THE SCIENCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS
AND THE CONSCIOUSNESS OF SCIENCE
by Paul Jones
<0>
Abstract
--------
Gary Schouborg article is an excellent introduction to the methodology of
consciousness studies, stressing the importance of materialism, dialectics
and human activity for true understanding of consciousness-related phenomena.
Despite of a few minor drawbacks, it may be considered one of the most consistent
approaches available for today.
---------------------------------------------------------
<1>
'The exploration of any new field is necessarily bound to the search for
and development of the appropriate method. It might be formulated as a general
thought that every radically new approach to a scientific problem necessarily
implies the elaboration of the new techniques and new ways of investigation.
The object and method of study are hence highly interrelated.' 'The work
on the problem and the development of the method goes on either in parallel
or at least in a common direction. The specification of the method becomes
one of the most important tasks of research. Here, the method comes as both
a precondition and a product, a tool and a result of the study.' [1, ch.2]
<2>
I have quoted these two passages from L.Vygotsky to express my solidarity
with Gary Schouborg's approach seeking for the general foundations of consciousness
studies without restricting them to one of the narrow theoretical paradigms
advocated in the contemporary science split into a handful of fighting with
each other and equally abstract schools.
<3>
The first evident merits of the article reviewed are:
1. the awareness of the possibility of a centralized study of consciousness
by a special science;
2. the realization of the necessity for this science to comply with the
general norms of scientific inquiry;
3. the attention to the methodological basis of science in general nd 'science
of consciousness (SOC)' in
the first place.
Since consciousness is a many-level phenomenon, SOC can only coordinate
the efforts of different sciences related to conscious phenomena, being
in this sense interdisciplinary. It need not prescribe other sciences how
they ought to deal with consciousness within their own inquiry; however,
it must bring the diverse data on various aspects of consciousness coming
from other sciences under a general conceptual scheme, which could serve
as a methodological frame for those very sciences. The interaction of consciousness-related
sciences hence would be hierarchically organized, with lower-level sciences
providing the factual basis for the higher levels, while a higher-level
science supplying the methodological principles to the levels below. SOC,
being the topmost level of this hierarchical structure, could be thought
of as representing all of the hierarchy, which may virtually include all
the sciences known. In this sense, it may well play the role of philosophy.
However, the same hierarchy could be unfolded with the focus on another
object (say, the personality), and then SOC would occupy its place on one
of the lower levels of the resulting hierarchical structure, considering
only one aspect of the object studied (e.g. the conscious level of the personality).
Interdisciplinary nature of any science is hence not absolute, depending
on the specific hierarchical structure considered.
<4>
In the view of the refoldability of the hierarchy of science described above,
one might find a few week points in Schouborg's presentation. Thus, the
presence of non-science intrusions ('dialectical embrace' with philosophy,
syncretic 'e-claims' and ideological 'n-claims') which is said to be a characteristic
feature of SOC is actually a common situation with all the sciences, which
are all culturally conditioned, combining all the variety of social phenomena,
from shear making money or entertainment to political intricacies, moral
obligations or sublime creativity [2]. Also, such things as concentration,
mindfulness and wisdom are indispensable in every science, rather than being
the skills of any particular specialty. Reflectivity is common for all the
sciences, as well as for the arts and philosophy--- though the forms of
reflection would differ, of course.
<5>
The specificity of SOC among the other sciences is not clear from the paper
reviewed, much due to the intentional focus on the epistemology with no
recourse to ontology of consciousness. However, one cannot distinguish one
science from another knowing nothing about the objects they study; all what
is left is the most general methodology of science, which is the same for
all the scientific specialties. Virtually, any science is defined by its
object, and, leaving the object off, one would characterize it as a science,
but no more than that.
<6>
Another side of the lack of specificity is the absence of a clear understanding
of the internal organization of SOC. The map of major methodologies suggested
[<22>] is rather loose and eclectic, and no objective necessity is
felt behind it: just an empirical enumeration, with no interrelationships
being traced (though claimed to be outlined). In a methodological work,
one might expect a more logical structure, where the hierarchy of components
would follow from a fundamental idea governing the whole study.
<7>
Despite of all these drawbacks, the article is most interesting since it
is based on an ideology not very common in the scientific community of today.
