Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Ned Block

Ned Block (born 1942) is an American philosopher specializing in the , with foundational contributions to the understanding of , , and . He holds the position of Silver Professor of , , and Neural Science at , where he has taught since 1996 after serving as chair of the philosophy program at . Block earned his S.B. in physics and humanities from in 1964 and his Ph.D. in philosophy from in 1971. His research integrates philosophical analysis with empirical findings from and , challenging assumptions in and representationalism while emphasizing the distinction between phenomenal consciousness (the subjective "what it is like" of experience) and access consciousness (information available for reasoning and report). Block's seminal 1978 paper "Troubles with Functionalism" introduced the "" , arguing that fails to account for if a system simulates understanding without genuine mental states, influencing debates on and mental content. In 1995, he articulated the phenomenal-access distinction in "On a Confusion about a Function of Consciousness," demonstrating how creatures could have rich sensory experiences without cognitive access, thereby decoupling from behavioral or functional roles. More recently, his "" argument, developed in works like "Perceptual Consciousness Overflows Cognitive Access" (2011), posits that visual awareness exceeds capacity, supporting the independence of phenomenal richness from reportable cognition through evidence from iconic memory experiments. Among his influential publications are the edited volumes Readings in Philosophy of Psychology (two volumes, 1980–1981), The Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical Debates (1997, co-edited with Owen Flanagan and Güven Güzeldere), and his collected papers in Consciousness, Function, and Representation (2007). Block's work has earned him prestigious honors, including election as a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2004), Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society, Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2021 Phi Beta Kappa Lebowitz Prize for philosophical achievement (shared with Ian Phillips), and the MIT Robert A. Muh Alumni Award (2005).

Biography

Early Life and Education

Ned Joel Block was born in 1942 in , . Block pursued his undergraduate education at the (), where he earned a (S.B.) degree in physics and humanities in 1964. This interdisciplinary program exposed him to both scientific rigor and philosophical inquiry, fostering an early interest in the intersection of mind, science, and human experience. During his time at , Block was mentored by philosopher , whose teachings on and the profoundly influenced his developing thought. Following his undergraduate studies, Block advanced to graduate work at , completing a Ph.D. in in 1971 under Putnam's supervision. His dissertation built on Putnam's ideas, exploring foundational questions in the that would define his later career. This period solidified Block's commitment to , bridging empirical sciences with conceptual analysis. Shortly after obtaining his doctorate, he returned to to begin his academic career.

Academic Career

Ned Block earned his PhD from in 1971 under the supervision of , which laid the foundation for his academic career. Following his doctoral studies, Block joined the (MIT) as an assistant professor of in 1971, serving in that role until 1977. He was promoted to from 1977 to 1983 and then to full professor from 1983 to 1996. During his time at MIT, Block chaired the philosophy section from 1989 to 1995, overseeing key developments in the department's focus on and . In 1996, Block moved to New York University (NYU) as a professor of and . He was appointed Silver Professor in 2005, recognizing his contributions to interdisciplinary research. As of 2025, Block holds the title of Silver Professor of , , and Neural Science at NYU, with appointments in the Departments of and and the Center for Neural Science. Block's marriage to developmental psychologist Susan Carey has fostered significant interdisciplinary collaborations, particularly in bridging and .

Awards and Honors

Ned Block has received numerous prestigious awards and honors recognizing his contributions to and . In 1984, he was awarded a , supporting his research in and related fields. He has also served as a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Language and Information (CSLI) at , a position reflecting his influence in interdisciplinary studies of language, , and . Block was elected a of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2004, an honor bestowed for distinguished achievements in scholarly and artistic pursuits. In 2005, he received the Robert A. Muh Award from , recognizing noteworthy accomplishments in the humanities by an alumnus. He is a of the Society, elected for sustained impact on the field through research that bridges , , and . In 2013, Block was awarded the Jean Nicod Prize by the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), honoring his foundational work in and ; he delivered the associated lectures in 2014. More recently, in 2021, he shared the Lebowitz Prize with Ian Phillips, awarded by the American Philosophical Association and for advancing philosophical inquiry into , , and the self.

