The Phantom Organ and The “Hard Problem” — I apply MVT to solve David Chalmers’s “Hard Problem” of consciousness-the question of why physical brain processes are accompanied by subjective feelings (qualia).
Nichols’s theory posits that self-referential consciousness and abstract thought in many modern animals are the evolutionary result of the loss of a physical sensory organ: the parietal/pineal eye (the “primal eye”). Nichols maps this transition across three brain states in vertebrate evolution: The E2 State (Finite-State): Early fish, amphibians, and ancestral reptiles (as well as modern “living fossils” like the Tuatara) possessed a functional, light-sensitive median eye on top of their skulls, connected to the pineal gland. This organ directly controlled thermoregulation, circadian rhythms, and basic predator detection in coldblooded (ectothermic) animals. Their brains were “hard-wired,” responding directly to environmental stimuli. The E1 State (Infinite-State): As mammals and birds evolved warmbloodedness (endothermy), external temperature sensing became redundant, and advanced lateral eyes took over visual duties. The primal eye atrophied, leaving behind only the internal pineal gland. Freed from the direct “lock-step” control of the sun, the brain became plastic and self-organising (infinite-state). The E0 State: Some lineages, like certain dinosaurs and modern crocodilians, lost both the median eye and the pineal gland entirely. II. The Phantom Organ and The “Hard Problem” Nichols applies MVT to solve David Chalmers’s “Hard Problem” of consciousness-the question of why physical brain processes are accompanied by subjective feelings (qualia). The Virtual Sensor: Just as an amputee can experience a “phantom limb” because the neural matrix still expects the arm, the E1 mammalian brain experiences a “phantom eye”. The brain was built over millions of years to process a central stream of generic sensory data from the primal eye. Centrally Evoked Mentation: When the physical eye retreated, it left an internal sensory void. The brain compensated by simulating the presence of this lost hub to unscramble data from the other senses. This virtual simulation is the seat of the subjective “I”. III. The Origins of REM Sleep and Dreaming Nichols heavily critiques philosophers like Owen Flanagan, who argue that dreams are useless evolutionary “spandrels” (biological noise). Baseline Architecture: In MVT, Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep is the baseline functional state of the new E1 architecture. Because the physical tether to sunlight was severed, the brain uses this “phantom” space to generate internal models.







