء على فهمنا المحدود للوعي. ثَمَّة أسئلةٌ كثيرة تَطرح نفسها في هذا الصدد: ما هو الوعي؟ وما مصدره؟ وأين يكمن؟ وهل يمكن أن يكون مجردَ وهمٍ أم أنه خاصية عامة تمتاز بها جميع المواد والكائنات؟

يُعَد هذا الكتاب تأملًا كاشفًا عن الذات، والإرادة الحرة، والخبرة المحسوسة، من خلال ما نُطلِق عليه اسم الوعي، وهو يَطرح رؤًى جدلية تتسم بالحيوية وتنطوي على الكثير من التحدي والإثارة، ومن شأن تلك الرؤى أن تُبدِّل أفكارنا عن الوعي؛ ما يسمح لنا بالتفكير فيه بحُريةٍ بأنفسنا، إن شئنا ذلك.

90 pages, ebook

First published January 1, 2019

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11.6k people want to read

About the author

Annaka Harris

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Annaka Harris is the author of "CONSCIOUS: A Brief Guide to the Fundamental Mystery of the Mind" (HarperCollins, June 2019). She is the author of the children's book "I Wonder," a collaborator on the "Mindful Games Activity Cards," by Susan Kaiser Greenland, and her work has appeared in The New York Times. She is a consultant for science writers and a volunteer mindfulness teacher for the Inner Kids organization. She is married to the neuroscientist and author Sam Harris.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 842 reviews
Profile Image for Ryan Boissonneault.
216 reviews2,264 followers
July 17, 2019
The argument is familiar. It begins with an honest account of the mystery of consciousness and how there is, as of yet, no adequate or complete scientific explanation for how subjective experience of the material world can arise from the material world. The subjective experience of seeing the color red, for example, is very different from the scientific accounts of wavelengths of light or electrochemical activity in the brain.

It is then pointed out that there is no direct external evidence of consciousness, and that only one’s own consciousness can be known with any degree of certainty. The problem of the “philosophical zombie,� however improbable, is nevertheless unnerving as there is no way to definitively prove that consciousness is driving the behavior of others. Consciousness is therefore one of the deepest mysteries in the universe.

Then, inevitably and out of nowhere, the assertion is made—after reviewing a few obligatory neuroscientific case studies mapping neural activity to behavior—that free will and choice is an illusion, not noticing that free will, being inextricably tied to consciousness, must remain a mystery as long as consciousness remains a mystery.

Scientists have not solved the problem of consciousness, nor have philosophers, nor has anyone else. And that means, by extension, that the problem of free will has not been conclusively solved either, despite the confident proclamations of the author and other hard determinists.

In Conscious, it is not long before the discussion takes a turn for the worse. After categorically declaring free will an illusion, Annaka Harris writes:

“Many people, however, object on ethical grounds to the assertion that conscious will is an illusion, holding that people should be held responsible for their choices and behavior. But people can (and should) be held responsible for their actions, for a variety of reasons; the two beliefs are not necessarily contradictory. We can still acknowledge the difference between premeditated, lucid actions and the sort that are caused by mental illness or other disorders of the mind/brain�.A distinction between the brain’s intentional behaviors and behaviors that are caused by brain damage or other outside forces (‘against one’s will�) is valid and necessary, especially when structuring a society’s laws and criminal justice system.�

These arguments drive me insane. Notice the action verbs I've highlighted in bold. To “acknowledge� the difference and “structure� a society are both actions, or choices, which contradicts the claim that we all lack free will. If the perpetrators of a crime could not have acted otherwise, then the adjudicators of that crime also could not have acted otherwise, and so the structure of society could not be otherwise, and quickly the entire conversation descends into absurdity.

What Harris wants to say is that all matter, including mind and consciousness, adheres to the physical laws of causation, and that therefore everything is determined ahead of time because nothing can interfere with or escape predetermined physical laws. But if that’s the case, then consciousness can serve no purpose.

The determinist makes the claim that mind and consciousness arises out of the activity of the brain, but that the brain, at the most fundamental level, is simply an arrangement of atoms, and atoms must obey the laws of physics and chemistry, blind to and un-influenced by things like emotion or awareness. The state of the universe at any particular time is the result of preceding causal forces, and therefore that particular state could not have been otherwise. Since the brain, which is composed of atoms, and consciousness, which arises from it, are also part of the universe, any particular conscious state could also not have been otherwise. Any thoughts or emotions or actions you’re taking at this moment could not have been otherwise, therefore free will is an illusion.

But if this is true, then consciousness loses its evolutionary rationale. The purpose of conscious awareness, evolutionarily speaking, is the processing of information for the purposes of making choices among alternatives. If choice is an illusion, and the universe can only be one way, based on the preceding chain of causal events, then consciousness now has no function. If it now comes down to the decision to either believe in free will or deny the underlying rationale for all evolutionary theory, I think I’ll stick with free will.

The fallacy is clear: Harris is stating that there is no explanation for how consciousness or subjective experience arises out of matter, yet insists that consciousness must be subject to the same causal dynamics as matter. This is an assumption with no backing, scientific or otherwise. Ignorance of the characteristics of consciousness cannot be used as justification for the idea that consciousness must conform entirely to the known physical laws.

There’s simply no reason for me to accept these assumptions, and as long as consciousness remains a mystery, and every waking moment of my experience tells me I have some level of choice, it’s more reasonable for me to assume that I do in fact have some degree of choice, especially since I cannot really convince myself otherwise.

Harris then moves on to discuss panpsychism, or the belief that consciousness in some sense pervades all matter. Harris explains that panpsychism is in fact based on science and rationality, but then writes, “In actuality, if a version of panpsychism is correct, everything will still appear to us and behave as it already does.� Well, if that’s the case, then panpsychism is not falsifiable, and therefore not scientific. We have a name for non-falsifiable claims that can never be tested: they are called pseudoscientific.

And so Harris is simultaneously telling us it is a delusion to believe that we may have free will but it is perfectly reasonable to believe that a thermostat or electron may have consciousness.

Harris also fails to adequately address the nuances of the philosophical debate, including the various positions of determinism, compatibilism, and metaphysical libertarianism, opting instead to review of few case studies in neuroscience and promote the idea of hard determinism and the benefits of meditation. What could have been a fascinating intellectual history or philosophical analysis turned out to be a superficial account of a questionable view. And how can you write a book on consciousness and leave out Daniel Dennett? It's either a sign of ignorance or apprehension to include an alternative view.

Where I do agree with Harris is when she writes, at the end of the book, “From our current vantage point, it seems unlikely that we will ever arrive at a true understanding of consciousness.� I agree, and that’s why we shouldn’t be making categorical statements about free will, which is a component of consciousness. There are still too many unknowns about the universe and the mind, including the mysteries of the quantum world and the presence of dark matter and energy, not to mention the fact that we only have sensory access to an infinitesimally small sliver of reality. The determinist is forming their conclusions under the assumption that we have all the relevant information we need, but I think this is wrong.