The keywords are: materialism, dialectics and activity.
<8>
*Materialism*
The idea that every human experience must originate from some external object
existing in a way relatively independent of any experiencing may seem quite
appealing in many sciences, but very few people have ever been aware of
its deeper consequences. Being materialistic is especially difficult in
the sciences whose inquiry would have to penetrate into the realm of subjectivity.
Is it possible to study the intimate 1st-person experiences in an objective
way? Can there be any methods of study other than mere introspection? How
do subjective experiences differ from the effect of environment on a physical
body, or the sensations of the animals? These and other questions have to
be consistently answered in any science pretending to study consciousness
as an actually existing phenomenon.
<9>
Most existing treatments of the problem fail to describe consciousness in
a consistently materialistic way. They either admit the existence of something
beyond any scientific description, or simply deny the reality of subjectivity,
reducing conscious behavior to purely physiological processes. Materialism
gets often associated with reductionism, assuming that consciousness is
a product of the brain and is located within the individual's body. But
the specificity of subjectivity escapes clear expression in terms of individual
experience, and the best one could do within this 'biofunctional' paradigm
is to suggest a many-level description, with the lower levels providing
one of the possible implementations for the higher-level functions that
are qualitatively different from any specific implementation. Then the hierarchy
of the subject can be phenomenologically described in any detail---but one
can never tell why one hierarchical structure is more preferable than another,
and where the whole hierarchy comes from. As a result, the study would either
momentarily fall into idealism, like in [3], or postpone the solution of
the problem in a kind of 'dual-aspect monism' or 'cybernetic realism' [4].
<10>
Gary Schouborg sems to advocate a dedicatedly materialistic view on subjectivity
and consciousness. He makes a smart notice that 'there has been found no
one who denies an independently existing world who has actually based their
action and thinking on the dictates of that denial.' [<40>] Everything
that is in consciousness is in reality first, and the necessary link between
the objectively existing world and the content of consciousness is called
*experiencing*. This principle gets consistently applied to consciousness
itself, so that it is meant to exist as an objective attribute of the subject
and one has to experience it to become aware of it and subject to scientific
analysis. This logically leads to considering reflection as one of the most
important means of scientific inquiry, and all the other aspects of science
(and SOC in particular) become hierarchical, including both immediate and
reflective levels. Reflectivity is the key to the solution of the ontological
problems of consciousness, since it is closely related to development [5].
However, Schouborg didn't further follow this line of thought in the article
reviewed, maybe intending to do it elsewhere.
<11>
*Dialectics*
The history of science knew many examples when originally materialistic
ideas could not be unfolded into a well-founded methodology and finally
got stuck in the static metaphysics, ignoring development and reflectivity.
The traditional logic failed to reconcile itself with ever changing objects
that might represent other objects too. The enhanced kind of materialism
accounting for reflection requires a different logic, which is known as
dialectics. It must be noted that both materialism without dialectics and
dialectics without materialism meet the same difficulties in describing
the developing world and its representation in the ubject---and the only
solution is to employ dialectical materialism and materialistic dialectics
[6].
<12>
The paper reviewed suggests an interesting dialectical model [<40>],
that could be correlated with the general laws of dialectics [6]. The usage
of the word 'consciousness' in this context indicates that Schouborg has
come very close to the understanding of consciousness as a *collective phenomenon*
never restricted to a single individual and existing only in the society.
This ontological claim is the key to the whole Science of Consciousness,
and its specific methodology.
<13>
The call for 'pragmatically rational (not rationalistic) inquiry' [<41>]
is strongly opposing the positivist tradition of the modern science, when
the truth is thought to be achievable entirely within science, and verifiable
(or falsified) by the logical means. The necessity of including practice
in that process is rarely recognized and expressed ith Schouborg's clarity.
Unfortunately, the brevity of the text didn't permit the author to indicate
that 'unavoidably subjective judgment' that is claimed to be 'the final
judge of truth' [<41>] assumes a kind of objectivity, being related
to the fundamental laws of social development.
<14>
*Activity*
The active nature of scientific inquiry extensively advocated by Schouborg
is, from the viewpoint of dialectical materialism, the necessary complement
to the passive cognition, implicit in most objectivist philosophies of science.
