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Neuroscientist Anil Seth: ‘We risk not understanding

the central mystery of life’


theguardian.com/science/2021/aug/21/neuroscientist-anil-seth-we-risk-not-understanding-the-central-mystery-of-
life

Tim Adams August 21, 2021

For centuries, philosophers have theorised about the mind-body question, debating the
relationship between the physical matter of the brain and the conscious mental activity it
somehow creates. Even with advances in neuroscience and brain imaging techniques,
large parts of that fundamental relationship remain stubbornly mysterious. It was with
good reason that, in 1995, the cognitive scientist David Chalmers coined the term “the
hard problem” to describe the question of exactly how our brains conjure subjective
conscious experience. Some philosophers continue to insist that mind is inherently
distinct from matter. Advances in understanding how the brain functions undermine
those ideas of dualism, however.

Anil Seth, professor of cognitive and computational neuroscience at the University of


Sussex, is at the leading edge of that latter research. His Ted talk on consciousness has
been viewed more than 11m times. His new book, Being You, proposes an idea of the
human mind as a “highly evolved prediction machine”, rooted in the functions of the body
and “constantly hallucinating the world and the self” to create reality.

One of the things that I liked about your approach in the book was the way
that many of the phenomena you investigate arise out of your experience. For
example, the feeling of returning to consciousness after anaesthesia or how
your mother, experiencing delirium, was no longer recognisably herself. Do
you think it’s always important to keep that real-world framework in mind?
The reason I’m interested in consciousness is intrinsically personal. I want to understand
myself and, by extension, others. But I’m also super-interested for example in developing
statistical models and mathematical methods for characterising things such as emergence
[behaviour of the mind as a whole that exceeds the capability of its individual parts] and
there is no personal component in that.

You’ve set up your team at Sussex as a multidisciplinary group, with pure


mathematicians, psychologists and computer scientists as well as cognitive
neuroscientists. Why is that?
I was wary of academia because my early experience of education was of progressive
specialisation. I still remember having to choose between arts and sciences when I was 15
and that seemed nuts. I was worried that having an academic scientific career would
consist of learning a huge amount about something that nobody else cared about. It was a
massive relief when that turned out not to be true. We try to keep a question in mind and
then use different tools to answer that question without worrying about what discipline
they are attached to.

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What’s the question that you are all keeping in mind?
At its very broadest, it’s the question of how to develop a satisfying scientific explanation
of conscious experience.

Presumably, the mind-body problem is never going to be entirely resolved?


No, but I’d like to make progress. It’s the boring answer of continuing to do rigorous
science, rather than proposing some eureka solution to “the hard problem” [the question
of why and how our brains create subjective, conscious experience]. My approach is that
we risk not understanding the central mystery of life by lurching to one or other form of
magical thinking. While science might be a little bit slower, there is much to be done in a
straightforward materialist understanding of how the brain relates to conscious
experience.

I was interested in your section about memory in the book, in particular


about Clive Wearing. Wearing is someone who, as a result of a devastating
brain infection, lost all conscious memory and lives in a permanent present
tense, as if perpetually waking from coma. Yet the studies show that he
demonstrates an abiding love for his wife. How is that explained?
I’ve never met Clive or his wife, only read about the case. But it highlights the fact that
some of those things we think are necessary for selfhood are obviously not. There are all
sorts of different forms of memory. Explicit conscious recall, autobiographical memory, is
just one of them. In neurological patients, you often see how the mind is built of processes
that in normal life we never see.

Clive Wearing, who cannot form memories, with his wife, Deborah. Photograph: Ros
Drinkwater/Alamy

I remember the writer Nicholson Baker suggesting that all thoughts worth
having are about the size of a wardrobe and have the complexity of a
wheelbarrow. How do you think about thoughts?
The philosopher William James said: “Thoughts themselves are the thinkers.” I think that
there’s a truth to that. It’s perhaps always a mistake to think of thoughts being produced
or observed by a prior internal self. Thought is foundational to psychology, but it’s one of
the things that’s hardest to study. You can’t control thought in the same way you can
systematically manipulate perception in the lab. So I’ve tended to avoid investigating how
the mind wanders and so on.

But in your studies you begin to observe how some kind of playfulness is built
into consciousness?
There’s definitely a sort of internal creative spur to the variation of our mental lives. But
where do thoughts come from? I’m left a little cold by psychoanalytic explanations, which
suggest there’s a subconscious trying to get in there and give you some thought that would
otherwise be repressed. I think, to me, they’re the maximally abstract version of
perception.

