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If you’re thinking about Richard Feynman and his views on consciousness, the short version is: he didn’t claim to “solve” it—and was very skeptical of anyone who said they had.
🧠Feynman’s core stance on consciousness
Feynman approached consciousness the same way he approached everything in physics:
If we can’t test it, measure it, or model it clearly, we don’t really understand it yet.
He believed consciousness is likely a physical process—something arising from the brain—but he was honest that science didn’t yet have the tools to fully explain it.
🔬 Key ideas he expressed
1. Consciousness is probably not “mystical”
Feynman leaned toward the idea that consciousness comes from ordinary physical laws, not anything supernatural.
The brain is made of atoms
Atoms follow physics
So consciousness should, in principle, be explainable
This aligns with modern neuroscience, though the full explanation is still missing.
2. “I think I can safely say that nobody understands it”
He famously said (about quantum mechanics, but the spirit applies here too):
“I think I can safely say that nobody understands…”
Feynman extended this humility to consciousness—warning against fake certainty.
3. The danger of “philosophical hand-waving”
Feynman disliked vague explanations. If someone said:
He would likely respond: What does that predict? How do we test it?
4. The brain as a computational system
He was open to the idea that:
This overlaps with modern ideas in:
Neuroscience
Cognitive Science
🤔 What Feynman would likely say today
Based on his philosophy:
He’d be interested in theories of consciousness
But he’d demand evidence and testability
He’d reject anything that sounds profound but explains nothing
In his style:
“You might be right—but how do you know?”
🧩 Bottom line
Feynman didn’t solve consciousness—and didn’t pretend to.
His real contribution was the mindset:
If you want, I can compare Feynman’s view to people like David Chalmers or Daniel Dennett—they take very different approaches to consciousness.