My suspicion is that we’re missing something, some kind of natural explanation yet undiscovered that would provide some degree of free will. I of course do not know this, but my ignorance is on par with everyone else. And I wouldn’t write a book about it.

----

Also check out my review of, in my opinion, the far superior book I am Not a Brain: Philosophy of Mind for the Twenty-First Century by philosopher Markus Gabriel.
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.5k followers
June 28, 2019
Please not that in the title it states that this is a brief history, so one cannot expect lengthy explanations on each point. This is scholarly work, and sometimes I felt I was in over my head, or at least not very familiar with this subject from the beginning. I did find it interesting though, that challenging many beliefs, that our conscious and self may be two totally different entities. That often we do something automatically, and our brain knows before we do. That there are specific condition when consciousness is there, but our self may not be able to function as such. Such as locked in syndrome, where the body is paralyzed but inside the person is conscious, fully aware but unable to communicate.

She does give definitions and explores each subject, giving examples. The altered consciousness when one takes LSD, and the experiments that were used. She explores the belief that under the current definition of consciousness, plants may have their own type of consciousness. They react to touch, have memories passed down from generation just as we humans do. Like I said, some of this I did not quite understand but it is an interesting look at what makes us react the way we do, and how sometimes consciousness is an illusion.

Listened to this and the author is the narrator. She did a good job, do three stars all around.

ARC from Edelweiss.
Profile Image for Benji Mahaffey.
3 reviews3 followers
June 5, 2019
What do quantum physics, the hard problem of consciousness, and time have in common?

They all get a cursory synopsis by Annaka Harris in her very brief Guide.

I was prepared to love this book. While rabid Redditors at r/SamHarris were ready to tear Conscious apart before it even hit the printing press (on account of Ms. Harris's lack of academic qualifications to write the book), I was a fervent defender. On a topic as broad and widely debated as consciousness, a professional writer and journalist should be qualified to develop a sweeping analysis of the field thus far, in the vein of Bill Bryson or Michael Pollan.

I preordered Conscious and read it over the course of a few hours. It’s a challenging book to review, because I need to separate what I hoped (and expected) it would be vs. what Harris wants the book to accomplish.

In any primer on consciousness, I would expect to see Nagel and Chalmers mentioned, and Harris relies extensively on both philosophers to argue her points. Perhaps it’s too much to expect of a hundred-page book, but I was disappointed by the lack of any competing points of view. Daniel Dennett will hate this book, should he read it, and for good reason. I see nothing wrong with taking a side on the debate over the so-called “Hard Problem,� but in a book geared towards the complete layperson, to include Chalmers while omitting Dennett seems at best myopic, and at worst disingenuous.

As a dilettante myself, I don't fault Harris for writing outside of her area of expertise. Unfortunately, it seemed like Harris is conflating arguments in philosophy of mind with issues in cognitive neuroscience and physics. Philosophy of mind has not kept up terribly well with advances in the hard sciences. Panpsychism enjoys disproportionate coverage in Conscious, despite the fact that its being correct would require new laws of physics. See Sean Carroll’s Mindscape podcast featuring David Chalmers. Instead of including any of the arguments against panpsychism, Harris repeatedly cites sources from Aeon magazine that will appear credible to the layperson, but are actually little more than Medium.com essays.

Conscious is short enough to be worth the read; it’s written in an engaging and accessible tone and can serve as an introduction to the hard problem and qualia, but it veers dangerously close to Deepak Chopra territory (including tenuous quantum mechanics analogies), despite Harris’s occasional affirmations that panpsychism need not be equated with New Age pseudoscience. I was disappointed by the author's bias, reliance on Aeon citations, and her seeming disregard for philosophers like Dennett and similar established, credible literature.
Profile Image for Morgan Blackledge.
782 reviews2,549 followers
December 5, 2023
GREAT LIL BOOK.

Terrific primer on consciousness.

However.

Harris supports both The Hard Problem of Consciousness, and Panpsychism.

No tea no shade.

She’s HELLA smart.

And I respect her, A LOT.

But I (personally, just me) don’t 100% vibe with either of those ways of thinking about consciousness.

Any way.

5/5 stars ⭐️

Now for a long, probably fruitless�

PERSONAL RANT

I’m working through something here.

So please bear with me while I do so.

ܳ�

Cars drive right?

If we understood all the parts of a car, (most importantly, the engine) would we understand what “drive� is?

This seems like an unintelligible question to me.

Drive (in this context) is not a noun (person, place or thing), drive is a verb (action word). And it’s kind of a complex action.

Dropping down a level of complexity, and breaking the “drive� construct it into smaller chunks, like force, mass, velocity, friction, inertia (all that Newtonian physics stuff) is helpful if we want to understand “drive� (in this context).

Conversely, stepping up to a systems level of complexity to understand engines is also helpful. The words car, engine and part are nouns (things). When you assemble all those parts (nouns) into a system, and turn the ignition.

The engine “runs� (a verb).

And if we understand all the other laws of physics like combustion, and E=MC2 (and all Einstein that stuff). Then we can reasonably understand how an engine converts the energy of a controlled explosion, into force, via pistons, that can be harnessed via gears and into “drive�.

Going back to the first question.

If we understood all the parts of a car, (most importantly, the engine) would we understand what “drive� is?

It seems like an unworkable question when formulated in this way.

At least to me it does.

Because we’re attempting to discuss two things (drive/parts) that fundamentally don’t belong together in the same question, because they exist on different levels of organization. And furthermore, there’s a missing underlying level of fundamental understanding.

But if we reframe the same question to:

IF we reasonably understand all the constituent aspects of “driving�, including all of the fundamental physical laws that underlie moving through space and time.

AND if we also understand all of the constituent parts of a car, and a gas combustion engine, including all of the fundamental physical laws that underlie converting mass to energy, and harnessing it to do work.

THEN can we reasonably understand how cars and engines enable people to drive?

The answer has to be YES.

At least to my way of thinking.

THE HARD PROBLEM OF CONSCIOUSNESS

Now (if you’re still with me) let’s swap the words “dive� for “consciousness� and the words “engine� for “brain�.

Philosopher David Chalmers famously posits.

That if we understand everything about the brain (a noun in this context), we still wouldn’t understand consciousness (a verb in this context).

NOTE:

Chalmers definition of consciousness is simply the explicit experience of being e.g., what it’s like to be a bat (🦇).

Chalmers claims that we would not (and perhaps can not) know what it is like to be something (other than what we are) or even what precisely that special “such-ness� of being is, or how it arises, just by understanding brains.

Chalmers additionally argues, that understanding brains (via neuroscience) is difficult, but easy compared to understanding consciousness, which Chalmers designates as a special “hard problem�.

I am not a philosopher of mind, or a physicist.