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Your book is full of good aphorisms. One pivotal one in your argument about
the how and why of consciousness is the idea that “I predict myself, therefore
I am”. What is the “I” in that sentence?
It’s a collection of perceptual predictions. It’s a playful sentence. The “I” is deliberately
ambiguous there – it says there is an experience arising of me being a single unified
individual, with all these different attributes: memories, emotional bonds, experiences of
body. For this piece of flesh and blood here, they seem to be unified – at least if I don’t
reflect on it too much.

That first-person feeling is very stubborn. Most of us have a very strong sense
of continuity between our childhood experiences and our current self. Is that
perceived unity essentially a kind of Darwinian strategy?
There’s a lot of argument about the evolutionary function of consciousness. But the
answers you get to that depend on what distinction you’re trying to make. If you’re trying
to say why is anything conscious at all, rather than just mechanisms evolving in patterns
in the dark?, then you’re simply up against the “hard problem” again. But if you reframe it
as what is the evolutionary benefit of the organism having these specific experiences?,
then you see that an experience of selfhood is clearly important because it maximises the
organism’s chances of survival.

Why is it not possible for artificial intelligence to at least mimic that


organising perception and therefore mimic other aspects of conscious
selfhood?
I do think it’s very likely possible for AI to mimic that. In fact, in the book I talk about the
pace of this ability to mimic being really quite scary, with the combination of “deep fake”
things and natural language processing machines. Instantiation is another thing, though.

What do you mean by instantiation?


Building an AI system or a robot that does subjectively experience having a self, as
opposed to being a sophisticated machine that gives the appearance of having a self but
with nothing actually going on.

A surgeon checks MRI scans during brain surgery. Photograph: Science Photo Library/Getty
Images/Science Photo Library RF

But if we take Daniel Dennett’s definition of consciousness as a “trillion


mindless robots dancing”, where does the difference lie?
Dan Dennett has been one of my longest-standing inspirations and mentors and the
chance over the last few years to argue with him has been a great pleasure. I gave a Ted
talk in 2017 and of the 3,000 people in the room – lots of founders and investors and
famous people – I was only terrified about Dennett, who I knew was in the audience. And
rightly so. At one point in the talk, I described perceptual experiences as a kind of “inner
movie”. Afterwards, he said: “Ah, that was all great, apart from the movie. Because: who’s
watching the movie?” And that’s a very good criticism. There’s no movie because there is
no one watching it.

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But there is an inbuilt narrative however we describe it – our internal life is
all storytelling?
Dennett is a little equivocal about what he thinks perceptual or phenomenal experience is,
if it exists or not – whether, once you’ve explained all the functions of the system and its
dispositions to behave in particular ways, there’s anything left over still to explain. I’m on
board with that, because I think we can get a very long way to explaining the functions
and dispositions of things to behave in particular ways. But I’m agnostic about whether at
the end of this programme of trying to account in physical terms for properties of
experience, there will still be some residue of mystery left, something more to explain.

Have your thoughts on that ever taken any spiritual swerve – in terms of the
why of there being something rather than nothing?
It’s more that I think there’s hubris in assuming that everything will submit to a
mechanistic programme of explanation. I think it’s intellectual honesty to acknowledge
that the existence of conscious experience as a phenomenon in a universe for which we
generally have physicalist accounts seems weird. I want to figure out the ways in which we
can undermine this seeming weird.

One of the questions posed by Thomas Nagel’s famous essay, What Is It Like
to Be a Bat?, is whether a human being represents the most evolved kind of
consciousness. How mindful are you of different kinds of being?
I hope very. A lot of what we know about human consciousness is based on animal
experiments. One of the stories in the book is about the time I spent studying octopuses,
which was fantastic. They really do demonstrate a wholly different way of being. One of
the things that has become more and more embedded for me is that tension between
using humans as a benchmark, which we somehow have to do, and recognising that
humans are not the benchmark by which all other conscious species should be assessed.
It’s important to recognise that if other species have experience, the very first things that
they are going to be endowed with by evolution are abilities to feel pain or pleasure or
suffering rather than complex, intelligent thinking. When we decide how to treat other
animals, we should bear that in mind, rather than assessing how smart they seem to be.

In the book, you describe how you only came to look at a living human brain
relatively recently, having been invited to sit in during an operation. Was that
a suitably surreal experience for you?
Yes. That is where awe comes in. This material object, which I’ve written about and
described and studied data from for over 20 years: that’s it, right there. At one point, as
the surgeon was doing the operation, which involved excising parts of the brain that were
damaged, he sliced off one bit and gave it to me to hold. It was a very affecting experience,
a reminder that whatever is happening is somehow happening right there, right now.

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