1.3 Models of Reality: Materialism, Dualism, Idealism
Approaches to Consciousness
Let us return to the story of the man who thought he saw a snake.
He was walking along a forest path at dusk when he froze—there, coiled on the ground, was a snake. His heart raced. His breath caught. But as his eyes adjusted, he realized it was just a rope.
The snake was never there. It was a projection of his mind.
🔀 Question 1: What conclusions could we draw from this story?
Two Ways of Approaching Consciousness
We find ourselves again in front of a fundamental question:
What is consciousness? And how does it relate to reality?
There are two major lenses through which this question has traditionally been viewed:
| Perspective | Main Question | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Objective | What is consciousness in physical terms? | Neuroscience, biology |
| Subjective | What does it feel like to be conscious? | Internal experience, philosophy |
This split—between outer observation and inner experience—has shaped centuries of thought. René Descartes famously declared, “I think, therefore I am.” With those words, he drew a line: the body is a mechanical extension of the world; the mind, something else entirely.
Thus was born Cartesian dualism—a model that still echoes today.
🔀 Question 2: When looking at a brain scan, can you assess what a person is experiencing internally?
Three Models of Reality
Let us explore the three main ways humanity has tried to explain the relationship between consciousness and reality.
1) Materialism
In this view, the brain creates the mind.
Reality is physical, and consciousness is a byproduct—like light from a flame.
It gained strength after Darwin, riding on the predictive success of classical physics and neuroscience.
🔀 Question 3: From this perspective, what statements could be made?
🔀 Question 4: What advantages does accepting this view offer?
2) Dualism
The mind and the body are two distinct substances. The body may host consciousness—but it does not produce it.
This was Descartes’ position: res extensa (extended matter) and res cogitans (thinking substance).
🔀 Question 5: From this view, what statements could be made?
🔀 Question 6: What advantages does accepting this view offer?
3) Idealism
Now comes a bold proposal:
Consciousness is primary. Matter arises within it.
In modern physics, experiments like the double-slit experiment suggest that observation changes reality. Some physicists began to wonder: what if the observer isn’t separate from what is observed?
From ancient Vedanta to thinkers like Berkeley, Schopenhauer, and—today—Tom Campbell, idealism asks:
What if we are not brains within a universe?
What if we are consciousness experiencing a universe?