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Sam Harris
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I'm here with Michael Pollan. Michael, it's great to see you again.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, great to be back, Sam, or
Sam Harris
to see you for the first time. We were just talking about the fact that the last podcast, I think, was just audio. Right. It was a phone call, effectively.
Michael Pollan
Yeah. I actually remember the day really well. It was 2018, and I was in a hotel room in Portland, Oregon.
Sam Harris
Has that much time passed? Jesus, that's really depressing.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, it was. How to Change youe Mind had just come out.
Sam Harris
Yeah. Wow.
Michael Pollan
And we were talking about psychedelics, if
Sam Harris
this must be a function of age. But when asked to estimate how much time has elapsed, I'm always off by a factor of at least two, if not three. I mean, I'm always wrong in the direction of underestimating.
Michael Pollan
Yeah. It's been a while.
Sam Harris
Yeah. Well, it's great to see you. It's great to see that you have a new book and you have written a. Not everyone does this. You have written a bestseller on the nature of consciousness, and the book is. Is a World A Journey Into Consciousness, which is an all too natural follow on from your last book on psychedelics, how to Change youe Mind. Before we jump into the deep end of the pool, let's just have you connect those dots for me. How did you convince yourself that you wanted to go deeper in this direction?
Michael Pollan
You know, I think it's a very common response to psychedelic experience. I had a series of experiences, research trips, if you will, from when I was working on how to change your mind. And one of the things psychedelics kind of reliably do for people is defamiliarize consciousness. You're suddenly made more aware of it. I describe it in the book as, like, smudging the windshield through which you normally perceive reality. And suddenly you realize, hey, there's a windshield. What is that about? Because most of the time, it's utterly transparent. You can go a long time without thinking about consciousness. So that was, you know, so it put it in front of me as a set of questions. And of all the things, you know, whenever you finish a book, there's always a few threads that are left, you know, untied and, you know, curious paths. It's too late to go down. You're on the last chapter. And consciousness was definitely one of them. So I thought. And I. And I had a wonderful editor who was willing to support me on an expedition with a very uncertain destination, because I set off on this really not knowing where I was going, what I was doing, and with no sense of what to expect. And God bless her, she's since passed and Godoff is her name. She's a wonderful editor. She said, yeah, you'll do something interesting with that. So I was off.
Sam Harris
Well, you've certainly done that. And we'll spend the next, I don't know, 90 minutes or so thinking about consciousness. But I think you arrive at a place that I've arrived. I don't know if it's stable in the end, but I seem to have occupied this spot for quite some time. Thinking about consciousness and specifically the hard problem of consciousness, which we'll talk about in a moment, is something that just utterly kind of subsumed my intellectual interests somewhere around the mid-90s and held them for quite some time. But I've.
Michael Pollan
And you wrote a really interesting book on it. I mean, it was about the self, but it was really about consciousness. Waking up had a big influence on me.
Sam Harris
Nice. Well. But I think many of us in this game eventually beat our heads against the wall long enough that we finally admit to ourselves that we're not going to solve the hard problem of consciousness. Now, there are many people in your book who have not admitted that.
Michael Pollan
Spoiler alert for this podcast episode.
Sam Harris
We'll talk about this. But ultimately there is something more to do or less to do than think about consciousness, which is to say, you can simply be consciousness more and more subtly and deeply and continuously. And that's where things like meditation and psychedelics come in. So your book almost takes you full circle back to questions of being more than thinking. But the thinking is fascinating and we need to do it because we need to talk about it. Let's just define our terms at the outset, which you do early in the book. But we should just distinguish a few concepts. There's sentience, there's consciousness, there's cognition, there's intelligence. We'll talk about AI and intelligence is something that many people are thinking about now and in its various instantiations. How do you define or disambiguate these terms?
