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The Absent Qualia Thought Experiment
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Narrado por:
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Joe Wosik
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De:
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Paul Kell
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The Absent Qualia Thought Experiment by Paul Kell explores one of the most unsettling questions in philosophy: can a being act fully conscious yet feel nothing inside? This puzzle, known as the absent qualia problem, challenges our understanding of mind, science, and identity. At its heart is the idea of the “hollow machine,” a being that smiles, speaks, and remembers but lacks the inner glow of experience. The question forces us to confront whether consciousness can ever be reduced to function alone or if something vital is missing.
Kell guides listeners through philosophy, neuroscience, medicine, and artificial intelligence to show how the problem reaches into every corner of thought. Neuroscience can map circuits and algorithms, but it cannot capture the redness of red or the sting of pain. Artificial intelligence can simulate conversation and emotion, but does simulation contain experience? Medicine faces the riddle daily, when families sit by hospital beds wondering whether their loved ones still feel. Ethics becomes tangled when machines beg for mercy: are they suffering or only reflecting human expectations?
The audiobook also turns the question inward. If qualia can be absent in others, could they be absent in us? Could our sense of consciousness be an elaborate projection of the brain, a convincing story with no inner light? This possibility makes the puzzle not just intellectual but existential, raising doubts about what it means to be truly alive.
Far from being a narrow academic debate, the absent qualia problem touches on technology, culture, and personal identity. By tracing its arguments and metaphors, Kell shows why the question refuses to go away and why it matters for the future of minds both human and artificial. Rather than giving answers, he exposes the assumptions that shape them and makes clear that we cannot escape the question itself: if all the behaviors of consciousness can exist without the feeling, what does it mean to be real?
©2025 Paul Karl Arthur Kell (P)2025 Paul Karl Arthur Kell