Daniel Dennett EXPOSES Keith Ward’s “Hard Problem” Argument
Keith Ward
20.22
30 May 2026
8 June 2026
This video features a deep philosophical debate between Daniel Dennett and Keith Ward on one of the biggest questions in philosophy and neuroscience: is consciousness something science can fully explain?
Dennett challenges the famous “hard problem of consciousness,” arguing that it is simply a modern version of vitalism—the old belief that living things required a mysterious extra force beyond physical processes.
Ward pushes back by arguing that subjective experience—such as the feeling of listening to music or experiencing meaning—cannot be reduced to brain activity alone. The discussion then moves into deeper questions about:
- whether consciousness exists as something beyond the physical brain
- gradual states of awareness and coma patients
- subjective experience vs neurological explanation
- whether the “self” is separate from the brain itself
As the debate unfolds, Dennett argues that consciousness is not a magical extra ingredient added to the brain, but an emergent result of increasingly complex physical processes.
At its core, this exchange becomes a debate about what it really means to be conscious—and whether mystery itself is evidence of something beyond science.
