The interaction between the brain, time and
consciousness.
Wikipedia, tijd
Introduction
In a way we are not only in time like a rock or a car, we are also with time. We are incapsulated in time and time in us. Time-consciousness is something we share with many organisms. But isn’t this a phantasm? Does time exist, do we perceive a reality? What is the character of time-consciousness, how can it be facilitated by a brain-mechanisms and how does it relate to consciousness as such? Explaining time consciousness can help explain consciousness itself (Kent & Wittmann, 2021 p. 1-2).
Time consciousness is a complicated subject and much
has been written about it. This paper cannot hope to answer these questions
exhaustively but may be able to point in a direction of better understanding.
I start with a non-causal explanation why time experience is realistic, using two models of spacetime. In paragraph 3 I outline the character of time consciousness and by what mechanism it could be realised. In paragraph 4 I give a function-theoretic description of time consciousness (not a function-theoretic explanation) . In the last paragraph the relation between time consciousness and consciousness as such is explored. Finally I draw some summary conclusions.
1. Realism and anti-realism
There are many theories about time perception but generally those theories can be divided into two main visions.
-Phenomeno-temporal realism (henceforth
‘realism’): change, succession and persistence can be directly perceived
or apprehended.
-Phenomeno-temporal antirealism (henceforth ‘antirealism’):
change, succession and persistence cannot be directly perceived or apprehended
(Stanford 2023, p. 3, 4). There are many theories consistent with this last
view: e.g. time wouldn’t exists or time exist only in a cinematic way. This
cinematic approach sees a stream of consciousness consisting of momentary
phases without any significant extension; like motion free snapshots or stills.
(Stanford 2023, p 11-13).
I think the current model of spacetime has developed strongly in favour of realism. To understand this we must turn to Kant.
2. Why realism?
“The time is not something that exists on its own, or belongs to the things as objective determination, and so would be left as one would abstract from all the subjective conditions of the perception of things” (Kant 1781/2014, p. 131). Kant considered space and time as “shapes of the senses”. In this view spacetime is a mode of perception, the “Ding an sich” (thing in itself) exists outside spacetime, space and time is something our senses add to the world; time and space are “produced” in the observation act. Kant was an anti-realist (Kant 1781/2014, p. 131-133) .
Spacetime in general, before the 20th century, was
seen as a theatre in which the other phenomena were actors. It was a “theatre
model” that corresponds with our intuition. Everything - gods, natural laws,
matter etc - “acts” in an immutable spacetime. The model didn’t give any
counterfactual information, because space and time where immutable. It was a
phenomenal model. It maps space and time as phenomenon. The universe (for
Kantians the transcendental universe) in this model is not with spacetime,
but in spacetime.
In the current model, based on Einsteins theory of
relativity, the universe is with spacetime. Spacetime is theatre
and actor all at once; it is inseparably intertwined with speed of light, mass
and gravity; spacetime can be curved.
This model is an explanatory model, it is useful for
the purpose of control and manipulation, is predictive and empirically proven.
When you counterfactually change one of the constants - i.e the speed of light,
or the relation gravity, mass and space - the target domain, spacetime itself,
would be different. This model not only describes how the system behaves, but
also how it will behave under a variety of interventions. It gives a lot of
counterfactual information (Craver 2006, p. 358).
What
does this have to do with realism and anti-realism? The question is: can a
model be an explanatory model, when its sensory foundation is totally different
from the facts constituting the target domain? Although this model
is very counter-intuitive, it is ultimately founded on spatiotemporal
perception facilitated by our brain; because that is the only way we can
experience the phenomena time and space. Our images of time and space, “when do
we mean time and when do we mean space?” are substantial and irreducible
concepts; the conceptual basis for statements about
spatiotemporallity.
The scientific statement, “in a black hole, time and
space trade places (Markus Pösel, 2010)”, implies an underlying conception of
space and of time; of space and time as we conceive by means of our brain and
can be made useful for very complex calculations and derivations. Without
phenomeno-spatiotemporal realism, our empirically proven model of spacetime
contained in formulas, wouldn’t be internally coherent because it wouldn’t
mirror the facts of the target domain and collapse.
This explanation of the reality of time
consciousness is a non-causal explanation based on coherence.
(Chirimuuta 2017, p. 6).
3. Mechanisms and the field-like
character of time conscousness
The realistic belief that our episodes of experience
are themselves temporally extended to be able to incorporate change and
persistence straightforwardly is called the extensional model. But there are
problems processing this by computation and applying it in a mechanism
(Stanford 2023, p. 2, 3, 5-7).
There is succession of experience and experience of
succession (Stanford 2023, p.4, 5).