I have (some) training in psychology, and (some, but not much) training in neuroscience. So I’m sensitive to the fact that Chalmers (and other smart people who agree with him) have a legitimate point. But I (for the life of me) just can’t get onboard. And (as per the first drive/engine example) have an intuition that the question is poorly constructed, to the point of not even being right or wrong.

But rather leading to a hopeless dead end.

If we deconstruct the term “drive�, we can say “drive� is a natural phenomenon (force) that is engendered by mechanical engines (steam, gas or electric) that were designed to “drive� all kinds of implements, not just cars, but sewing machines, water pumps, mechanical looms, etc.

If we do the same with consciousness, we could say, that it is a natural phenomenon (not magic, but what exactly?), that it is engendered by brains (somehow, not exactly sure how, but yes), that evolved to help animals survive and reproduce.

There are still A LOT of unanswered questions.

But I think all of that is reasonable to assume.

And I think the burden of proof is on those bro’s who would oppose.

Furthermore, I think it’s safe to assume that consciousness is a function of memory, specifically short term memory, i.e., something like “the remembered present moment�.

I don’t know about you.

But that works for me.

I also think that affect has something to do with it, so in other words, consciousness is the “felt experience of the remembered present moment�.

That also works for me.

It seems to have something to do with information. It’s hard to imagine consciousness without any informational content.

If we keep going, I think what is left boils down to the subjective sense of being, which we simply don’t have instruments or methods for observing or measuring.

At least not yet.

Maybe never.

But that doesn’t make the issue of consciousness “special�, or particularly hard, just out of reach for direct observation and measurement.

I think it’s similar to the question “what is life�?

Which we still don’t entirely understand, but we certainly don’t think of life as “elan vital� or a mystical “life essence� like we used to.

Most (scientist) people view it as an emergent property of nature and evolution via natural selection. But not something special or extra or magical (beyond the fucking miracle of biology).

PANPSYCHISM

Panpsychism claims that consciousness is a fundamental property of matter, like gravity.

Very few people would say, life is a fundamental aspect of the matter (as panpsychism claims about consciousness). But most (science) people (especially biologists) reasonably assume that (somehow or another) so-called inorganic shit got all mixed up in the right conditions, and started self assembling into organized, organic slime (somehow or another).

Any way.

Some of my intuitions about the subject are informed by personal meditation and drug experiences.

In meditation practice, I have experienced very attenuated states of consciousness/awareness. Meaning, the lights (of conscious/awareness) were on, but just barely. In a deep state of meditation, you can get VERY relaxed, and still be awake. It’s like hovering just above being unconscious/unaware.

One of the benefits of doing that, is you can also observe yourself boot back up, one layer at a time. From (almost) nothing, to something, to a self, to personhood. Way down in the basement of that experience, the minimal consciousness state is pretty simple. It lacks all of the sense information, and symbolic language, and psychology of normal waking life.

My personal experience of that state is, that it’s pretty simple.

It is a sense that something exists.

It’s a kind of frothing sensation.

Probably the sense of chemical changes in the nervous system.

But beyond that.

There isn’t much more you can say about it.

Something like a point of view or proto-self sense is present.

But it’s really not at all like we ordinarily experience.

Reflecting back on these (extremely primitive feeling) experiences of existence. It is not at all counterintuitive to me that this is an emergent phenomenon of a nervous system.

Similarly, I have a neurological condition that makes me pass out very easily if I stand up to quickly, particularly from a back bend. As such, I pass out a lot when I do yoga. And (shhhh, don’t tell anyone) I really enjoy the sensation, and do it on purpose, quite frequently.

Emerging to consciousness, from being passed out and unconscious, in this very controlled (and safe) way that I have figured out how to do, is extremely interesting. You go from nothing, to something, one layer at a time as your brain slowly wakes back up.

Again, the basement of that experience of something, just after being nothing, is pretty simple.

Based on these experiences, it’s not hard for me to intuit a very primitive sense of being, and based on the fact that, when my brain is off, so is my consciousness, it is also hard for me to not equate consciousness with brain function.

Lastly.

Drugs.

I don’t do them anymore.

But when I did.

They were also quite instructive in this regard.

IF you can alter your consciousness by altering you brain chemistry. THAN I think it’s a safe bet that consciousness is at least VERY closely associated with brain function.

We may not be able to directly observe or measure that. And as such. We may not ever completely understand at least a little pocket of subjectivity via objective measurements.

But just because I don’t know what my neighbors are doing next-door. Doesn’t mean it’s a hard problem in the way Chalmers seems to infer regarding consciousness.

Anyway.

Please straighten me out on this if you can.
Profile Image for Lloyd.
565 reviews44 followers
June 18, 2019
The failure of Annaka Harris’s Conscious to meet the lofty goal of accessibility is apparent in the first chapter.

Conscious: A Brief Guide to the Fundamental Mystery of the Mind by Annaka Harris is promised to be as “concise and enlightening as Seven Brief Lessons on Physics and Astrophysics for People in a Hurry�. This is such a brave and ambitious undertaking as consciousness truly is an enigma.


Let me jump to the beginning of Chapter Two: Intuitions and Illusions to confirm what the author was trying to accomplish in the first chapter: “Now that we have a working definition of consciousness and the mystery it entails, we can start chipping away at some common intuitions.� So did chapter one give us that accessible, working definition of conscience? No, the author seems to give us sciency riddles, “An organism is conscious if there is something that it is like to be that organism.�

That quoted definition is followed by a paragraph that is the author’s own definition and the meat of this first chapter:

“In other words, consciousness is what we’re referring to when we talk about experience in its most basic form. Is it like something to be you in this moment? Presumably your answer is yes. Is it like something to be the chair you’re sitting on? Your answer will (most likely) be an equally definitive no. It’s this simple difference—whether there is an experience present or not—which we can all use as a reference point, that constitutes what I mean by the word “consciousness.� Is it like something to be a grain of sand, a bacterium, an oak tree, a worm, an ant, a mouse, a dog? At some point along the spectrum the answer is yes, and the great mystery lies in why the “lights turn on� for some collections of matter in the universe.�


Yes, the difference is simple when considering such dissimilar entities, but that only confirms we can intuitively identify a difference between extremes. Before considering the mystery of why the lights turn on, I want to understand what the properties are of this light and what phenomena you consider distinct and related or not. I’m left feeling that this book is too sophisticated for me and unsure who is the target audience of this book.

The conversation has to start from where the audience is. This book doesn’t meet me at the beginning of my understanding on this topic. There is an assumption that I’m ready to play a hard puzzle. If this is really meant to be accessible the chapter would at least start with what the human experience feels like.

A successful introduction starting from the shared human experience would use language like “subjective experience�, “a perspective of experience�, an “I experience�, or “my body and my environment�. How does this relate to “a sense of being�, “inner feeling�, “an emotional life�, “inner voice�, “a sense of self�, “self-awareness� or “feeling like an observer�? Or explain why this is the wrong path or inappropriate.

