In our previous look at Daniel Dennett’s work, we explored the “how” of consciousness—how evolution could move from mindless bacteria to the complex symphonies of Bach through the slow accumulation of “competence without comprehension.” But if Dennett is right—if we are truly biological machines—we are left with a staggering conceptual hurdle.
If the mind is just the brain in action, what is a “belief”? What is “pain”? What is the “feeling” of a sunset? If these aren’t special spiritual substances, then what are they?
To answer this, we must turn to Functionalism. If Dennett’s evolutionary theory is the history of the mind, Functionalism is its architecture. It is the theory that mental states are defined not by what they are made of, but by what they do.
The Great Transition – From Behaviorism to Function
To understand why Functionalism is so dominant today, we have to understand what it replaced. In the early 20th century, psychology was dominated by Behaviorism. Behaviorists argued that because we cannot “see” inside the mind, we should only care about what we can observe: the input (a stimulus) and the output (a behavior).
The problem was that Behaviorism was “hollow.” It suggested that if you are in pain but don’t cry out or flinch, you aren’t really in pain. It ignored the internal life entirely. Functionalism arrived as the sophisticated successor. It agreed that inputs and outputs matter, but it added a crucial middle step: Internal Relations.
A mental state is not just a behavior; it is a causal engine that interacts with other mental states. If you see a needle (input), it triggers “fear” (mental state), which checks with your “belief” that medical care is necessary (mental state), resulting in you sitting still (output) even though you are afraid. This “Internal Relation” is the “Logic of the Ghost.” It treats the mind as a system of interconnected roles, much like the software of a computer.
Substrate Independence and the Octopus Problem
The most radical aspect of Functionalism is Multiple Realizability, or “substrate independence.” Earlier theorists argued the mind was identical to the brain. Under that view, “pain” is just the firing of human neurons. But this created a “human-centric” bias.
Functionalism “backs off” from this biological requirement. If an octopus—which has a completely different neural architecture—gets its tentacle caught in a rock and recoils in distress, is it not in pain because it lacks “human” neurons? Functionalism says that if the octopus’s nervous system performs the same function—detecting damage, creating a state of distress, and triggering avoidance behavior—then the octopus is in pain. Substrate independence suggests that the “software” of the mind can run on many different types of “hardware.”
Searle’s Warning – Syntax vs. Semantics
While Functionalism offers an elegant solution to the “octopus problem,” it triggers one of the most famous debates in modern thought. Can a system that functions like it understands actually understand?
Philosopher John Searle offers a powerful warning known as the Chinese Room. He asks us to imagine a man who speaks no Chinese locked in a room. He has a massive rulebook that tells him: “If you see shape A, output shape B.” People outside slide Chinese characters under the door, the man follows the rules, and slides back perfect responses.
To the outside world, the room passes the “Turing Test.” Functionally, it is perfect. But the man inside doesn’t understand a single word. Searle uses this to argue that Functionalism mistakes syntax (manipulating symbols) for semantics (understanding meaning). He suggests that biological brains have a “causal power” to produce intentionality—a real “aboutness”—that mere functions cannot replicate.
The Dennettian Rebuttal – The Intentional Stance
This is where our exploration meets Dennett’s “Multiple Drafts.” Dennett’s response to Searle is a masterpiece of biological humility. He argues that Searle is looking for a “magic spark” of understanding that isn’t even there in humans.
Dennett proposes the Intentional Stance. He suggests that “understanding” isn’t a substance found in a single neuron or a single man in a room. It is a level of description. If you want to predict what a chess-playing computer will do, you don’t look at the electrons; you treat it as if it “wants” to save its Queen.
If the “Chinese Room” is complex enough to pass every test, Dennett argues that “understanding” is the only word that remains useful. We aren’t “more” than the Chinese Room; we are simply Chinese Rooms made of billions of “minions” (neurons) that are also, individually, mindless. The understanding isn’t in the man; it is a property of the entire system.
The Problem of Qualia – The Inverted Spectrum
Even if we accept that intelligence is functional, what about the raw “feel” of experience? This is the “Hard Problem” of Qualia.
Imagine two people who are functionally identical. They both call a stop sign “red.” They both know red is a “warm” color. But inside, one person sees what the other would call “green.” This is the Inverted Spectrum thought experiment. If their functions are identical but their internal experiences are different, doesn’t that prove Functionalism is missing the “soul” of experience?