Michael Pollan
Yeah, so I made a distinction. It's not mine alone, but it's not always Made between sentience and consciousness. And you see that coming up in the whole discussion about AI. Some people use the word sentient to describe these machines that they think may be conscious. Sentience is a more basic foundational term. It involves ability to sense your changes in your environment, assess whether they're good or bad, and allow you to move toward one and away from the other. It may be a property of life. Single celled creatures, bacteria have chemotaxis, so they can distinguish between molecules that are good food and ones that'll kill them and act accordingly. So sentience is kind of very basic, perhaps permeates all of life. I can't be sure about that. Consciousness is a more elaborate form of sentience that involves other things, such as a sense of awareness, feelings. In the case of humans, not only awareness, but awareness. We're aware and we layer it. And so human consciousness is just how we do sentience. And every creature that is conscious does it in a slightly different way, presumably reflecting their sensorium, their body type, the scale at which they operate, all these kind of things. Intelligence and consciousness are not on a spectrum or together they're orthogonal. I think their relationship. Intelligence is, I define pretty much as problem solving ability. And so that's quite a part. I mean, we all know people who are conscious and not intelligent. I mean, they don't necessarily go together. Cognition is the taking in and processing of information from the world. I think that's kind of how I define it. So yeah, and consciousness I define simply as experience or subjective experience. Pretty simple. You don't have to include things like self consciousness or meta consciousness in it. Those are kind of bells and whistles that humans have added, and I doubt many animals have them.
Sam Harris
Yeah, so consciousness is the fact that the lights are on and it's synonymous with the fact of experience, whatever we're experientially aware of altogether, I guess. So sentience still can be described. I mean, I guess the crucial line for me and for many people think about this, is that things like life, things like sentience can be given a description from the outside in terms of their functional characteristics. I mean, does something reproduce, does it metabolize, does it grow, et cetera. These are characteristics of life. And then the boundary conditions can be somewhat diffuse. And so it can be hard to say whether a virus is alive in the way that a bacterium is alive, et cetera. But. And so it is, I think with sentience, at least under the definition you gave it. But consciousness is the fact that it's like something to use Nagel's now immortal phrase, to be what we are. And if it's like something to be a bat, well, then that would be consciousness in the case of a bat. And that's obviously his famous example from his essay, what is it like to be a Bat? And this disgorges what the philosopher David Chalmers has named the hard problem of consciousness, which I've already invoked without defining it. But it's just a simple fact that it seems that there's no third person description of the way the world is that reduces the mystery that it should be like something from the first person side to be associated with any collection of those facts.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, there's an inside, there's an interiority that third person perspective can't penetrate, it can speculate about. But I think that's a very good point you make about sentience and its difference that it, it is something we can perceive and make a judgment about from the outside. I mean, there may be some slight inside to it, but basically it's. We can, we can assess it from the outside and we can't with consciousness. And that's a huge. I mean, that is the hard problem, I'd put it. I'd add also it's. I mean, it's the problem of how do you get from matter, this, you know, three pounds of neurons in our head, to mind to subjective experience, if that is indeed the way it happens?
