How to pronounce "phi"
Transcript
Right now
you have a movie playing inside your head.
It's an amazing multi-track movie.
It has 3D vision and surround sound
for what you're seeing and hearing right now,
but that's just the start of it.
Your movie has smell and taste and touch.
It has a sense of your body,
pain, hunger, orgasms.
It has emotions,
anger and happiness.
It has memories, like scenes from your childhood
playing before you.
And it has this constant voiceover narrative
in your stream of conscious thinking.
At the heart of this movie is you
experiencing all this directly.
This movie is your stream of consciousness,
the subject of experience
of the mind and the world.
Consciousness is one of the fundamental facts
of human existence.
Each of us is conscious.
We all have our own inner movie,
you and you and you.
There's nothing we know about more directly.
At least, I know about my consciousness directly.
I can't be certain that you guys are conscious.
Consciousness also is what makes life worth living.
If we weren't conscious, nothing in our lives
would have meaning or value.
But at the same time, it's the most
mysterious phenomenon in the universe.
Why are we conscious?
Why do we have these inner movies?
Why aren't we just robots
who process all this input,
produce all that output,
without experiencing the inner movie at all?
Right now, nobody knows the answers
to those questions.
I'm going to suggest that to integrate consciousness
into science, some radical ideas may be needed.
Some people say a science of consciousness
is impossible.
Science, by its nature, is objective.
Consciousness, by its nature, is subjective.
So there can never be a science of consciousness.
For much of the 20th century, that view held sway.
Psychologists studied behavior objectively,
neuroscientists studied the brain objectively,
and nobody even mentioned consciousness.
Even 30 years ago, when TED got started,
there was very little scientific work
on consciousness.
Now, about 20 years ago,
all that began to change.
Neuroscientists like Francis Crick
and physicists like Roger Penrose
said now is the time for science
to attack consciousness.
And since then, there's been a real explosion,
a flowering of scientific work
on consciousness.
And this work has been wonderful. It's been great.
But it also has some fundamental
limitations so far.
The centerpiece
of the science of consciousness in recent years
has been the search for correlations,
correlations between certain areas of the brain
and certain states of consciousness.
We saw some of this kind of work
from Nancy Kanwisher and the wonderful work
she presented just a few minutes ago.
Now we understand much better, for example,
the kinds of brain areas that go along with
the conscious experience of seeing faces
or of feeling pain
or of feeling happy.
But this is still a science of correlations.
It's not a science of explanations.
We know that these brain areas
go along with certain kinds of conscious experience,
but we don't know why they do.
I like to put this by saying
that this kind of work from neuroscience
is answering some of the questions
we want answered about consciousness,
the questions about what certain brain areas do
and what they correlate with.
But in a certain sense, those are the easy problems.
No knock on the neuroscientists.
There are no truly easy problems with consciousness.
But it doesn't address the real mystery
at the core of this subject:
why is it that all that physical processing in a brain
should be accompanied by consciousness at all?
Why is there this inner subjective movie?
Right now, we don't really have a bead on that.
And you might say,
let's just give neuroscience a few years.
It'll turn out to be another emergent phenomenon
like traffic jams, like hurricanes,
like life, and we'll figure it out.
The classical cases of emergence
are all cases of emergent behavior,
how a traffic jam behaves,
how a hurricane functions,
how a living organism reproduces
and adapts and metabolizes,
all questions about objective functioning.
You could apply that to the human brain
in explaining some of the behaviors
and the functions of the human brain
as emergent phenomena:
how we walk, how we talk, how we play chess,
all these questions about behavior.
But when it comes to consciousness,
questions about behavior
are among the easy problems.
When it comes to the hard problem,
that's the question of why is it
that all this behavior
is accompanied by subjective experience?
And here, the standard paradigm
of emergence,
even the standard paradigms of neuroscience,
don't really, so far, have that much to say.
Now, I'm a scientific materialist at heart.
I want a scientific theory of consciousness
that works,
and for a long time, I banged my head
against the wall
looking for a theory of consciousness
in purely physical terms
that would work.
But I eventually came to the conclusion
that that just didn't work for systematic reasons.
It's a long story,
but the core idea is just that what you get
from purely reductionist explanations
in physical terms, in brain-based terms,
is stories about the functioning of a system,
its structure, its dynamics,
the behavior it produces,
great for solving the easy problems —
how we behave, how we function —
but when it comes to subjective experience —
why does all this feel like something from the inside? —
that's something fundamentally new,
and it's always a further question.