Philosophical Work

Access and Phenomenal Consciousness

Ned Block introduced a influential distinction between two types of consciousness in his philosophical work, separating access consciousness from phenomenal consciousness to address confusions in the functionalist theories of mind prevalent in the . Access consciousness refers to s that are poised for use in reasoning, rational control of action, and the guidance of speech and report, making their content globally available in cognitive processes such as those described in global workspace theories. In contrast, phenomenal consciousness involves the subjective, qualitative aspects of experience—the "what it is like" to undergo a particular , such as the felt redness of seeing a ripe tomato or the raw feel of pain, which Block argues cannot be fully captured by functional or informational roles. Block's 1995 paper, "On a Confusion About a Function of ," published in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, critiques the tendency among to conflate these two forms, particularly in debates with philosophers like , who in works such as (1991) treated primarily as a functional, reportable without acknowledging irreducible experiential qualities. Block contends that many empirical and theoretical claims about the functions of —such as enabling inference or behavioral control—actually pertain to access , and illicitly attributing these to phenomenal leads to theoretical errors. This distinction built on earlier 1990s discussions in , where dominated, but Block highlighted dissociations to preserve the reality of phenomenal experience beyond computational accessibility. To argue against reducing phenomenal consciousness to access consciousness, Block employs thought experiments demonstrating their potential independence. In the absent qualia argument, he imagines a functional duplicate of a —a "zombie" system that perfectly replicates all functions, including rational action and , but lacks any subjective —suggesting that phenomenal properties are not entailed by alone. Similarly, the super scenario posits a subject who unconsciously processes visual information in a blind field to guide behavior as effectively as sighted individuals, achieving consciousness without corresponding phenomenal awareness, thus showing that can occur in the absence of . Real-world evidence from patients, who respond accurately to stimuli in scotomas without visual , further supports this dissociation, as their information processing bypasses phenomenal . These ideas have significant implications for computational theories of , challenging the view that mental states can be fully explained by information processing or functional organization. Block maintains that while computational models may replicate access —enabling inference and control—they fail to account for the non-functional, intrinsic nature of phenomenal experience, thereby questioning whether artificial systems could ever possess genuine subjective . This separation underscores the need for theories of to address experiential aspects independently of cognitive availability, influencing ongoing debates in and .

The Overflow Argument

Ned Block's overflow argument posits that phenomenal consciousness—the subjective "what it is like" aspect of experience—contains more content than can be cognitively accessed or reported, thereby establishing a between phenomenal and access consciousness. This claim builds on the conceptual distinction between these two forms of consciousness, where access consciousness enables information to be used for reasoning, verbal report, and control of action, while phenomenal consciousness involves rich perceptual qualities that may exceed such access. Central to the argument is evidence from experiments demonstrating perceptual overflow in high-resolution scenes. In George Sperling's 1960 partial report paradigm, subjects view a brief array of 12 letters arranged in three rows and can report only about 4 items when attempting full recall, but when cued to focus on a specific row shortly after presentation, they accurately report nearly all 4 letters from that row, suggesting conscious representation of around 10-12 items overall—far exceeding capacity. extends this to argue that while attended items allow detailed access, unattended details overflow into phenomenal experience without entering cognitive access, as subjects report a rich despite limited reportability. These findings are elaborated in 's 2007 target article "Consciousness, , and the mesh between and ," where he uses Sperling-like experiments to illustrate how phenomenology routinely outstrips , and in his 2011 paper "Perceptual overflows cognitive access," which updates the argument with modern variants emphasizing iconic memory's role in supporting richer conscious capacity. Block addresses critics who invoke capacity limits to deny , such as Michael Cohen's suggestion that visual holds only 3-4 items and Daniel Dennett's view that apparent richness is an from unconscious . He counters by emphasizing that the involves qualitative, non-iconic phenomenal properties—such as the distributed spatial layout and color details of the entire scene—rather than mere , which subject phenomenology confirms as consciously experienced yet inaccessible for report without cues. This rebuttal highlights that critics' accounts fail to explain the immediate subjective richness reported in experiments, preserving the argument's empirical foundation. Philosophically, the overflow argument bolsters non-reductive physicalism by demonstrating that phenomenal states, while realized in the brain, are not identical to or fully determined by access states; they can be causally inert with respect to yet genuinely real and explanatory for subjective . Post-2010 developments have integrated this with neural correlates research, such as studies on fragile visual in area V4, which sustains up to 7-8 items for several seconds—exceeding prefrontal limits—and aligns with by showing early visual areas encode rich phenomenology independently of access pathways.

