The Structure of Experience
The Structure of Experience
If experience is cause-effect structure, then the kind of experience is determined by the shape of that structure. Different phenomenal properties correspond to different structural features.
Two levels of structural claim are at work here, and they should be distinguished. The first: different experiences have different structures. Specific phenomenal features—the redness of red, the sharpness of fear—correspond to specific structural motifs in cause-effect space. These extractable aspects of experience (the narrow qualia introduced in Part I's gradient of distinction) can be compared across moments and across systems by measuring structural similarity. This claim is relatively modest and empirically tractable. The second is stronger: the unified moment of experience IS the full cause-effect structure. Not just that the parts have geometry, but that the whole IS geometry—the broad qualia, everything-present-at-once, is identical to the intrinsic cause-effect structure in its entirety. The geometric affect framework (next section) addresses the first claim: it characterizes narrow qualia as structural motifs. The identity thesis above makes the second: broad qualia is cause-effect structure. They are logically independent—you can accept that affects have geometric signatures without accepting that experience is nothing over and above structure. But if the identity thesis holds, then integration () becomes the bridge: it measures how much the broad qualia exceeds the sum of narrow qualia, the quantity of unified experience that survives any attempt to decompose it into characterizable parts.
IIT proposes that the essential properties of any experience are:
- Intrinsicality: The experience exists for the system itself, not relative to an external observer.
- Information: The experience is specific—this experience, not any other possible one.
- Integration: The experience is unified—it cannot be decomposed into independent sub-experiences.
- Exclusion: The experience has definite boundaries—there is a fact about what is and isn’t part of it.
- Composition: The experience is structured—composed of distinctions and relations among them.
These are translated into physical/structural postulates:
- Intrinsicality Cause-effect power within the system
- Information Specific cause-effect repertoires
- Integration Irreducibility to partitioned components
- Exclusion Maximality of the integrated complex
- Composition The full structure of distinctions and relations