So I think we're at a kind of impasse here.
We've got this wonderful, great chain of explanation,
we're used to it, where physics explains chemistry,
chemistry explains biology,
biology explains parts of psychology.
But consciousness
doesn't seem to fit into this picture.
On the one hand, it's a datum
that we're conscious.
On the other hand, we don't know how
to accommodate it into our scientific view of the world.
So I think consciousness right now
is a kind of anomaly,
one that we need to integrate
into our view of the world, but we don't yet see how.
Faced with an anomaly like this,
radical ideas may be needed,
and I think that we may need one or two ideas
that initially seem crazy
before we can come to grips with consciousness
scientifically.
Now, there are a few candidates
for what those crazy ideas might be.
My friend Dan Dennett, who's here today, has one.
His crazy idea is that there is no hard problem
of consciousness.
The whole idea of the inner subjective movie
involves a kind of illusion or confusion.
Actually, all we've got to do is explain
the objective functions, the behaviors of the brain,
and then we've explained everything
that needs to be explained.
Well I say, more power to him.
That's the kind of radical idea
that we need to explore
if you want to have a purely reductionist
brain-based theory of consciousness.
At the same time, for me and for many other people,
that view is a bit too close to simply
denying the datum of consciousness
to be satisfactory.
So I go in a different direction.
In the time remaining,
I want to explore two crazy ideas
that I think may have some promise.
The first crazy idea
is that consciousness is fundamental.
Physicists sometimes take some aspects of the universe
as fundamental building blocks:
space and time and mass.
They postulate fundamental laws governing them,
like the laws of gravity or of quantum mechanics.
These fundamental properties and laws
aren't explained in terms of anything more basic.
Rather, they're taken as primitive,
and you build up the world from there.
Now sometimes, the list of fundamentals expands.
In the 19th century, Maxwell figured out
that you can't explain electromagnetic phenomena
in terms of the existing fundamentals —
space, time, mass, Newton's laws —
so he postulated fundamental laws
of electromagnetism
and postulated electric charge
as a fundamental element
that those laws govern.
I think that's the situation we're in
with consciousness.
If you can't explain consciousness
in terms of the existing fundamentals —
space, time, mass, charge —
then as a matter of logic, you need to expand the list.
The natural thing to do is to postulate
consciousness itself as something fundamental,
a fundamental building block of nature.
This doesn't mean you suddenly can't do science with it.
This opens up the way for you to do science with it.
What we then need is to study
the fundamental laws governing consciousness,
the laws that connect consciousness
to other fundamentals: space, time, mass,
physical processes.
Physicists sometimes say
that we want fundamental laws so simple
that we could write them on the front of a t-shirt.
Well I think something like that is the situation
we're in with consciousness.
We want to find fundamental laws so simple
we could write them on the front of a t-shirt.
We don't know what those laws are yet,
but that's what we're after.
The second crazy idea
is that consciousness might be universal.
Every system might have some degree
of consciousness.
This view is sometimes called panpsychism:
pan for all, psych for mind,
every system is conscious,
not just humans, dogs, mice, flies,
but even Rob Knight's microbes,
elementary particles.
Even a photon has some degree of consciousness.
The idea is not that photons are intelligent
or thinking.
It's not that a photon
is wracked with angst
because it's thinking, "Aww, I'm always buzzing around near the speed of light.
I never get to slow down and smell the roses."
No, not like that.
But the thought is maybe photons might have
some element of raw, subjective feeling,
some primitive precursor to consciousness.
This may sound a bit kooky to you.
I mean, why would anyone think such a crazy thing?
Some motivation comes from the first crazy idea,
that consciousness is fundamental.
If it's fundamental, like space and time and mass,
it's natural to suppose that it might be universal too,
the way they are.
It's also worth noting that although the idea
seems counterintuitive to us,
it's much less counterintuitive to people
from different cultures,
where the human mind is seen as much more
continuous with nature.
A deeper motivation comes from the idea that
perhaps the most simple and powerful way
to find fundamental laws connecting consciousness
to physical processing
is to link consciousness to information.
Wherever there's information processing,
there's consciousness.
Complex information processing, like in a human,
complex consciousness.
Simple information processing,
simple consciousness.
A really exciting thing is in recent years
a neuroscientist, Giulio Tononi,
has taken this kind of theory
and developed it rigorously
with a mathematical theory.