Sam Harris
Yeah. And just to be clear for people, again, it's amazing how hard it is for many people to form an intuition about what makes the hard problem hard. And some of the most celebrated thinkers in neuroscience and philosophy, many of them, to my eye, have not had any kind of natural intuition for this. And the symptom of that is they kind of blow past it, asserting some reductive explanation of consciousness as though they had solved the hard problem, whereas they really haven't even acknowledged it. And, you know, so we might name some of these people, but the hard problem predates Chalmers. He gave it this name that was very, very sticky. But it goes all the way back to Leibniz. At least Leibniz invoked this image of a mill. You know, if you just imagine you blow up the brain to the size of a mill and walk inside it, at no point would you encounter anything that announced its sufficiency to produce the inner subjectivity of that organ. And there are many other philosophers who've touched this. Saul Kripke and Ned Bloch and Frank Jackson and Joseph Levine. I don't know if he pronounced it Levine or Levine. But he gave us this notion of the explanatory gap, which is just another way of saying the hard problem. So the problem is that whatever the right answer for the emergence of consciousness is, if in fact it emerges. So there's some description of the functional characteristics of a system or the way the neural correlates of consciousness are arranged and consciousness emerges from that. Even if we had that description in hand, the fact that that is the basis of consciousness, that first the lights are not on, then all of a sudden you change the wiring diagram ever so slightly and an inner world appears, that is just the. It doesn't mean it's not true, but it would be totally non explanatory. There is this explanatory gap and whatever the right answer is, it's still going to look like a miracle.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, well, Christophe Koch, who was involved at the very beginning of modern consciousness science, started out with Francis Crick, the great scientist who cracked inheritance when he discovered co, discovered the double helix. You know, they went looking for the neural correlates and they thought that would solve the problem. They would find that group of neurons responsible for subjective experience. And it was only a couple years into that quest, and by the way that quest goes on, that Christoph realized that, oh, even if we found the neural correlates, it really wouldn't answer the question we're trying to answer. How did that group of neurons, if there was such a group, produced this feeling of being me, this voice in my head? And so he was. That was the first of several crises he's had along the way.
Sam Harris
Well, like many of us, Christoph has done some drugs in the meantime.
Michael Pollan
That's given them another crisis.
Sam Harris
Yeah, I mean, the influence of psychedelics on this conversation is fascinating. I mean, it's not surprising given what happened a generation and a half ago, but we had this hiatus in science where these drugs could not be experimented with. Before we dive into consciousness, maybe. Let me just ask, get your opinion on this. I mean, how do you view the almost the omnipresence of psychedelics now in the discussion here, scientifically, but also in the culture? Are you at all worried that we're on the verge of recapitulating some of the errors of the 60s where we just, we get a little too fast and loose with these drugs and we invite some kind of backlash or. How are you feeling about the psychedelic part of this conversation?
Michael Pollan
Yeah, I mean. Well, first to go back a little bit, it was a real surprise. I thought I would mention psychedelics in the introduction to this book as something that inspired it and set me on this path, and that would be it. And there would be no psychedelics in the book. But they kept popping up, and I wasn't bringing them up. It was the scientists working on the problem who are. Partly because they're stuck, partly because they're very open minded to using any tools at hand. Many of them, you know, would talk to me unbidden about their experience with psychedelics and how in many cases, it had influenced them. They're not doing studies, they're not involved in the various university studies, but they're personally using them and in some cases, getting insights that they think are really important. In other cases, not sure what exactly to do with them. But it just kind of was this. It became this motif in the book of scientists telling me about their psychedelic experiences and how it had affected their work. So I thought that was really interesting. You know, the whole issue of psychedelics has changed a lot since 2018. I mean, it is, first of all, more acceptable for us to have a conversation about it. I think in Waking up, you know, you were kind of ahead of the curve in your willingness to talk about your own experiences. Many people regarded it as a reputational risk back then. What year was waking up published?
Sam Harris
2014.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, so that was early. That was before this. Science at Johns Hopkins had gotten a lot of, you know, publicity, and suddenly we were taking psychedelics seriously as a therapeutic modality. I think we're in a very different moment than the 60s. I think there was a lot of careless use of psychedelics. Things went wrong, and psychedelics also got really entangled in the counterculture, and that was part of the backlash. I mean, Nixon targeted psychedelics because he thought it was one of the reasons that American boys were refusing to fight in Vietn. And he may well have been right.
Sam Harris
Well, we should say that some people, like Timothy Leary, perhaps most notably, made that connection, that political connection explicit.
Michael Pollan
Right.
Sam Harris
It's like, you know.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, but so did Nixon. Nixon said, you know. Well, he said Leary was public enemy number one.
Sam Harris
Yeah. The most dangerous man in America.