Critique of Artificial Intelligence

Ned Block has been a prominent critic of strong (AI) claims, arguing that behavioral or functional equivalence does not suffice for mentality or . In his 1981 paper "Psychologism and Behaviorism," Block challenges the , which posits that a capable of indistinguishable verbal behavior from a demonstrates intelligence. He contends that behavioral equivalence fails to guarantee internal mental states, as external behavior can be produced without understanding or cognition. To illustrate this, Block introduces the Blockhead thought experiment, envisioning a massive housed in a giant underground room that maps every possible input to an appropriate output, simulating intelligent responses to any query without any comprehension or internal processing. This "blockhead" system, operated by a or mechanism consulting pre-programmed responses, would pass the behaviorally but lack mentality, demonstrating that psychologism—where intelligence depends on internal information processing—holds over pure . Block uses this to argue that systems relying on or alone cannot achieve genuine mentality, as they mimic without intrinsic understanding. Block extends his critique to , the view that mental states are defined by their causal roles in a system, which underpins many theories. In his 1980 essay "Troubles with Functionalism," he presents the thought experiment, where the entire population of is organized via radio to implement the functional organization of a , producing identical inputs and outputs to a conscious mind but without individual or collective . This "homunculi-headed" , as Block describes it, reveals functionalism's liberalism: it attributes mentality too broadly, even to systems intuitively lacking or phenomenal experience, thus failing to capture the essence of . Block rejects machine-functionalist accounts for phenomenal consciousness, insisting that while can replicate functional roles (access consciousness), it cannot produce subjective experience. Building on his distinction between phenomenal consciousness (raw subjective experience) and access consciousness (information available for reasoning and report), Block argues this separation explains AI's limitations: computational systems excel at access-like functions but lack the biological substrate for . In a 2023 discussion of large language models, Block endorsed the view that requires electrochemical processing, which silicon-based lacks. More recently, in his 2025 paper "Can Only Meat Machines Be Conscious?", Block argues that subcomputational biological mechanisms, such as those in electrochemical nervous systems, may be necessary for , creating tension for computational and suggesting cannot achieve it without specific biological realizers. Block's arguments intersect with those of , whose 1980 thought experiment similarly critiques syntactic computation's insufficiency for semantics or understanding, though Block emphasizes population-level over individual symbol manipulation. In contrast, , a defender of , has countered Block by arguing that emerges from functional organization alone, dismissing as illusory; Block maintains this dissolves the hard problem of experience. These debates highlight Block's insistence that machine requires more than computation.