Here, we must practice the “backing off” approach. Instead of insisting that Qualia are either “magical” or “fake,” we might view them through Dennett’s lens of the User Interface. When you click an icon on your computer, you see a folder opening. Underneath, there is a chaotic storm of binary code. The “folder” is a useful illusion—a “user-illusion”—that allows you to interact with the complexity.
Functionalism suggests that our “inner life”—the redness of red, the sting of pain—is the User Interface of the Brain. It isn’t an irreducible mystery; it is the way the biological machine represents its own complex internal functions to itself. The “feeling” is the functional output of a system trying to categorize a massive influx of data in real-time.
The Ethics of the Machine – Tiny Robots and the Soul of Korg
If we accept the functionalist view, we face a profound shift in our moral landscape. If consciousness is a function, then the “Center of Narrative Gravity” we call the “Self” is a product of organization, not biology.
This leads to the China Brain thought experiment by Ned Block. If every person in China was given a radio and told to simulate the firing of a single neuron, and they all communicated to control a giant robot, would that robot be “conscious”? Functionalism says yes. Our intuition often screams no because we are biased toward “meat.” We find it hard to believe that a billion people could produce the “smooth” feeling of a mind.
However, we can bridge this gap by looking at our own cultural imagination. Consider Korg, the character from the Marvel Universe made entirely of rock. Scientifically, he has no “meat,” no neurons, and no grey matter. Yet, when Korg speaks, jokes, and displays empathy, we don’t doubt for a second that he is a conscious person.
This is where Dennett’s most provocative claim comes into play. Dennett famously says, “Yes, we have a soul. But it’s made of lots of tiny robots.” In humans, those “robots” are our neurons—unthinking, mechanical cells that follow simple rules. In a being like Korg, those “robots” would be something similar, only made of silicon.
The “soul” of Korg—and our own soul—is not a magical, ghostly substance. It is the emergent result of billions of mindless parts working together so perfectly that they create a “User Interface” of personality and warmth. Dennett’s point is that we don’t need “skyhooks” (magical properties) to explain Korg’s kindness or our own consciousness. We only need “cranes” (functional mechanisms). If we can imagine a conscious being made of rock like Korg, we are admitting that the soul is not about what you are made of, but about how your “tiny robots” are organized.
Conclusion: The Horizon of the Functional Mind
Writing about the mind requires a certain degree of intellectual “backing off.” If we cling too rigidly to the idea that we are “nothing but” neurons, we lose the beauty of the experience. But if we cling to the idea of an immaterial soul, we close our eyes to the brilliant reality of our evolutionary history.
Functionalism provides the bridge. It allows us to say that our thoughts and feelings are real, but they are real in the same way a “game” or “insurance” is real. They are patterns of activity. They are ways of being in the world.
Whether we are looking at the man in the Chinese Room, the rock-man Korg, or the “Multiple Drafts” in our own heads, we are looking at a system that has found a way to turn mindless matter into meaningful experience. We are the “biological machine’s self-description,” and the more we understand the functions that make us up, the more we can appreciate the sheer, unlikely wonder of being awake.
📚 Recommended Reading on Consciousness and the Mind
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- Dennett, Daniel C. — Bacteria to Bach and Back: The Evolution of Minds This book is essential for understanding how complex minds can emerge from mindless biological processes. It provides the evolutionary “how” that pairs perfectly with the functionalist “what” discussed in this post.
- Searle, John R. — The Mystery of Consciousness Searle provides the most rigorous critique of functionalism. Reading this is vital to understanding the “Chinese Room” argument and the limits of treating the mind as a symbol-processing computer.
- Putnam, Hilary. — Mind, Language and Reality Putnam is the father of functionalism. These early essays define the concept of “Multiple Realizability”—the idea that a mind can exist in many different types of physical substrates.
- Block, Ned. — Readings in Philosophy of Psychology This collection is a treasure trove for those interested in the challenges of functionalism. It includes the “China Brain” thought experiment and other classic arguments that force us to question our biological biases.
- Chalmers, David J. — The Conscious Mind Chalmers is the architect of the “Hard Problem.” This book is the best way to explore the counter-view that subjective experience (qualia) is something fundamentally irreducible to functional or physical descriptions.
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