We are not told if “reflection� or “deep thought� is beyond this concept. Instead we’re left to parse and re-parse the cohesive, but terse “something that it is like to be that organism�, which depends on appreciating that “it is like to be� is the inner presence’s experience and not just external experiences like the physical sensation of the stimulus of the air current across a bat’s wing.

I’m now wonder if there is a consciousness education equivalent of the Bohr model of electrons orbiting atoms? But even if this does exist, maybe it isn’t a model that can bridge to a more complete model as the conversation becomes more complicated and interesting.

I was also counting on the author elaborating on “experience in its most basic form� and say whether there is any indication, observation, or measurements of consciousness.

Instead, we see the author setting up the “matter� panpsychism experiment from the start and heightening at chapter one’s ending with another overly witty “wonderful clear and playful portrait of the mystery� quote which starts: “Sure, consciousness is a matter of matter � what else could it be, since that’s what we are� but still, the fact that some hunks of matter have an inner life� �

I really wanted an onramp to the topic. The author’s expertise in consciousness seems to have made her blind to the needs of those unfamiliar [1]. She accidentally pushed us readers in to these deep waters from a cliff.

I put down the book to capture my first impressions. I came for a “wonderfully accessible book� by an author known for being able to introduce topics to diverse audiences including children, but that isn’t what I’ve found. I see little likelihood that the book will enable new well-reasoned conversations on this new subject for me. These deep, cold waters leave my anxious to what would be asked for me to wrap my mind around next.

I finished the book and it is a fascinating book inspiring awe, but I was correct to fear. I’m left struggling to come up with my own foundation to consider these ideas from. The book provided no stable structure to build on, but definitely surfaces great thought experiments and questions. It contributes to my interesting in further exploration in this area. Unfortunately, the author, her team, and her supporters� intuitions on this being a general guidebook are incorrect. The promise wasn’t kept.


1. The lack of a good introduction is more puzzling considering the author acknowledges the “linguistically issue� on the Making Sense podcast #159 - Conscious 12:50. “It’s partly a linguistically issue � it’s not as accurate as we’d like it to be. I actually like the word experience better even though that can be misunderstood too.� The author goes on to describe how she solves the problem with a back and forth, but I’d argue her solution is insufficient. After reading the book, I also listened to 10% Happier with Dan Harris podcast #190: The Fundamental Mystery of the Mind, Annaka Harris. Here too I got the sense the author believes she did have the feedback that the definition wasn’t working for some readers and she thought she had addressed the issue.


Endnote: The praise in the author blurbs also have the theme of “clarity�, but they all also look to be experts in related subjects. Was this prose tested on people new to the subject? Was constructive feedback received? Was it incorporated into introducing the topics? Or was the test audience intimidated by how brilliant the author and her writing are?
Profile Image for Tom Stewart.
Author4 books173 followers
December 30, 2022
Trying to squeeze in some last-minute reviews of a few books I read in 2022 that I hadn’t yet posted!

If an omniscient being would kindly answer one of my metaphysical curiosities, Explain to me consciousness, would be near the top of my list. How does consciousness arise—from a certain organization, interconnection, and processing of brain parts? Or could it be fundamental, like subatomic particles and gravitational forces? This book asks more questions than it answers but it’s a delightful introduction to a field of study that I find extremely interesting. How we conceptualize consciousness has implications into free-will versus determinism, ethical concerns like how we treat plants or advanced robotics, and what might happen to us after we die. Even the possibility that all matter may be conscious�panpsychism—is no longer an occult theory; respected and rationally-minded scientists do not dismiss its viability.

I’m a big fan of Sam Harris (I own all his books, subscribe to his meditation app, listen to his podcast), and found Annaka via Sam. I enjoyed this short book enough to read it twice in the same year.
***
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Profile Image for Ross Blocher.
520 reviews1,438 followers
June 9, 2020
The one thing we can know for certain is that we are conscious. Maybe you live in a simulation. Maybe we're all brains in vats. Perhaps everybody else only appears to be conscious, and you are sole person with the "lights on". Whatever the underlying reality might be, you can be convinced of your awareness and experience: the very act of thinking about it is the proof. And yet, consciousness remains one of science's most intractable mysteries. We don't know how the tangle of molecules that form our neurons, seemingly the same stuff of which everything else is made, results in a conscious experience. In Conscious, Annaka Harris seeks to explore the parameters of what we know about consciousness, give us a tour of the popular thinkers and thoughts, and advocate for an unorthodox solution.

If you haven't read much on the topic, this is a great, quick introduction that is sure to expand your mind. If you have, you'll recognize many of the themes and examples, but appreciate the clarity and concision of the descriptions. Harris introduces the hard problem of consciousness (that aforementioned bugaboo of nonthinking matter giving rise to thought) and the common ballpark solutions: perhaps consciousness is an emergent property arising from the complexity of neuronal connections, or the frequencies generated by their activity, or the act of information processing itself. She looks at edge cases that cast light on the topic: plants react to stimuli and form memories based on experience, and yet we know they don't have anything we would call brains. We're pretty sure that a dog is conscious, but is there something that it's like to be a bat? Or a shrimp? When did consciousness arise in the evolutionary time frame? Is it an all-or-nothing proposition, or can you be 15% conscious? We have created artificial intelligence (AI) that also has complexity, information processing, and stimulus response... When it tells us it's conscious, will we believe it?

Harris also presents aspects of our own conscious experience that throw off expectations and constrain our theories. Our brains fudge a lot of our sensory inputs to create cohesive "binding": a perception that things are happening simultaneously. A serious neurological look at our decision-making processes reveals that decisions are only reported to our conscious "selves", and not made by them. This casts doubt on the concept of free will, and Harris explores the societal and logical implications of that particular illusion. Brain surgeries have revealed split-brain patients whose left and right hemispheres don't talk to each other, resulting in multiple, competing centers of consciousness (for example, the right hemisphere takes an action based on information the left hemisphere doesn't have, and the left hemisphere comes up with its own justification for the action). This suggests we might have multiple centers of consciousness that work together to create the semblance of a whole. Sleep is an interesting window into our ability to generate vibrant simulation without concurrent sensory input. "Locked-in syndrome" lets us know that it's possible to be conscious without the ability to speak or generate any indication of awareness (with frightening implications for anesthesia and end-of-life decisions). Drugs can alter consciousness and even remove the illusion of an "I" that is doing the experiencing. Practiced meditation can accomplish similar feats of breaking the illusion of self-as-passenger within the body.