Philosophy of Perception

Ned Block's philosophy of perception centers on the idea that perceptual experiences possess a distinctive form of content that is nonconceptual, allowing direct representation of sensory properties like color and without reliance on propositional or conceptual structures. For instance, seeing a specific of or the geometric form of an object involves an iconic format that captures fine-grained details beyond what linguistic or judgmental concepts can articulate, enabling to serve as a foundational input for rather than a derivative of it. This view challenges traditional empiricist assumptions by positing that perceptual is constitutively analog and determinate, as opposed to the discrete and indeterminate nature of thought. Block critiques representationalist theories of perception, which hold that all phenomenal qualities are exhausted by their representational content, by arguing that some experiential features—termed "naked" qualia or "mental paint"—are intrinsic, non-intentional properties that cannot be reduced to what the experience represents about the external world. In experiences of color or , for example, there is an ineffable "" that persists independently of representational function, undermining the claim that phenomenology is fully transparent to its intentional objects. These highlight a limit to representationalism, as they suggest that includes elements opaque to cognitive interpretation or functional role. In his 2023 book The Border Between Seeing and Thinking, articulates a "joint in " between and , maintaining that seeing involves non-inferential, direct access to environmental features through representations, whereas thinking relies on inferential processes and propositional attitudes. He argues that this border is marked by 's constitutive properties—nonpropositional, nonconceptual, and —which enable immediate responsiveness to stimuli without mediating judgments. integrates this philosophical framework with empirical psychology, using phenomena like to illustrate how perceptual systems deliver rich, pre-attentive that can be disrupted by attentional shifts, yet remains distinct from cognitive reconstruction. Against inferentialist models prevalent in vision science, which treat as a hypothesis-testing inference from sensory data, contends that such views conflate perceptual immediacy with cognitive elaboration, failing to account for the directness of visual experience. Block's recent contributions from 2019 to 2023 further refine these ideas, particularly in addressing debates on and . In his 2023 target article in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, he defends the iconic nature of against discursive , arguing that perceptual representations retain analog richness even as they transition to cognitive storage. Responding to Firestone and Scholl's about cognitive penetration of , Block maintains that apparent top-down effects often reflect post-perceptual biases rather than alterations to perceptual content itself, preserving the of seeing. In 2025, Block published responses to critics of his book in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, engaging with objections to his arguments on perceptual variation, , and the seeing-thinking distinction. These works underscore 's while exemplifying, as in the overflow argument, how sensory experience can exceed attentional and reportable limits.

