The Hard Problem is a Cognitive Illusion: How Temporal Blindness Creates the Mystery of Consciousness
Abstract
The ‘hard problem’ of consciousness—how and why physical processing gives rise to subjective experiences—is so stubborn not because of a presumed gap, but because of specific, predictable cognitive limitations. This paper proposes that the troublesome gap is an illusion rooted in the evolution of the human brain. It argues that the problem arises from a cognitive bias termed temporal blindness—the profound inability to grasp the ultra-gradual, multi-billion-year process of evolutionary and developmental construction. By considering consciousness as a layered, gradual construct resulting from countless refinements in very long evolution, genetics and natural selection,we dissolve the hard problem into tractable scientific questions. This perspective suggests that the gap mystery is not a barrier to science, but an inherent cognitive bias of our evolved brain.
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