Consul wrote: ↑May 15th, 2021, 11:16 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑May 13th, 2021, 6:08 pm
So there is an incentive to be extra careful about challenging orthodox positions, which can lead researchers to groupthink. I suspect this is the case with consciousness researchers exclusively focusing on neurobiology, completely ignoring the extreme interdependencies with other body systems. I think it highly unlikely that this "brain in a vat" approach will work.
Life started with a metabolism, and nervous systems and brains only evolved to better feed and protect metabolic body structures. So I think that would be a respectable place to start when seeking the very most basic source of being. It would mean a multi-disciplinary approach to consciousness studies that starts with the brain-gut connection (at least) rather treating everything beyond the brain stem as a black box.
No, the "cerebrocentrists" do not "completely ignor[e] the extreme interdependencies with other body systems." They just think that other body systems or mechanisms aren't part of the organ, i.e. the constitutive neurophysiological mechanisms, of mind and consciousness but only external influencers. Brains depend physiologically on the organisms of which they are part, but it is not the case that the body or organism as a whole, in its entirety is the organ of mind and consciousness.
Decades of neuroscience and billions of dollars have ultimately produced nothing whatsoever as regards the genesis of consciousness.
Zero results. Nothing. Zip. Nada.
In context, it is fair to imagine that neuroscience may
never solve the hard problem. Thus, practitioners can be expected to continue (for the most part) to treat the hard problem with attitudes ranging from disdain to disinterest. In a sense, it hardly matters, because neuroscience is geared towards medical rather than philosophical outcomes.
It's reasonable to consider that a critical all-body attribute such as consciousness may not necessarily stem from a single organ. It's not outlandish to wonder if the interdependencies required for consciousness are more intrinsic than previously assumed. Other body systems may not "external influencers", as you suggest, but may be part of the process. The neurocentric approach over the years has occasionally raised hopes of solving the hard problem, but they have always turned out to be false flags.
The way neurocentrist thinkers dig in suggests to me that they
want the brain to be the exclusive generator of consciousness. No doubt this pertains to arguments around materialism and metaphysics. Ideological battles such as these only serve to distract IMO.