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THE BRAIN DOESN’T CREATE
CONSCIOUSNESS
The reducing valve theory
Paul Marshall
First published by iai news, 15 December 2021
https://iai.tv/articles/the-brain-doesnt-create-consciousness
©Paul Marshall 2021
onsciousness is generated by the brain, isn’t it? Neuroscientists have
commonly assumed so, and it is easy to understand why. Our
everyday experiences are highly dependent on the brain and nervous
system. For example, a stiff blow to the head knocks the living daylights out, as
addled boxers can attest. Damage to the primary visual cortex at the rear of the
brain shuts down conscious visual perception. Alterations to the brain’s
neurotransmitter chemistry through illness or psychoactive drugs impact on
perception, cognition, and mood. Psychedelics, such as LSD and mescaline, can
have particularly dramatic effects, ranging from superlative highs to abject lows.
Plainly consciousness—or at least consciousness as we ordinarily know
it—is highly dependent on the brain. However, it may be a step too far to assume
that consciousness is produced by the brain. Dependence is not the same as
production. Consider some analogies. Cool, clean air flows from a conditioning
unit, but the unit does not produce the air: it merely extracts air from outside,
cooling it and filtering out impurities. A washbasin tap does not generate water;
it just regulates the flow. Sunlight floods into a room when the blinds are opened,
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