About halfway through the book, Harris switches gears and advocates for a solution that many have written off: panpsychism. Panpsychism addresses the problem of consciousness arising from non-conscious material by positing that consciousness is inherent in ALL matter to begin with. The common criticism is that this sounds mystical and absurd on its face: we picture desk chairs upset that we're sitting in them, or individual atoms with attitudes. Harris agrees that these are absurd conclusions to draw, and regrets the baggage of the term. This is not a claim that every object is conscious to a human level: there are degrees of consciousness and there are objects that we should expect to have no information processing worth considering. Harris points to a number prominent scientists (she has talked to an impressive array of thinkers and researchers for this book) who have entertained a version of panpsychism that might resolve some of the problems traditional models haven't made headway in solving. And yet, she admits that even with the hard problem addressed, many other issues remain (such as explaining qualia - the subjective attributes we experience - and the fact that this theory doesn't fare well with Occam's demand for simple explanations). Harris insists she's not completely convinced of panpsychism, but is convinced that it's worth taking seriously. I would love to have heard some potential ways this hypothesis could be tested. While I do not leave convinced, I will pay attention to panpsychist explanations far more than I would have otherwise. For the remainder of the book, Harris continues her interesting conversation on consciousness, but now in the light of panpsychism's potential explanatory power.

As a funny aside, Annaka Harris references journalist and author Michael Harris (no relation), psychedelic researcher Robin Carhart-Harris (no relation), reporter and meditation promoter Dan Harris (no relation), but not neuroscientist, author, podcaster and meditation proponent Sam Harris (her husband). It's quite the convention of Harrises, and the exclusion of her very-qualified-on-this-topic partner seemed like a conscious (heh) effort to avoid him having too much influence or getting outsized credit for the book. Alternately, I wondered if he wanted to avoid being seen as championing panpsychism. According to on Sam's podcast, he was simply too preoccupied with his podcast and meditation app to return the copy-editing favor that she bestows on his books.

Bottom line: it's a quick read, well written, that will give you a lot of food for thought. Or whatever is going on in your head.
3 reviews
June 18, 2019
I wanted to give this 3 stars, because going in, I had such high hopes for it as a brief introduction to the major questions in the field of consciousness. And, in fairness, it did engage my interest in the topic. But the author’s style was disappointingly opaque. Harris often introduces a new question or idea, but never explores it in depth. And her explanations of complex ideas (especially in quantum mechanics) often leave quite a bit to be desired.

More significantly, the author clearly has a preference for the Panpsychic school of thought, and this bias permeates most of the book. Which is fine! Plenty of scientific/philosophical authors share their opinions, rather than only facts, in their books. But, given Harris� strong preference for a single philosophy, the book should have been marketed as a defense of Panpsychism (or, at the very least, a manifesto encouraging scientists to take a closer look at Panpsychism) rather than a general discussion on consciousness. I went in expecting a balanced introduction to contemporary theories about consciousness; I was disappointed in this regard.

And as a student of psychology, Harris loses me when she declares that “we know that the idea of the self, as a concrete entity, is an illusion,� going on to argue that our conscious experience, therefore, is simply “what it’s like to be over here as this [particular] configuration of atoms.� Such a blanket statement is fundamentally flawed.

Of course the “self� does not exist in a physical sense. And of course our self-concept constantly changes, as we integrate new ideas and experiences into our psyche. However, to make the sweeping generalization that the self *does not exist* is to discount decades of research in psychology. A large body of empirical evidence in psychology tells us that the variables generally considered to constitute the self (personality, genetic predispositions, individual experiences) have a profound influence on our actions and psychological states. If they didn’t, how could we predict human behavior at all? I understand that Harris� book has more of a philosophical/neurological bent than a psychological one, but this oversight on her part undermines her arguments.

And, ultimately, that’s the biggest problem I had with the book: in an effort to defend her views, Harris often relies on tenuous arguments to support her claims. It’s too bad, because Harris� clear love for the topic is infectious, and like I said, the book has interested me in learning more about consciousness.
Profile Image for Makmild.
738 reviews196 followers
Read
March 25, 2022
หนังสือเล่มบางแค่เนี้ย� (100กว่าหน้า ขนาดเอห้า) แต่โคตรยาก เนื้อหาก็ยา� การอธิบายให้เข้าใจก็ยาก ยากไปซะทุกอย่า� แต่สนุ� (และปวดหัวด้ว�) แล� mindblow มากๆ แบ� โอโห

ประเด็นหนังสือคือไม่ได้ตอบคำถามว่าจิตรู้สำนึกคืออะไร (เพราะยังไม่มีคำตอ�) จิตใจมนุษย� การรู้คิดและตัวตนที่ประกอบร่างเป็นสิ่งมีชีวิตลี้ลับไม่แพ้กับอวกาศและควอนตัม (แถมไม่ค่อยได้รับความสนใจเท่�) การอธิบายเรื่องนี้เลยยากกว่าอธิบายควอนตัมอี� (หนังสือควอนตัมยังพ� “เข้าใจ� ได้มากกว่า) แต่หนังสือ อธิบายในมุมของนักเขียนว่� ทุกอย่างมีจิตรู้สำนึ� (เขาก็อธิบายว่าอาจผิ� ถ้าในอนาคตมีการวิจัยและพิสูจน์ได้มากกว่านี�) โดยทุกอย่างที่ว่าม� แม้จะมีจิตรู้สำนึกแต่ก็ไม่ได้มีระดับที่เท่ากัน ต่างกันมากน้อยแล้วแต่ความซับซ้อน

ซึ่งถ้าเป็นอย่างที่นักเขียนว่ามาจริ� มันจะนำไปสู่คำถามเชิงศีลธรรมในอนาคตได้มา� เช่� ถ้างั้นเอไอเมื่อซับซ้อนมากพอก็จะมีจิตรู้สำนึ� แล้วอะไรจะเป็นตัวกำหนดว่าเอไอหนึ่งเครื่องต่างกับมนุษย์หนึ่งคน? (เอาหล่ะ แต่หนังสือก็ไม่ได้ไปประเด็นนี้ เชื่อมโยงเอาเอง)

นอกจากคำถามเชิงศีลธรรมปรัชญา มันก็ยังลามไปถึงปัญหาศาสนา อัตลักษณ์ของมนุษย์อีกด้ว� แต่จริงๆแล้วมันก็พูดต่อได้อีกหลายปัญหาที่เกิดจากแค่คำถามเดียวที่ยังเป็นปริศนาอยู่ว่า จิตรู้สำนึกคืออะไรกันแน่?

สรุปเล่มนี้ อ่านยากมาก� แต่สนุ� 555555 ชอ� ออกแนว hype� เหมือนโดปยามาอะ (ไม่เคยโดปแต่เคยเห็นในซีรีย� Breakind bad ทรงคล้ายๆกัน) ส่วนตัวที่คิดว่าสนุกเพราะเราสงสัยเรื่องพวกนี้อยู่พอด� อย่างเวลาอ่านงานควอนตัมก็จะสงสัยว่� ถ้าทุกอย่างเป็นควอนตัม ร่างกายเรา ความคิดเราก็เป็นควอนตัมด้วยหรือเปล่า แล้วความรู้สึกละ? เล่มนี้เลยเหมือนตอบโจทย์ดีค่ะ
Profile Image for Greg.
Author3 books46 followers
August 9, 2019
To say this book is thought provoking is an understatement. It will challenge the way you think about yourself, and about the nature of reality, and it may scare the hell out of you, too. Author Annaka Harris brings a lively curiosity, and a welcome humility, to the hard problem of consciousness, and I applaud her for advancing a conversation that too often makes people feel uncomfortable and threatened, and causes them to react dismissively. "Humanity is young," she writes,"and we have barely begun to understand our place in the cosmos." In other words, let's try to keep an open mind here.
Profile Image for Bakunin.
286 reviews269 followers
November 2, 2019
This proved to be a frustrating read. The advantage being that it managed to illuminate many of my disagreements with Annaka and her husband, Sam Harris.

