ABSTRACT
I argue that there is no mind-brain problem but rather that there are irreducible
subjective - objective problems. These include the difference between “inside” and
“outside” perspectives on neural states, the creation of subjective neural states
with objectified outside objects, and awareness of the self as an object in the world.
The origin of consciousness is traced to the development of meaning states, and I demonstrate how differing perspectives related to these states are mutually
irreducible. For instance, neural states are spatiotemporally distributed when observed
from the outside, while mental states are unified when experienced from the inside;
from the inside neural states are experienced as outside of themselves; and qualia
have a material reality only from the inside. Rather than positing a special substance
or immaterial process theory of consciousness, it is argued that the apparent immateriality
of mind is an artifact of the nature of the phenomenon and of the process of observation
itself.
Keywords
consciousness - subjective-objective - explanatory gap - perceptual binding - mind-brain
dichotomy