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consciousness-9

2025-04-27 View on smbc-comics.com → 2 revisions
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consciousness-9
Votey panel for consciousness-9
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Explanation

This comic tackles the hard problem of consciousness through a first-contact scenario with aliens. A human excitedly greets aliens, assuming they share consciousness, but the alien immediately corrects him: humans are the only conscious life in the universe. The alien explains that consciousness is uniquely weird -- it only arises when a "mind" is actually made up of thousands of individual modules that are barely on speaking terms with each other.

The alien elaborates: in this chaotic situation, evolution's best solution was to create "a whole nother layer" -- consciousness -- that monitors all the internal shouting and determines the best routes to sex and food. Everywhere else in the universe, life uses either a singular processor or a harmonious parallel system, neither of which needs consciousness.

The comic's big punchline comes when the alien delivers a vivid metaphor: "You guys are like a sack of cats on which someone stuck googly eyes on." The human, stunned, responds: "My God... That's the greatest definition of consciousness I've ever heard." The alien then twists the knife: "We use it for papers written about you."

The humor works because the comic takes genuine theories about consciousness -- particularly the idea that it emerges from the need to coordinate competing subsystems in the brain (related to Marvin Minsky's "Society of Mind" and Global Workspace Theory) -- and frames them as deeply unflattering. The "sack of cats with googly eyes" metaphor is simultaneously hilarious and philosophically insightful: it captures the idea that consciousness is not some grand, dignified phenomenon but rather a desperate kludge to manage internal chaos. The alien's condescending tone throughout, treating human consciousness as a pathetic cosmic anomaly rather than a crowning achievement, subverts the usual sci-fi trope where human consciousness is portrayed as special and valuable.

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