Joe Lau's wiki: Courses/2015a2230notes HOT


HOT theory of consciousness

What is it?

The Higher-Order Thought Theory of consciousness: X is conscious when there is a higher-order thought (HOT) T about X.

@[A] mental state is conscious ... just in case one has a roughly contemporaneous thought to the effect that one is in that very mental state^^^Rosenthal@

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Locke

@[A person] is a thinking intelligent Being, that has reason and reflection, and can consider it self as it self, the same thinking thing in different times and places; which it does only by that consciousness, which is inseparable from thinking, and as it seems to me essential to it: It being impossible for any one to perceive, without perceiving, that he does perceive.^^^Essay 2.27.9@

Supporting arguments and motivations

Some arguments from philosophy:

Some observations from neuroscience

See Lau, H., & Rosenthal, D. (2011). Empirical support for higher-order theories of conscious awareness. Trends in cognitive sciences, 15(8), 365-373.


Objections to the HOT theory

The liver problem (HOT is not sufficient)

The dog problem (HOT is not necessary)

Dretske’s objection

@there can be conscious differences in a person’s experience of the world – and in this sense, conscious features of his experience – of which that person is not conscious [i.e. aware].@

Byrne's comment: I can have a HOT A’ of A, and later a different HOT B’ of B, but this does not imply that I know that A’ is different from B’.

Partial consciousness

Rosenthal's likely reply:

@No higher-order thought could capture all the subtle variation of sensory quality we consciously experience. So higher-order thoughts must refer to sensory states demonstratively, perhaps as occupying this or that position in the relevant sensory field@

Example: I am having a visual experience which is this, that, that, and that.

Byrne's rejoinder:

Byrne's objection

Step #1: HOTs can be mistaken about the lower-order experience

1. I have a visual experience as of a cat, but think that I have an experience as of a dog.

2. The Marilyn room

3. "Filling in" at the blindspot

4. Not being in pain, but thinking that one is in pain.

Since a mental state and the HOT are different, it ought to be possible that one exists without the other.

Step #2

A different way of putting the argument

Conclusion

@the higher-order thought hypothesis cannot provide a more satisfactory explanation of phenomenal consciousness than an account that makes no mention of higher-order thoughts. And that is to say that it cannot provide a satisfactory explanation of phenomenal consciousness at all.@

Comments: If the HOT theory offers no theoretical advantage over the lower-order approach, then we would need to look at the empirical evidence more carefully.


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