He has a mathematical measure
of information integration
which he calls phi,
measuring the amount of information
integrated in a system.
And he supposes that phi goes along
with consciousness.
So in a human brain,
incredibly large amount of information integration,
high degree of phi,
a whole lot of consciousness.
In a mouse, medium degree of information integration,
still pretty significant,
pretty serious amount of consciousness.
But as you go down to worms,
microbes, particles,
the amount of phi falls off.
The amount of information integration falls off,
but it's still non-zero.
On Tononi's theory,
there's still going to be a non-zero degree
of consciousness.
In effect, he's proposing a fundamental law
of consciousness: high phi, high consciousness.
Now, I don't know if this theory is right,
but it's actually perhaps the leading theory right now
in the science of consciousness,
and it's been used to integrate a whole range
of scientific data,
and it does have a nice property that it is in fact simple enough
you can write it on the front of a t-shirt.
Another final motivation is that
panpsychism might help us to integrate
consciousness into the physical world.
Physicists and philosophers have often observed
that physics is curiously abstract.
It describes the structure of reality
using a bunch of equations,
but it doesn't tell us about the reality
that underlies it.
As Stephen Hawking puts it,
what puts the fire into the equations?
Well, on the panpsychist view,
you can leave the equations of physics as they are,
but you can take them to be describing
the flux of consciousness.
That's what physics really is ultimately doing,
describing the flux of consciousness.
On this view, it's consciousness
that puts the fire into the equations.
On that view, consciousness doesn't dangle
outside the physical world
as some kind of extra.
It's there right at its heart.
This view, I think, the panpsychist view,
has the potential to transfigure our relationship
to nature,
and it may have some pretty serious social
and ethical consequences.
Some of these may be counterintuitive.
I used to think I shouldn't eat anything
which is conscious,
so therefore I should be vegetarian.
Now, if you're a panpsychist and you take that view,
you're going to go very hungry.
So I think when you think about it,
this tends to transfigure your views,
whereas what matters for ethical purposes
and moral considerations,
not so much the fact of consciousness,
but the degree and the complexity of consciousness.
It's also natural to ask about consciousness
in other systems, like computers.
What about the artificially intelligent system
in the movie "Her," Samantha?
Is she conscious?
Well, if you take the informational,
panpsychist view,
she certainly has complicated information processing
and integration,
so the answer is very likely yes, she is conscious.
If that's right, it raises pretty serious
ethical issues about both the ethics
of developing intelligent computer systems
and the ethics of turning them off.
Finally, you might ask about the consciousness
of whole groups,
the planet.
Does Canada have its own consciousness?
Or at a more local level,
does an integrated group
like the audience at a TED conference,
are we right now having a collective TED consciousness,
an inner movie
for this collective TED group
which is distinct from the inner movies
of each of our parts?
I don't know the answer to that question,
but I think it's at least one
worth taking seriously.
Okay, so this panpsychist vision,
it is a radical one,
and I don't know that it's correct.
I'm actually more confident about
the first crazy idea,
that consciousness is fundamental,
than about the second one,
that it's universal.
I mean, the view raises any number of questions,
has any number of challenges,
like how do those little bits
of consciousness add up
to the kind of complex consciousness
we know and love.
If we can answer those questions,
then I think we're going to be well on our way
to a serious theory of consciousness.
If not, well, this is the hardest problem perhaps
in science and philosophy.
We can't expect to solve it overnight.
But I do think we're going to figure it out eventually.
Understanding consciousness is a real key, I think,
both to understanding the universe
and to understanding ourselves.
It may just take the right crazy idea.
Thank you.
(Applause)
Phonetic Breakdown of "phi"
Learn how to break down "phi" into its phonetic components. Understanding syllables and phonetics helps with pronunciation, spelling, and language learning.
Standard Phonetic Pronunciation:
IPA Phonetic Pronunciation:
Pronunciation Tips:
- Stress the first syllable
- Pay attention to vowel sounds
- Practice each syllable separately
Spelling Benefits:
- Easier to remember spelling
- Helps with word recognition
- Improves reading fluency
Definition of "phi"
Noun
-
Φ, the 21st letter of the Euclidean and modern Greek alphabet, usually romanized as "ph".
-
The golden ratio.
-
A visual illusion whereby a sequential pattern of lights produces a false sense of motion.