Introspection

Introspection, the direct examination of the contents of our own minds, seems itself to be in many minds at the moment.
The latest issue of the Journal of Consciousness Studies was devoted to papers on introspection, marking the tenth anniversary of the publication of The View from Within, by Francisco Varela and Jonathan Shear (which was itself a special edition of the JCS); and now Eric Schwitzgebel has produced a new entry for the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

The two accounts are of course quite different in some respects. The encyclopaedia entry is a careful, scholarly account, neutral and comprehensive; the JCS issue is openly a rallying-cry in support of a programme flowing from Varela’s work. This, it seems, called for an end to the ban on examination of lived experience; the JCS gives the impression that it was something of a milestone, though Schwitzgebel’s piece does not mention it (he does cite an earlier paper by Varela, once again in the JCS).

What’s all this about a ban? Well, back in the nineteenth century, psychologists had no fears about using introspective evidence; it was thought that a proper scientific effort would lead to an objectively verifiable kind of phenomenology. We should be able to classify the elements of mental experience and clarify how they worked together, just by examining what went on in our own heads. A great deal of work was done on all this (It was a great disappointments for me to discover, on first opening Brentano’s Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, that it consisted almost entirely of this kind of thing, and that the only passage about intentional inexistence, the interesting issue, was the couple of paragraphs which I had already read as quotes in several other books.). There was a gradual refinement of the methods involved, leading on to the great heyday of introspectionism, with Wundt and Titchener in the lead. Unfortunately, it became clear that the rival schools of introspectionism had begun to come up with results which in some respects were radically different and incompatible, and since our own introspections are by their nature private and unverifiable, all they could really do by way of settling the issues was to shout at each other.

This embarrassing impasse led to a reaction away from introspection and to the rise of behaviourism, which not only denied the usefulness of examining our inner experience, but actually went to the extreme of denying that there was any such thing as inner experience. Behaviourism in its turn fell out of favour, but according to Varela there remained an instinctive distrust of introspection which continued to put people off it as an avenue of research. This is the ‘ban’ he wanted to see overturned.

Was there, is there, really a ban? Not exactly. Apart from the most dogmatic of the behaviourists, no-one has ever tried to exclude introspection altogether. In recent times, introspective evidence has been widely accepted – the problem of qualia, thought by some to be the problem of consciousness, depends entirely on introspection. I think the real problem arises when we adopt special methods. In order to obtain consistent results, the old introspectionists thought extensive training was necessary. It wasn’t enough to sit and think for a bit; you had to have mastered certain skills of discrimination and perception. The methodological dangers involved in teaching your researchers what kind of thing they could legitimately look for are clear.

Unfortunately, it seems to be very much this kind of programme which the JCS authors would like to resurrect – or rather, have resurrected, and wish to gain acceptance and support for. Once again we are going to need to learn how to introspect properly before our observations will be acceptable. What makes it worse for me is that the proposal seems to be tied up with NLP – Neuro-linguistic Programming. I don’t know a great deal about NLP: it seems to be a protean doctrine which shares with the Holy Roman Empire the property of not really being any of the three things in its name – but for me it does nothing to render another trip down this particular blind alley more attractive.

Heart: I don’t know about that, but aren’t they right to emphasise the potential value of introspection? Isn’t it the case that introspection is our only source of infallible information? Most of the things we perceive are subject to error and delusion, but we can’t, for example, be wrong about the fact that we are feeling pain, can we? That seems interesting to me. Our impressions of the outside world come to us through a chain of cause and effect, and at any stage errors or misinterpretations can creep in; but because introspection is direct, there’s no space for error to occur. You could well say it’s our only source of certain knowledge – isn’t that worth pursuing a little more systematically?

Head: Infallible? That is the exact reverse of the truth: in fact all introspections are false. Think about it. Introspection can only address the contents of consciousness, right? You can’t introspect the unconscious mental processes that keep you balanced, or regulate your heartbeat. But all of the contents of consciousness have intentionality – they’re all about things, yes? So to have direct experience of mental content is to be thinking about something else – not about the mental state itself, but about the thing it’s about! Now when we attempt to think directly about our own mental states, it follows that we’re not experiencing them in themselves – we’re experiencing a different mental state which is about them. In short, we’re necessarily imagining our mental states. Far from having direct contact, we are inevitably thinking about something we’ve just made up.

Peter Hankins is author of the Conscious Entities weblog.


The Uses and Cautions of Introspection.

Obviously introspection is as variable as each individual is, and totally unique. The introspective arena would be totally different between a religious believer and an atheist, for example. Or between a criminal and a college professor. Using Abraham Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, a person living on the streets would introspect from a different perspective than an accomplished, and well paid computer programmer. A properly adjusted and comprehensive survey of the frequency and self revelations of introspective habits and how people act on such insights would be of incalculable value in basic psychological evaluations and for hiring assessments and a myriad of other potential uses. Some of the cautions could be the ease of faking answers to survey questions if certain replies were assumed to enhance one's standing in society or to improve their job prospects or salary. There's also the fear some people would have of the ultimate uses or distribution of their survey results and any possible consequences. How would an Idi Amin, Osama bin Laden or an indoctrinated Taliban suicide bomber answer their survey compared to people in the humanistic and altruistic professions such as doctors, teachers and charitable foundation employees or volunteers? Structuring a survey and verifying the respondent's freedom from outside influence, honesty and openness and then the applicability of interpretations and their uses to enhance that person's life and achievements pose many difficulties and wonderful potentials at the same time.
In the most broad, generalist's view of psychology, Sigmund Freud was a genius and pioneer, but his own students went in wildly different directions, Carl Jung, Alfred Adler and Karen Horney all being notable examples. With the "Neo-Freudians" there was no uniformity and no all encompassing scope had developed yet. A strict interpretation of B.F. Skinner's behaviorism has fallen into disuse and lack of credibility. One Freud follower, Dr. Karen Horney, who introduced a new method to psychoanalysis - introspection, believed that in some cases, the patient is able to continue the analysis without the supervision of a doctor, if they have already mastered the technique. She claimed that some people can achieve a clear understanding of their subconscious stress without the supervision of experienced analysts. The "fully functioning person" of Carl Rogers or the self-actualized individual of Abraham Maslow are based on more grounded assessments and to me, form the core direction of where modern psychology is and should be. Rather than studying the hysterical and depraved individuals that Freud based much or his studies and formed most of his theories around, Maslow, who studied under Adler, analyzed geniuses and highly accomplished individuals and developed his theories and concepts to enhance and improve one's awareness and drive them toward their higher aspirations. A properly conceived and well structured assessment of introspective habits and how that person is benefited or harmed by them has the potential to redirect a person toward the best that life has to offer. And what better aim could there be than those kinds of personal enhancements and the societal maturation and evolution that could follow?

See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maslow%27s_hierarchy_of_needs
and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-actualization

Darwin was a keen observer and theorist and his theory is PROVEN beyond a shadow of a doubt. The only reason it is still called a theory is because it can't be proven in the same way a mathematical theorem can. That is a problem with semantics, NOT the science!