1001Philosophers

David Chalmers Quotes on Mind

David Chalmers is an Australian philosopher, professor at New York University and the Australian National University, and a leading voice in the contemporary philosophy of mind. This page collects quotes attributed to David Chalmers on the topic of mind, drawn from across the philosopher's works.

Quotes

  • Attributed to David Chalmers:

    “There is something it is like to be a conscious organism, and that fact is the hard problem of consciousness.”

  • Attributed to David Chalmers:

    “We may need to revise our basic picture of reality to make room for consciousness.”

  • Attributed to David Chalmers:

    “The easy problems of consciousness are explanations of cognitive functions; the hard problem is the explanation of experience itself.”

  • Attributed to David Chalmers:

    “Property dualism is the thesis that the world contains physical properties and irreducible phenomenal properties.”

  • “Another useful way to avoid confusion [used by e.g. Allen Newell 1990 Unified Theories of Cognition ] is to reserve the term "consciousness" for the phenomena of experience, using the less loaded term "awareness" for the more straightforward phenomena... If such a convention were widely adopted, communication would be much easier; as things stand, those who talk about "consciousness" are frequently talking past each other.”

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  • “Consciousness is the biggest mystery. It may be the largest outstanding obstacle in our quest for a scientific understanding of the universe.”

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  • “I am an optimist about consciousness: I think that we will eventually have a theory of it, and in this book I look for one. But consciousness is not just business as usual; if we are to make progress, the first thing we must do is face up to the things that make the problem so difficult. Then we can move forward toward a theory, without blinkers and with a good idea of the task at hand.”

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  • “In developing my account of consciousness, I have tried to obey a number of constraints. The first and most important is to take consciousness seriously. The easiest way to develop a "theory" of consciousness is to deny its exis­tence, or to redefine the phenomenon in need of explanation as something it is not. This usually leads to an elegant theory, but the problem does not go away.”

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  • “Consciousness can be startlingly intense. It is the most vivid of phenomena; nothing is more real to us. But it can be frustratingly diaphanous: in talking about conscious experience, it is notoriously difficult to pin down the subject matter.”

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