Succession of experience is easily explainable by
mechanisms; in a cinematic model this would be possible. One can easily explain
every snapshot experience with the help of a mechanism of a kind. The behaviour
of a system, i.e. the changes of its state over time, can be interpreted as a
series of points in its state space”(Gervais, R. 2015 p. 47). But experience of
succession is more complicated, it doesn’t have a discrete or point-like
character but is much more field-like. (Kent & Wittmann 2021, p. 11-12).
What
does this mean? I can illustrate this using an example from phenomenology,
music: a form of expression much based on time-experience. When every tone
would be perceived separately in its time sequence (succession of experience),
music would be an uninteresting assembly of separate sounds. But music as we
experience and appreciate it is more; in every present tone, the past tones
resonates (retention) and there is, at the same time, expectation about the
future tones (protention); that makes music exciting. In experiencing time, in
music but also in other ways, story’s, events etc., every moment resonates in
other moments, there are no clear cut episodes, everything is fluent, moments
overlap. It’s even wrong to speak about moments, there are no outlined episodes
with boundaries, it is “time-flow”; retentions, the present and protentions are
at the same time[1].
This
is a problem for the cinematic view: what kind of mechanism can combine the
snapshots of this view in a unity of time flow? A memory (short term or long
term) can store past sensory perceptions as discrete units, but cannot combine
them into a time flow (Gallagher & Zahavi 2008, 261/839-264/839). We
can try to give an explanation in terms of computational processes (Piccinini
2006, p. 350; Cummins 2000, p. 129). The whole system of computation itself is
based on the processing of discrete units. It can process bounded episodes, up
to a millionth part of a second or smaller. There is no slowness of perception
in computation, only outlined parts/units can be computed, something or nothing
can be computed. But in time experience there is, as we have seen, no case of
bounded episodes[2].
But
tough there is blurring as to cause and effect, that doesn’t mean time
consciousness can’t be processed. There is cause and effect, but observation
takes place from different “points of view on the timescale” at the same time:
past, present and expected future.
Wittmann & Kent mentioned ideas about the
continuous input from the body as part of an embodied system in addition to the
spatiotemporal dynamics of the brain. This explains the continuous character of
time experience (Wittmann & Kent 2023, p. 26-27).
I see an analogy with space. A system that can process
time in a similar manner as a hologram processes light. In a hologram, light
waves from different viewpoints in space converge in the eye, and give a sense
of depth in space. Time flow is also marked by overlap and converging, the
phenomenon time flow can be considered as “depth” in time. Maybe a
non-functional located “holographic” mechanism, involving the cooperation of
all parts of the brain on a neural level, that facilitates the convergence of
differently stored stimuli, can transform succession of experience into
experience of succession. But why non-functionally located? There is a widely
supported, although disputed, view that the cognitive architecture of the brain
is modular, in the sense of being informatively encapsulated (Farah, 1994,
p.43). But according to research of Farah this is not always the
case. Maybe a functional analysis, which is a sketch of a mechanism, can
provide more clarity about a possible mechanism of time-perception.
Time-consciousness is a complex capacity. Showing that this complex capacity is
made up of more basic capacities, organised together, is the goal of a
functional analysis (Piccinini Craver 2011, p. 283-286). An extended
function-theoretic explanation would be too ambitious for a short paper, so
I’ll limit myself to a “function-theoretic description”; a domain-general and
environmental-neutral characterisation of a functional mechanism (Egan 2018, p.
146). Maybe we can deduce some clues from such a description.
4. A function-theoretic
description
We can ask ourselves: what is the role of
spatiotemporal consciousness in evolution? According to Robert Cummins,“A
source of evidence that a system really has a given function is that such a
function would have constituted an adaptation”. (Cummins 2000, p.
135)
What could be the evolutionary function of
time-consciousness? It gives an organism the opportunity to make
representations fastly and accurately (e.g. in a forest or plain) of phenomena
that where present in the past or can become present in the future.
Anticipation and reconstruction, i.e. protention and retention of phenomena in
spacetime. The organism can represent things that could happen, happen and
could have happened, opportunities and dangers, not in a split second but all
at once because of the field like character of time perception. This is
time-consciousness as an adaptation, a result of evolution.
But I think another more profound interpretation is possible.
Evolution is about survival and reproduction. No-one
wants to be dead, and dead is losing time- experience. Risk of losing
time-experience/being dead is accompanied by fear; I think fear and
time-experience are connected, implicitly or explicitly. Organisms
instinctively avoid death with all their might, and the same goes for bad
times, as caused by injuries or starvation and that weaken or end their
reproductive capacity. After all, their goal is to pass on their
genes.
Thus there are two function-theoretic descriptions of
time-consciousness:
-as an adaptation to represent “present, passed and
possible” all at once;
-as a motor mechanism of evolution itself.