"Conscious" is supposed to be a 'brief guide to the fundamental mystery of the mind' but all too often ends in up simplifying complex problems. To start off her definition of what is conscious leaves one unfulfilled. She uses Thomas Nagels definition from his essay "what is it like to be a bat" wherein Nagel famously asserts that “an organism has conscious mental states if and only if there is something that it is like to be that organism—something it is like for the organism." So for example a rock doesn't have a subjective experience, whereas being a bat would give one a quite unique experience of the world. I don't mind that definition but I don't think its perhaps a strong enough definition to lend itself to deeper philosophical and scientific discussion.

Annaka then uses David Chalmers famous zombie argument to further explore what consciousness is. Chalmers says that we can imagine a world where humans do everything as we normally do but where we don't have any subjective (that is to say conscious) experience of the world. Humans in this world are philosophical zombies. Even though Annaka admits that this just a hypothetical situation, she still uses it to prove her somewhat murky views of the universe. She thinks (and uses some scientific research to prove this) that consciousness doesn't have a function: we are merely under the illusion that our subjective "I" is doing really anything at all. So why are we conscious?
I must say I find this line of reasoning a tad absurd as it might well be reasonable to think that consciousness is a consequence of our evolution. As living organisms develop instincts in order to maximize pleasure and minimize pain, their brains and therefore their consciousness also increases. This seems perfectly reasonable to me. And yet, to mrs. Harris consciousness is this mysterious thing which seems to be unexplainable. I would also add that I believe that we don't really need to like the explanation for consciousness for it to be a sound and scientific one. Our brains and instincts are not adapted to understand (intuitively) the explanations which science gives us.

The author then proceeds to panpsychism. As consciousness isn't doing anything in this world and as it remains a mystery, perhaps all things have some kind of consciousness built into them. If consciousness is just complex handling of information, then surely you can argue that even tiny bacteria are conscious in some sense of the word?
The author usually singles out something in the universe and then extrapolates to the nth degree. To better understand my critique of her reasoning I will use an analogy. If I build a car, then it is the sum of all the parts that is the car. The parts of the car don't have any intrinsic car-nature to them. They only become a car because I organize different parts in a specific way. Consciousness can be similar to this as it cannot be explained by reducing it to a mere microbe. Mrs. Harris has a hard time accepting that the car analogy or strong emergence (as it is called in the scientific literature) is believable. Why would something suddenly spring into existence which was not there to begin with? I am not sure have an answer to that specific question but my spontaneous answer is that this is how humans work. We see the world this way as it makes common sense. If I sit on a chair, I am not worried that I will fall through it because of what quantum mechanics tell me about the world. Is there a chair nature to the different atoms in the chair? The Swedish author Lena Andersson has written about this specific problem and her explanation of the phenomenon is that we humans use abstract ideas to elucidate reality. There is no perfect chair, but there is an idea of the chair. That doesn't make the chair any less real. (This is based on her quite interesting reading of Plato).

Another question which pops up is in what way a tiny unicellular organism has an experience? Aren't we changing the definition of the word experience in order to make panpsychism theory more sound?
Profile Image for LUCAS H. GOLDING.
131 reviews3 followers
June 6, 2019
For those of you living on another planet that were unaware of the debate over whether Free Will is real or not, I cannot recommend this book enough. One quote that particularly caught my eye was as follows: “The concept of a conscious will that is free seems to be incoherent—it suggests that one’s will is separate and isolated from the rest of its environment, yet paradoxically able to influence its environment by making choices within it.�
Although it is short read, do not underestimate its content. It’s packed with real world experiments and thought experiments that back up its claims. As for what Consciousness is, it’s a bit more complicated. Annaka Harris goes into detail about the concept of panpsychism- basically it states that consciousness may be Inherent in everything, including energy itself.(I know, it’s sounds crazy but after reading the book I’ve come to understand that this theory is one of the most agreed upon speculations amongst neuroscience and philosophers.) She by no means says that we have all the answers, but uses the knowledge on hand to make the clearest explanation of Consciousness that I’ve seen as of this writing. A must read for anyone interested in philosophy/ neuroscience.
Profile Image for Alien Bookreader.
347 reviews43 followers
January 4, 2021
Overall an interesting little book about why consciousness is more mysterious than we may think. It reads like an open essay somewhere between science journalism and a philosophical argument, but it would be stronger if she firmly picked one style rather than straddling between them. In depth review below:

Annaka Harris sets out to illustrate why the nature of consciousness is difficult to define. Her line of inquiry is not focused so much on “what are the neural correlates of consciousness� or “what is the function of consciousness� so much as “what is consciousness exactly�?

Harris takes the readers' background knowledge somewhat for granted, bringing in some assumptions without diving deeply into them. One of these is the assumption that free will is an illusion. Another is that there is no way to prove that another being has consciousness from outside observation (ie. Philosophical Zombies). I agree with her viewpoint on both of these topics and I’m familiar with the arguments behind them. However, she summarizes them briefly without convincing the reader of them. It would be better to do a slow reveal of the arguments for these views or if not that, to leave it an open question. To write a quick chapter with the takeaway “of course free will is an illusion� is to reduce a huge and controversial topic into a footnote. Free will may be altogether beyond the scope of a small book on consciousness.

The title wasn’t exactly matching for the book. More than a "guide" to consciousness this books reads like an essay in favor of a specific goal: separating consciousness from the idea of selfhood.

Harris brings in several examples and evidence for conscious experience being fragmented: split brains that can contain two centers of consciousness, sensory information coming into our neural processing at different times and rates (an then a binding process creates the illusion that our it all happens at the same time), our consciousness over time, fragmenting when we sleep or are under anesthesia, and of course the famous panpsychism argument (perhaps rather than consciousness “emerging suddenly�, consciousness is a kind of property of matter present in all matter, but taking on a complex form in brains).

The ideas are interesting, but they come across as a bit biased when titled “A Brief Guide� to consciousness. In some way it’s neither here nor there - not totally fleshing out arguments in favor of a stance but not giving equal time to different theories and ideas (ie. she could give more time to arguments in favor of “emergence� rather than panpsychism). Harris’s writing style is somewhere between journalistic and argumentative.

If it has to be one or the other I would rather she take a firmer stance and flesh out the issues more rather than glossing over them. The topic is really interesting but it’s the kind of topic that has the most impact when the reader really has to grapple with it rather than read a summary of it.

