Predictive processing's flirt with transcendental idealism

Noûs Pub Date : 2025-05-16 DOI:10.1111/nous.12552
Tobias Schlicht
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Abstract

The popular predictive processing (PP) framework posits prediction error minimization (PEM) as the sole mechanism in the brain that can account for all mental phenomena, including consciousness. I first highlight three ambitions associated with major presentations of PP: (1) Completeness (PP aims for a comprehensive account of mental phenomena), (2) Bayesian realism (PP claims that PEM is implemented in the brain rather than providing only a model), and (3) Naturalism (PP is typically presented as yielding a naturalistic view of the mind). Then I demonstrate that many proponents of PP also endorse a form of Kantian transcendental idealism (TI), based on a characterization of experiential content as the brain's currently best hypothesis about the world. I argue that endorsing this claim (4), that is, that we only experience the world as it appears, but not the world itself, sabotages achieving the three ambitions. The argument proceeds by discussing the prospects of each ambition in turn, drawing on discussions in the philosophy of science about realism and its alternatives, about the motivation and features of computational models, and about the foundational role of consciousness for science.
预测处理与先验理想主义调情
流行的预测处理(PP)框架假定预测误差最小化(PEM)是大脑中可以解释包括意识在内的所有心理现象的唯一机制。我首先强调与PP的主要介绍相关的三个目标:(1)完整性(PP的目标是对心理现象进行全面的描述),(2)贝叶斯现实主义(PP声称PEM是在大脑中实现的,而不仅仅是提供一个模型),以及(3)自然主义(PP通常被提出为产生自然主义的思想观点)。然后,我证明了PP的许多支持者也支持一种形式的康德先验唯心主义(TI),这种唯心主义是基于对经验内容的表征,作为大脑目前对世界的最佳假设。我认为,赞同这一说法(4),即我们只体验世界的表象,而不是世界本身,会破坏实现这三个抱负。本文依次讨论了每一种抱负的前景,并借鉴了科学哲学中关于现实主义及其替代品、计算模型的动机和特征、以及意识对科学的基础作用的讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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