Both functions are intertwined also in their
functioning; the motor function increases itself through the same (reproduction
stimulating) adaptation of which she is the cause. It’s a case of mutual
enforcement, a snowball effect, with associated development in the
brain. As a motor mechanism of evolution itself, time-consciousness is
profound and probably ubiquitous, in a more or less primitive form.
The origins of brain development are very old, cells
that probably are the precursors of neurons have been found in the digestive
system of brainless sea-sponges, already existing in the precambrium. Genes and
chemicals used by neurons predate the evolution of multicellular animals
(Marshall, M. 2021). Of course there is no case of time-consciousness in the
precambrium, but it is possible that the first principles of time-experience
have developed early, in combination and cooperation with the development of
the first brain mechanisms. Because of its profoundness, I think involvement
and cooperation of many mechanisms of the brain, realised over hundreds of
millions of years and on many levels, are involved in time experience. Maybe
the mechanism behind time-consciousness is difficult to identify because it
does not fit the (assumed) modularity of brain functions (Farah 1994, P. 1,
60). But this is of course pure speculation.
5. Time and consciousness
Even if you have a identified a neural mechanism, the
1st person experience of it remains a problem, the “hard
problem”. Is spatio-temporal perception a qualia (Chalmers 2003, P.
2)? Qualia are not instantiated in neural activity. Neurons don’t
recreate the colour experience of red, but time extendedness is realistic, and
instantiated in neural activity. It cannot be that time consciousness is a
mechanism only giving the experience of extension (as a qualia) and not
producing it. That would be anti-realism. Time is part of the perceptual
field within which qualia contents are experienced (Kent & Wittmann
2021, p. 23-26).
But maybe time-consciousness is a qualia in another
sense. You can ask: describe the difference between space and time. This is
impossible without using a tautology. You can say “time is going in only one
direction, from past to present”, but that is not a description but a property
of time; a one way street does the same regarding space. This question is
analogous to, but has more sense, than the question “what is it like to be a
spacetime experiencer?” There is no thinkable and conscious position from which
to ask that last question.
David Chalmers talks about intrinsic properties of
fundamental physical systems in opposition to properties in relation to other
physical properties and to us. Does spatio-temporality have intrinsic
properties? Like red is the intrinsic property of light waves with a certain
frequency. I think consciousness is the intrinsic property of spacetime. When
intrinsic properties constitute phenomenal properties they are protophenomenal
(Chalmers 2003, p. 36, 37). Maybe consciousness is protophenomenal for
spacetime. This theory is slightly different from Chalmers protopanpsychism. It
is protopsychism of spatiotemporality; you could use the term
spatiotemporal-protopsychism. In this view spacetime has a potential mental
property, but not necessarily realised. There is a duality between its
structural dispositional properties - field like-structure, interwovenness with
speed, gravity and mass etc. - and its intrinsic protophenomenal property -
which is consciousness. Evolution facilitates the necessary brain
infrastructure to process this property. Which does not deny the fact that
other entities can have intrinsic properties too. Without e.g. the perception
of red because of colour-blindness, there is still consciousness, but without
time-perception, not for one second.
Conclusions
There is evidence that time consciousness as facilitated by the brain has a considerable degree of reality. Spacetime as a phenomenon is based on facts in physics, processed by the brain, not produced, as with Kant.
The character of our temporal perception is field
like. Therefore I think we need a kind of holographic neural mechanism that brings
“depth in our experience” to explain time-perception.
A function-theoretic description yields two
results: time consciousness as a an adaptation and time as motor mechanism (not
a goal) of the evolution. Both are intertwined and reinforce each other and
brain development. Time-consciousness is profound and probably ubiquitous (more
or less primitive). Probably many brain mechanisms on many levels are involved
in it, therefore maybe the mechanism is difficult to identify and not
fitting with the (assumed) modularity of other brain functions.
It is not the field like extension of
time-consciousness that gives it a qualia character because that would lead to
spatiotemporal anti-realism, but its substantial character. Time and
consciousness are connected in time consciousness. Maybe consciousness is the
intrinsic property of spacetime. Then spacetime is protopsychic; evolution,
with time consciousness as an accelerating force, facilitates certain
developments in brains and of brains, as a result of which the protopsychic
intrinsic properties of spacetime can become manifest.
Literature
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[1] The origin of these ideas
are from Edmund Husserl, elaborated in his book Phenomenology of temporality
(Galagher & Zahavi 261/839, 262/839).
[2] Maybe spatio-temporality
itself has a pixel-like structure on Planck scale, but I wonder whether brains
can operate on this unbelievable small scale. On the other hand, everything is
possible.