
In "Consciousness Explained," Dennett dismantles the mind's greatest mystery. Richard Dawkins praised its "torrent of stimulating thoughts" while Scientific American called it "the best philosophical work in decades." Can consciousness truly be explained, or is Dennett's radical theory just beginning the conversation?
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Imagine waking up tomorrow to discover there's no central "you" inside your head - no mental control room where consciousness happens, no inner observer watching a private mental movie. This isn't science fiction; it's the startling conclusion of Daniel Dennett's revolutionary work. The intuitive model most of us carry - that consciousness occurs in a specific place in our brain where all sensory information comes together - is what Dennett calls the "Cartesian Theater," and it's completely wrong. This misconception creates an infinite regress: if there's a "viewer" watching the show in your mind, who's watching inside that viewer's mind? Another smaller viewer? The absurdity becomes clear. Instead, consciousness emerges from multiple parallel processes distributed throughout the brain, with no central headquarters where "it all comes together." Your brain doesn't create a single, definitive version of reality - it generates multiple "drafts" simultaneously. Think of consciousness as more like Wikipedia than a printed encyclopedia; it's constantly being edited from multiple sources with no final, authoritative version. This explains puzzling phenomena like the phi effect, where two different colored dots flashed in sequence appear to change color mid-movement. Your brain isn't sending information backward in time; it's simply making its best interpretation after receiving all relevant information. When you "become aware" of something isn't a precise moment but emerges from distributed processes occurring over hundreds of milliseconds. Ask yourself: exactly when did you become conscious of the last sentence you read? The question itself assumes a false model of how consciousness works.
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

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