References

  1. [1]
    Ned Block (New York University) - PhilPeople
    Ned Block is a silver professor at New York University, Department of Philosophy Psychology Center for Neural Science. They are interested in Philosophy of ...
  2. [2]
    Ned Block - NYU Arts & Science
    Ned Block. Silver Professor; Professor of Philosophy and Psychology ned.block@nyu.edu (pronouns: he/him/his) Department of Philosophy, 405Missing: Stanford bachelor's<|separator|>
  3. [3]
    Philosopher Ned Block receives Muh Award | MIT News
    Feb 25, 2005 · The Robert A. Muh Alumni Award honoring an MIT graduate for noteworthy achievements in the humanities, arts, and social sciences will be presented to Ned Block.
  4. [4]
    Ned Block (New York University): Publications - PhilPeople
    List of philosophical publications by Ned Block (New York University), including "The Border Between Seeing and Thinking", "What is functionalism?
  5. [5]
    2021 Lebowitz Prize Awarded to Philosophers Ned Block and Ian ...
    Apr 6, 2021 · Awarded annually by ΦBK in conjunction with the APA, this prize recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of philosophy. Each winner ...Missing: honors | Show results with:honors
  6. [6]
    Jewish Philosophers - JINFO.org
    Ned Block ... In Men of Mathematics, Eric Temple Bell described Cantor as being "of pure Jewish descent on both sides," although both parents were baptized.
  7. [7]
    Philosopher of mind : Ned Block - Jagran Josh
    Dec 25, 2012 · Name: Ned Block ; Born: 1942 ; Birth Place: Chicago ; Era: 20th-century philosophy ; Region: Western Philosophy.Missing: biography - | Show results with:biography -
  8. [8]
    Ned Block
    Ned Block (Ph.D., Harvard) came to NYU in 1996 from MIT where he was Chair of the Philosophy Program. He works in philosophy of perception and foundations ...About · Publications · Named Lectures · Honors
  9. [9]
    Hilary Whitehall Putnam - The Mathematics Genealogy Project
    Hilary Whitehall Putnam ; Block, Ned, Harvard University, 1971 ; Bloom, Stephen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968 ; Boolos, George, Massachusetts ...Missing: supervisor | Show results with:supervisor
  10. [10]
    2005 | Ned Block
    Ned Block (SB '64, Physics and Humanities), a former Chair of MIT Philosophy, earned his Ph.D at Harvard and is the Silver Professor of Philosophy, ...
  11. [11]
    Contributors - Neuroscience and Philosophy - NCBI Bookshelf - NIH
    Ned Block is Julius Silver Professor, with appointments in the Departments of Philosophy and Psychology and Center for Neural Science at New York University ...
  12. [12]
    Susan E. Carey - Annual Reviews
    Sep 13, 2022 · I had met Ned Block, my life partner, in the spring before I started my PhD studies and wasn't about to try to follow. Miller or Shepard to an ...
  13. [13]
    List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1984 - Wikipedia
    List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1984 ; Ned Block, Philosophy ; Rubén Bonifaz Nuño, Poetry ; Heraclio Bonilla, Iberian & Latin American History ; Martin ...
  14. [14]
    Honors - Ned Block
    Honors · Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences · Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society · Guggenheim Fellow · Senior Fellow of the Center for the ...
  15. [15]
    [PDF] 1780–2017 25 - Members of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences
    Election: 2004, Fellow. Affiliation at election: Massachusetts. Institute of ... Block, Ned (1942-). Election: 2004, Fellow. Affiliation at election: New ...
  16. [16]
    Fellows - Cognitive Science Society
    Ned Block, New York University Josep Call, University of St. Andrews Nick ... (2) A Fellow's research should exhibit sustained impact on the Cognitive Science ...
  17. [17]
    N. BLOCK - INSTITUT JEAN NICOD
    Le Prix Jean-Nicod 2013 a été décerné à Ned Block cependant la cérémonie et les conférences ont eu lieu au printemps 2014. Ned BLOCK (Department of Philosophy, ...
  18. [18]
    2021 Lebowitz Prize Awarded to Philosophers Block and Phillips
    Apr 6, 2021 · Awarded annually by PBK in conjunction with the APA, this prize recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of philosophy. Each winner will ...Missing: honors | Show results with:honors
  19. [19]
  20. [20]
    Psychologism and Behaviorism - jstor
    PSYCHOLOGISM AND BEHAVIORISM. Ned Block. I et psychologism be the doctrine that whether behavior is intelligent behavior depends on the character of the ...
  21. [21]
    Troubles with Functionalism - University Digital Conservancy
    Block, Ned. (1978). Troubles with Functionalism. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/185298.
  22. [22]
    Could a Large Language Model Be Conscious? - Boston Review
    Aug 9, 2023 · ... deep learning in artificial neural networks. Just recently, my ... A related view, endorsed by my colleague Ned Block, is that ...
  23. [23]
    The Chinese Room Argument - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    Mar 19, 2004 · Thus Block's thought experiment, as with those of Davis and Dennett, is a system of many humans rather than one. The focus is on consciousness, ...
  24. [24]
    The Border Between Seeing and Thinking - Ned Block
    Free delivery 25-day returnsPhilosopher Ned Block argues in this book that there is a joint in nature between perception and cognition and that by exploring the nature of that joint, ...
  25. [25]
    Conclusions | The Border Between Seeing and Thinking
    Mar 23, 2023 · Perception is constitutively nonpropositional, nonconceptual, and iconic, and cognition does not constitutively have any of these properties. 2.
  26. [26]
    [PDF] Mental Paint Ned Block
    Jan 27, 2004 · I was born on Twin Earth and emigrated to Earth at age 18. When I ... Philosophical Essays, ed. by M. Davies and G. Humphreys. Oxford ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  27. [27]
    [PDF] Qualia - Ned Block
    qualia include the ways it feels to see, hear and smell, the way it feels to have a pain; more generally, what it's like to have mental states.
  28. [28]
    Top-down effects that are probably not cases of cognitive penetration
    Mar 23, 2023 · This chapter discusses the question of whether knowledge of what is depicted by a figure has an effect on whether it is seen as a figure or as ...
  29. [29]
    [PDF] The Border Between Seeing and Thinking - PhilPapers
    Title: The border between seeing and thinking / Ned Block. Description: New ... 2023. DOI: 10.1093/ oso/ 9780197622223.003.0006. 6. Nonconceptual color ...
  30. [30]
    Perception is iconic, perceptual working memory is discursive
    Sep 28, 2023 · Perceptual working memory representations contain the remnants of iconic perceptual representations, often recoded, in a discursive envelope.