For instance, when describing how it is hard to ascribe consciousness to other beings only from observation she mentions that starfish also move to avoid obstacles despite having no central nervous system, and this can mirror complex human behavior. She skips ahead before letting this sink in, letting the reader wonder where exactly they draw the line between conscious behavior and mechanistic behavior.

Harris mentions briefly that during both her pregnancies she experienced altered states and sensations she never imagined were “on the menu� of human experience. Then she just skips ahead before letting the reader know what she experienced or what the implications may be of hormonal changes on consciousness, experience, a sense of selfhood. I find myself asking, “wait wait tell me more�, but she quickly moves to the next topic.

This book was an interesting balance of philosophical questions and scientific exploration into the nature of consciousness and selfhood, but the writing left something to be desired. I hope Annaka Harris continues writing on these topics. I would be interested to see where she will go with these topics.
Profile Image for Brett Williams.
Author2 books65 followers
December 11, 2020
This book asks one of the most fascinating questions, “Why would any collection of matter in the universe be conscious?� Nobody knows. So, like answers to what is time, matter, or light, some of the answers are just as fun to ponder. Freaky realities are offered from neuroscience that put the source and operation of consciousness in question, but in many cases, only for those with injury, disease, or malfunction. Like a broken machine made to operate, of course, it acts odd. But central to the author’s message is that consciousness is a universal illusion. The author makes much use of things like “binding.� Light reflected off an object—like a tennis ball hitting a racket—and the sound from it hitting impinge on our senses at different times. Waiting for the last stimulus, our brain “binds� them together in time, providing the illusion of simultaneity.

But the speed of light is about 1-foot per nanosecond. Sound travels at about 1-foot per millisecond, while nerve signals run about three times slower than sound. That optic signal first to reach our eyes will reach our brains about two milliseconds before the sound hits our ears, which arrives at our brain about a millisecond after that—a three-millisecond separation. Does it matter? I’ve toiled with lasers that produce femtosecond pulses. To these circuits, 3-milliseconds feels like an eternity. One femtosecond is to a single second as 1-second is to 32 million years. But to the world humans live in, a few millisecond separation is the same as simultaneous. What illusion?

More doubt is cast on free will, “consciousness being the last to know.� We flinch at some startling noise before we recognize it. It’s asserted that “we� are our consciousness. That other thing, the subconscious or autopilot or whatever, is something not “me.� Says who?

The book ends courageously with ponderings of the hot-potato notion that consciousness (not self) may be a fundamental aspect of the universe like charge and matter, called panpsychism. Kooky as it sounds, the author does a reasonable job of considering it. Though the author’s a little miffed that physicists take seriously ten quantum dimensions, but not panpsychism. The reason being that quantum dimensions fall out of mathematical analysis, not mere speculation alone. Just because both are analogously whacky doesn’t mean both have equal validity.

While there are interesting morsels to ponder, and the author poo-poos complexity theory (which seems to be the most likely answer), for me, the book was more a pleasant muse than a revelation.
Profile Image for Mark Robison.
1,162 reviews88 followers
July 7, 2019
A short book whose acknowledgments were so good, they almost caused me to bump it up a star. It's so generous and filled with good will that you can’t help but realize how selfish most other acknowledgment sections are. And the list of scientists and philosophers who offered feedback is jaw-dropping in their prominence.

As for the book, it offers some of the clearest and most concise descriptions of free will and consciousness I’ve ever come across. The book's biggest contribution is a case for panpsychism � the idea that everything contains an element of consciousness, including the keys of my keyboard that I’m typing this with. Of course, she's not suggesting that all matter is capable of complex thought, just bits of consciousness, because otherwise, it's difficult to explain how consciousness appears. She takes apart the pieces of what we consider consciousness and explains how those traits are seen in things we don’t normally attribute consciousness to, such as how a "mother" tree can tell the difference between her genetic kin and unrelated trees of the same species � and can actively help them.

One especially intriguing part brings together the way a conscious observer today has the power to affect the path of a particle 10 billion years ago. And if you think this sounds absurd, Harris will agree with you and then offer convincing evidence to indicate it just might be true anyway.

Grade: A-
83 reviews119 followers
June 10, 2019
Well researched, succinct, lucid. This little book is a must-read for any conscious being wondering what (the fuck) a conscious being is. There may not be that much novel information here if you've spent a while pondering this mystery, but you will certainly enjoy seeing all your favorite names in the consciousness camp- Chalmers, Gazzaniga, Ramachandran, etc etc etc and their ideas organized and explained in language most people can understand. Harris treats the mystery with the respect it deserves without lapsing into what some would call 'woo', but is also willing to step outside the box and consider perspectives that are not yet mainstream.
Profile Image for Val Timke.
149 reviews13 followers
January 4, 2021
This was so thought provoking. There were so many aspects to consciousness I hadn't considered, such as the idea that it is separate from the "self" (shown through meditation in which someone can remain conscious but lose a sense of self). So, what other forms might consciousness take? Could other things in the universe be conscious but without a sense of self?

This really was a brief guide. It took me less than an hour to read. It touches on ideas without really going in-depth on them. But I would love to keep reading about this topic in the (near) future.
Profile Image for Przemek.
20 reviews5 followers
March 2, 2021
I liked it a lot but it was a mistake to try an audiobook. The guide might be brief but it's referencing other sources and requires time to stop and think deeply about the material. It goes to the to-reread-list ;) The list of the author's friends that contributed to the book is stunning. What a network of thinkers!
Profile Image for Kammy.
159 reviews8 followers
May 30, 2020
This book was a good intro to a very complex subject matter. It’s not a book to fully grasp all material, but to get you curious and explore more.
Profile Image for Daniel Hageman.
357 reviews50 followers
October 26, 2019
I rate this book in full recognition that I was predisposed to endure some serious confirmation bias along the way, as Annaka's previous appearances on various podcasts and panels had all but assured me that her views within the realms of 'philosophy of mind', and more specifically consciousness itself, were near full alignment with my own. However, knowing as such, I felt myself reading the book actually hoping to find areas of disagreement, or at least find fault for 'oversimplification' or 'old news' content, merely so I could avoid the idea that my appreciation for the book would indeed be biased. But to the demise of my ego’s will for bipartisanship, I had no such luck, finding no serious qualms worthy of mention.

