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research article

First-person experience cannot rescue causal structure theories from the unfolding argument

Herzog, Michael H.  
•
Schurger, Aaron
•
Doerig, Adrien
January 12, 2022
Consciousness and Cognition

We recently put forward an argument, the Unfolding Argument (UA), that integrated information theory (IIT) and other causal structure theories are either already falsified or unfalsifiable, which provoked significant criticism. It seems that we and the critics agree that the main question in this debate is whether first-person experience, independent of third-person data, is a sufficient foundation for theories of consciousness. Here, we argue that pure first-person experience cannot be a scientific foundation for IIT because science relies on taking measurements, and pure first-person experience is not measurable except through reports, brain activity, and the relationship between them. We also argue that pure first-person experience cannot be taken as ground truth because science is about backing up theories with data, not about asserting that we have ground truth independent of data. Lastly, we explain why no experiment based on third-person data can test IIT as a theory of consciousness. IIT may be a good theory of something, but not of consciousness. We conclude by exposing a deeper reason for the above conclusions: IIT’s consciousness is by construction fully dissociated from any measurable thing and, for this reason, IIT implies that both the level and content of consciousness are epiphenomenal, with no causal power. IIT and other causal structure theories end up in a form of dissociative epiphenomenalism, in which we cannot even trust reports about first-person experiences. But reports about first-person experiences are taken as ground truth and the foundation for IIT’s axioms. Therefore, accepting IIT leads to rejecting its own axioms. We also respond to several other criticisms against the UA.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.concog.2021.103261
Author(s)
Herzog, Michael H.  
Schurger, Aaron
Doerig, Adrien
Date Issued

2022-01-12

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Consciousness and Cognition
Volume

98

Start page

1

End page

12,103261

Subjects

UA

•

Unfolding Argument

•

IIT

•

Integrated Information Theory

•

CST

•

Causal Structure Theory

•

i/o

•

input/output

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPSY  
FunderGrant Number

FNS

191718

FNS

176153

Available on Infoscience
February 7, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/185198
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