Think I'll take a little leap.
Toward a Scientific View of Consciousness
The so-called 'hard' problem, Cartesian Theater, homunculi and their ilk... the discussion about consciousness is riddled with uncertainty as to what it is one wishes to define, and how to go about it with science. There is a lingering doubt that there must be more to it than what meets the eye (or fMRI). Is there? And where to start?
My take:
Where to start: There is a working definition of consciousness that is used in the medical profession. This state is associated with a set of observable behaviors externally, and internally with what can be read from a brain scan. Rather than any sort of definition from literature or philosophy, this measurable phenomenon is the best starting point.
What to look for: Just as above, nothing other than what the system itself reveals. That is, what the activities, signals, and states that can be measured and tracked during medical consciousness are. Later, sets of measurements for the brain activities that are associated with partial consciousness, coma, and other intermediates. (The hard slog and extremely long-term part: associating the physical to the cognitive in a detailed fashion and across the board.)
What kinds of answers: Descriptions of the actual workings of whatever is needed to provide workable, medical consciousness, what behavior is enabled by it, and... Bob's your uncle. No more needed; same way of doing science as in other, less belief-tainted areas.
The point: There is no need for philosophical fishing expeditions if one is interested in the science of the brain. Whatever the broad and/or narrow enabling of functionalities the brain is capable of may be, that is what is there, what is done, or what is going on. We may continue to call a resulting set of some of these descriptions consciousness, or simply use the terms that arise in the research. Either way, in my view this is the way to approach the mind scientifically; i.e., by studying the machine that behaves as a mind.
In the end: I would not be surprised to find that a good number of the preconceived attributes or elements of the mind from philosophy are found to have rough equivalencies, and the old labels then applied to the new data. However, it would be going precisely backwards to start with those old labels, and is misguided to do so.
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Just a thought, as I twiddle thumbs waiting for an 8.1 to 10 Windows upgrade on another machine to finish.