Annaka really does accomplish her goal of exploring a difficult-to-discuss topic in a succinct manner that not only avoids oversimplification but includes sufficient details of relevant studies, fascinating thought experiments, and citations to the views/work of professionals in the field, all while maintaining a tone of curiosity and 'wonder' (perhaps homage to her first book) throughout every page. For a topic that is too often overladen with philosophical jargon or new-age mysticism (I personally prefer to sit with dictionary in hand than deal with the latter), ‘Conscious� discusses many of the questions that have surrounded the issue for decades on end, and does so in a digestible and awe-inspiring style, making this the perfect recommendation for anyone new to the topic, or for any philosophical juggernaut looking for a refreshingly clear and understandable take on the mystery that is consciousness.
Profile Image for Jeff.
661 reviews54 followers
December 23, 2022
I encourage the more energetic and popular reviewers on GR to write a dialogue between Annaka and infamous hubby Sam. Some settings to consider:
- Xmas Eve after the kids are in bed
- Stuck in their car in the Holland Tunnel
- Podcast


Update Dec 23, 2022:
Inspired by the manny[sic] Rayner ChatGPT "reviews", i figured i'd ask the aforementioned AI to create one of the dialogues mentioned above. Alas, OpenAI requires email address and telephone # before they'll let me play with their enslaved artificial intelligence. I'm too old and cynical for this nonsense, so the virtual community will have to live without it (ie, live without something that nobody else is aware of and that nobody else wants).
Profile Image for Jasper Götting.
6 reviews4 followers
June 8, 2019
A nice, brief overview of consciousness: The problems, the theories, and a tiny bit history. It spends pleasantly little time with blown-up examples and filler content and makes a (to me) surprisingly good case for versions of (post-)panpsychism which I did not anticipate updating towards. Sadly too much focus on the said case and the book glances over other well-developed theories and views: One mention of qualia eliminativism, two-three sentences on Integrated Information Theory, no mention of Global Workspace Theory; you see what I mean. Should've had panpsychism in the title, really. But I see why this would kill the sales, so I'm sympathetic.
Nonetheless, 3.5 stars since I really liked the format, style and overview.
Profile Image for Moh. Nasiri.
323 reviews102 followers
August 3, 2019
What is consciousness and what is not?

Consciousness is a mysterious thing, but being conscious essentially means that you are having an experience. The one thing we know for sure about consciousness is that human beings have it, but that’s about it. Upon closer inspection, however, we find that consciousness isn’t tied to any specific human thoughts or behaviors. When we rule out these human aspects of consciousness, we can begin to speculate as to whether other things in the world also have conscious experiences. The theory of panpsychism goes even further, claiming that consciousness is an intrinsic element of all matter(blinkist summary)
Profile Image for Kin.
498 reviews159 followers
October 1, 2021
สั้น กระชับ และชวนปวดหัว ถ้าชอบเรื่อ� consciousness อยู่แล้วก็อาจจะไม่ได้มีอะไรใหม� หนังสือไม่ได้ให้คำตอบอะไรเพราะมันตอบไม่ได้ด้วยความรู้ที่เรามี แต่ประเด็นคำถามต่าง� ก็สนุกชวนคิดใช้ได้ เสียดายที่ไม่ค่อยได้พูดถึงการวิจั� � ปัจจุบันมากอย่างที่หวังไว้
Profile Image for Mohamed al-Jamri.
178 reviews144 followers
September 6, 2019
واع: دليل موجز للغز العقل الأعظم


ما هو الوعي؟ وما هي وظيفته؟ وهل يمكن للعلم أن يجيب على هذه الأسئلة؟ يبدو للوهلة الأولى أننا كلنا نعرف ما هو الوعي، ولكن عندما نأتي للإجابة نتعثر، خصوصًا عندما نحاول التفريق بينه وبين الأمور المرتبطة به كالتركيز والاحساس بالذات وغيرها. هذا هو أحد أكبر الأسئلة التي عجز العلم والفلسفة عن الإجابة عنها بشكل واف حتى الآن.


في هذا الكتاب القصير، الذي بدأ كمقالة مطوّلة تأخذنا الكاتبة أناكا هاريس في جولة سريعة حول موضوع الوعي، مدافعة بشكل جيد عن ما يعرف بإسم الروحية الشاملة - بان سايكزم. أناكا هي زوجة الكاتب وعالم الأعصاب سام هارس المعروف بدفاعه الشرس عن الإلحاد، ومعروف أيضًا بتطرقه لمواضيع الوعي والتأمل. لو قال لي أحدهم أن هذا الكتاب من تأليفه لما كنت أشك لوهلة واحدة فالأسلوب والأفكار متقاربان جدًا.


بعد استعراض موضوع الوعي ومشاكله بشكل سريع، وهي أمور ستكون مثيرة جدًا لمن لم يقرأ حولها من قبل، تطرح الكاتبة فكرة الروحية الشاملة كتفسير للوعي، وتقول هذه الفكرة باختصار أن الوعي أمر أساسي في الوجود، بل هو أصل المادة، فالفيزياء الحديثة تصف لنا تفاعلات المادة، ولكنها عاجزة عن وصف ماهيتها. الوعي وفق هذه النظرة موجودة في كل شيء بدرجات متفاوتة، وتحرص الكاتبة على التفريق بين الوعي والذاكرة والاحساس بالذات.


هل تبدو هذه الفكرة مجنونة وقريبة من بعض الأفكار الدينية التي ما فتأ زوجها يحاربها؟ هذه هي ردة فعل الكثيرين، ولذلك تحاول الكاتبة أن تبين أنها متوافقة مع الرؤية المادية للكون، بل تشكل حلًا لمشكلة الوعي التي يستغلها بعض المتدينين كحجة. موضوع الكتاب عميق، ولا اعتقد أن كتابًا قصيرًا كهذا سيشكل أكثر من مقدمة وفاتح شهية للقارئ، خصوصًا وأن الكاتبة لم تقصر في ذكر المصادر التي يستطيع ث الاستزادة منها.
Profile Image for lille rev.
61 reviews13 followers
January 6, 2021
Har aldri blitt mer frustrert av en bok.

Det som frustrerte meg mest er hvordan Harris beskriver at Panpsykisme er et bedre alternativ til å forstå bevissthet enn såkalt «hard emergens» siden den er mer i vitenskapens ånd fordi den er «enklere». Dette er, for å sitere Foster Wallace, så fordummende at det praktisk talt sikler. Dette blir enda mer dritfrustrerende når en av de største forkjemperne for panpsykisme er enig i at tankegangen ikke hviler på noe form for empiri.

Istedenfor hviler panpsykismen på punktet om at vi har ingen tredjepersons-observasjon av førstepersonbevissthet med det fungerende rammeverket. Vi vet bare at bevissthet eksisterer fordi vi som individer erfarer verden. Så derfor må vi utvide søket med et nytt konseptuelt rammeverk. Javel.

Det skal sies at denne boken er hverken en vitenskapelig bok, eller en filosofisk bok. Den eneste reelle slutningen som trekkes er at vi må være nysgjerrige og åpne i møte med livets store mysterier. Wow..
Profile Image for Leah.
727 reviews115 followers
February 28, 2022
Interesting thought provoking read. A mix of science, psychology, and philosophy.
What is consciousness, is it a soul, what defines it, what's the purpose of it, can we combine it with other consciousnesses? So many questions...
Is a conscious when you have memories and can feel things, because a Venus fly trap plant has that, does that mean a plant has consciousness? Oh oh vegetarians and vegans :P
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