What is a mind?
A mind is easiest to misunderstand when we treat it as either a magical soul or as just a lump of biology.
A better starting point is simpler: a mind is a model-building control system.
That means two things at once. First, it builds representations of the world. Second, it uses those representations to steer what happens next. A system that only predicts is not yet enough. Prediction becomes mindedness when it serves agency. talk: Self Models of Loving Grace
The mind is not just “reason”
The paper makes an important distinction very early: consciousness is not the same thing as self, mind, or intellect. The mind is broader than the analytic part of us that talks in language or solves explicit problems. It is the matrix in which perceptions, intuitions, thoughts, emotions, imaginations, and experiences take shape. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
That is why people often confuse mind with intellect. Intellect is part of the story, but the human mind also includes:
- perception,
- attention,
- valuation,
- imagination,
- emotion,
- memory,
- self-modeling,
- and action selection. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
A person can be brilliant in explicit reasoning and still be confused about themselves, emotionally unstable, or poor at governing attention. That is because the mind is not one module.
Why minds build models
Why model the world at all?
Because reacting only to the present is too weak. A controller that can anticipate outcomes can do something far more powerful: it can choose among futures. It can simulate, compare, delay, commit, and coordinate. talk: Self Models of Loving Grace
That is the basic use of a mind:
- represent the world,
- represent the self in the world,
- predict what happens under different actions,
- and regulate the future instead of merely surviving the present.
This is also why the language of control matters. Many discussions of mind drift into “intelligence” as if it meant test performance. But a mind is not just a problem-solver. It is a way of staying coherent and effective over time.
The world you experience is already model-content
This view is strongly representational: the world you experience is not raw physics delivered directly into awareness. It is already an organized model.
One reader-friendly way to put this is that the world we experience is "a game engine generated in my own brain". talk: On Constructing Reality with Joscha Bach interview: Transcript of EP 334 Worldviews: Joscha Bach
That is not a denial of the external world. It is a claim about interface: the mind renders a workable world-model, then keeps that model constrained by incoming signals. talk: On Constructing Reality with Joscha Bach essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
Perception structures sensory input into a representation. Imagination and dreaming use much of the same machinery with weaker external correction. In that sense, waking experience is also generated — but under much tighter constraint. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis talk: Synthetic Sentience
That may sound strange at first, but it explains a lot:
- why perception can be fooled,
- why hallucination is possible,
- why memory and imagination can feel vivid,
- and why there can be different degrees of “realness” in experience. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
The point is not that nothing is real. The point is that reality reaches you through construction.
What the mind contains
The paper gives a very useful list of the contents of consciousness: percepts, feelings, thoughts, imaginations, and intuitions. Those are the kinds of things that can show up inside the mind’s active space. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
That list matters because it shows how broad mind is.
A thought is not the same thing as a feeling. An imagination is not the same thing as a perception. An intuition is not the same thing as a deliberate inference.
Yet all of them can shape action.
So when people ask “what is the mind?”, the answer is not just “the thing that thinks”. It is the whole organized field in which a controller builds, tests, values, and coordinates models.
The mind is for control, not for detached description
A useful simplification is this:
- Science often trains us to think of models as descriptions.
- Minds use models as instruments of control.
The difference matters. A scientific map can sit on a shelf. A mental map is usually there because the agent needs it to live, move, plan, avoid danger, seek what it values, and work with other agents. talk: Self Models of Loving Grace
That is also why minds are full of simplifications, compressions, and biases. They are not trying to be perfect mirrors. They are trying to be good enough for action under limited time, energy, attention, and memory.
Mind, self, and consciousness are different
A lot of confusion goes away once these are separated.
- Mind: the overall modeling-and-control matrix.
- Self: a model the system builds of itself as an agent.
- Consciousness: a particular mode of mental organization with its own phenomenology and function. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis
You can have mind processes that are not conscious. You can have consciousness that is not strongly personal. You can have a self-model that is distorted, overactive, or partly absent.
Those are different questions.
Why this matters for AI
If a mind is a model-building control system, then not every clever program is a mind in the same sense.
A classifier is not enough. A chatbot is not enough. A narrow planner is not enough.
Those may be parts of minds or simulations of some mind-like outputs. But a fuller mind would need coordinated modeling, stakes, self-representation, and control across time. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis talk: Joscha Bach - ChatGPT: Is AI Deepfaking Understanding?
That does not mean machines cannot ever qualify. It means the question is architectural, not rhetorical.
A compact definition
For this site, we will use mind to mean:
a model-building control system in which perceptions, feelings, thoughts, imaginations, intuitions, self-models, and action policies are organized for agency. essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis talk: Self Models of Loving Grace
Related pages
Sources
- essay: The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis@ p12-15
- interview: Transcript of EP 334 Worldviews: Joscha Bach@ 00:00:00
- talk: Self Models of Loving Grace@ 00:32:16
- talk: Synthetic Sentience@ 00:17:39
- talk: On Constructing Reality with Joscha Bach@ 00:07:48
- talk: Joscha Bach - ChatGPT: Is AI Deepfaking Understanding?@ 00:02:59