The traditional assumption that the object gets somehow represented in the
subject's knowledge ignores the development of both the object and knowledge
about it, and the active transformation of reality by the conscious subject.
But the task of science is not merely the explanation of the world, but
also the indication of the ways of its improvement. While the animal adapts
itself to the environment, the subject adapts the environment to suite their
needs---this is the drastic distinction of conscious behavior from the lower
(organic or physical) levels. Any serious study of consciousness must ccount
for this characteristic feature.
<15>
I will not quote the excellent observations of Schouborg on the active formation
of knowledge in the scientific research---they deserve to be read in the
original. It must be noted, however, that his idea of 'immediate' experience
[<5>] should be taken with care, since the reflective nature of experiencing
may easily lead one to higher-level (mediated) experiences, so that any
'immediateness' becomes relative, and any experience can be unfold into
a hierarchy of 'hidden' mediations, which are nothing else but lower-level
activities [7-9]. This minor inaccuracy of Schouborg's approach is related
to the insufficient understanding that any 1st-person experience is just
an interiorized 3rd-person experience, and any individual thought could
be considered a dialog with oneself. The very subjectivity (and consciousness)
is the result of this converting the social development into the 'internal
life' of the self [1,10].
<16>
Of course, this brief account does not describe all the findings of Gary
Schouborg's article. I would just mention the analysis of the relations
between various kinds of 'claims' and their relation to experiencing and
conceptualization, which could be neatly fit in the general scheme of [11].
The relations between SOC and TOC, together with the general methodological
map of [<22>], could be correlated with the organization of science
as described in [12]. Also, there are many more interesting parallels, of
which enumeration would lead me to a paper much longer than the one reviewed.
Commenting the writings of the others is easier than plain expressing one's
own attitudes--- and I can appreciate Gary Schouborg's attempt to formulate
the methodology 'that a critical mass of consciousness scientists will use
it to move their inquiries forward rather than endlessly debate fundamentals.'
[<3>] Though, in view of L.Vygotsky's thoughts quoted in the first
paragraph of this comment, fundamentals have to be debated as long as the
problem exists, it is very important to accentuate the basic lines before
the actual study begins, to avoid blind wandering and dead ends.
References
----------
1. L.Vygotsky
'The history of the development of the higher psychic functions.' --
Collected works, vol.3, pp.5-328 (Moscow: Pedagogika, 1983)
2. I refer to my own experience of a physicist, as well to my observations
about some other natural sciences
and humanities.
3. L.M.Vecker Psychic processes, vol. 3 (Moscow: Leningrad Univ., 1981)
4. G.R.Mulhauser Mind out of matter (forthcoming in 1997, private communication)
5. P.B.Ivanov Reflection: The ways of development (Moscow: Moscow State
Conservatory, 1984)
6. E.V.Ilyenkov Dialectical logic (Moscow: Politizdat, 1984)
7. A.N.Leontiev Activity, Consciousness and Personality (Englewood Cliffs,
NJ: Prentice Hall, 1978).
8. P.B.Ivanov 'A hierarchical theory of aesthetic perception: Musical scales.'
Leonardo, vol. 27, no.5, pp.417-421 (1994).
9. P.B.Ivanov 'A hierarchical theory of aesthetic perception: Scales in
the visual arts.'
Leonardo Music Journal, vol.5, pp. 49-55 (1995).
10. L.Vygotsky Thought and language (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1986)
11. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/3367/asp.htm
12. P.B.Ivanov Dialectics of hierarchies (Troisk, Ru: Inst. Spectrosc. Acad.
Sci. USSR, 1983)
[Paul Jones (Pavel B. Ivanov) is senior scientist, Troitsk Institute for
Innovation and Fusion Research (TRINITI), Troitsk, Moscow Region, 142092,
Russia. Degree: PhD in atomic physics. Other research: hierarchical approach
in science, art and philosophy; mathematical and physical models in aesthetics
and psychology, theory of consciousness and personality. Possible commenting:
hierarchical ideas in science and philosophy, general psychology, theories
of personality, consciousness studies.]
Email: <pjones@fly.triniti.troitsk.ru>