Michael Pollan
I think that's right. Most dangerous man in America, which is quite a statement. He also said that about Daniel Ellsberg, though. So most. He had a pretty broad definition of most. Now, psychedelics are not no longer coded liberal or left or counterculture. I mean, they're. I mean, look at, you know, last week, the president issued an executive order. Yeah. Supposedly easing the approval process and access to psychedelics. He's been driven in that direction by concern for soldiers, veterans, dealing with PTSD and the high rates of suicide among soldiers. And that was a very deliberate, I think, move on the part of Rick Doblin at maps, who was really one of the pioneers of getting research started again. He made overtures to vets groups, to the VA and to people like Rick Perry, former governor of Texas, who's a big supporter now of psychedelics. So I would say, if anything, there's more support on the right than the left. So I don't know that it's going to fall into the same backlash politics. It may if things go terribly wrong. There's also so much university research going on, so many trials, and it's rapidly being accepted as a legitimate area of study. There have been NIH grants to support psychedelic research. So I don't see us on the verge of that. I mean, people are still doing stupid things with psychedelics and there's still accidents happening and. But I think we learned, or I think a lot of people learned a lesson from the 60s, which they're powerful substances. They have to be used with intention. People are tending to use them more in guided, guided situations, which really mitigates a lot of the risk. So, yeah, I'm not overly concerned about that. I think there's going to be all sorts of nasty things happening. There's going to be profiteering and attempts to limit access, attempts to patent things that shouldn't be patented. I mean, all sorts of things are going on there, you know, and there's. There's a tremendous hype cycle with lots of capital rushing in and then the capital rushes out and now it's back in. So it's going to be messy. You know, whenever capitalism gets ahold of something like this, it gets really messy.
Sam Harris
Yeah, well, it's especially obvious in AI at the moment. We'll talk about the implications there. I mean, one concern I have about the influence of psychedelics on this conversation is that there's some way in which I think that the psychedelic experience, to speak generically, can be indispensable but also misleading. I mean, it certainly can be with respect to the goal of meditation and what there is to recognize about the nature of consciousness there that is liberative or worth paying attention to. There's something, I think the experiences, the peak experiences people have on psychedelics, while they advertise to them the possibility of living a very different kind of life in the world, they also can give the false impression that freedom is a matter of radically changing the contents of consciousness or radically expanding it and achieving something, some kind of Permanent state that is analogous to what you enjoyed on the peak of whatever it was, you know, acid, psilocybin, mdma, dmt, whatever your. Whatever your moment was. And so anyway, we'll talk about that because I think the.
Michael Pollan
Yeah, no, and I think that's a fundamental misunderstanding of the mystical experience, which is what, you know, how people kind of assess these experiences. That a mystical experience that was permanent would probably be schizophrenia. It's, you know, it's something in the context of everyday life. It's a period of transcendence, but it's not something you sustain. And, you know, I mean, you know, this history. Well, but many of the Americans who brought Buddhism to America started with psychedelics and then had the similar realization to what you're talking about, which is that it's not a practice, it's not something you can sustain day after day. And they moved into meditation, which was a place you could have a practice, obviously.
Sam Harris
Yeah.
Michael Pollan
But the links are very interesting and I think psychedelics may be a very good way to start a meditation practice. I'm always taken with the fact that most of the experience is not the profound climax, but this long tail which can go on for hours and is a meditation and often a very good meditation in that you're totally undistracted and you can go really deep, but you still have some control over your mind. So I think the links are very interesting. And I, And I do think psychedelics are a legitimate tool for the study of consciousness, the scientific study of consciousness. You know, the first big study that was done at Johns Hopkins by Roland Griffith was. Was of mystical experience. That's a very interesting aspect of human consciousness. And the fact that we have a tool that can pretty reliably induce it opens up all sorts of experimental possibilities.
Sam Harris
Yeah, I mean, the reliability, apart from the tiny percentage of people who seem impervious to psychedelics for reasons that I don't know whether they've been explained at the level of their five HT2A receptors or not. But I mean, some people, apparently. I never believe this. I mean, I accept it as a fact, but I just can't believe that there are people who, if given 500 micrograms of LSD, have no experience.
Michael Pollan
The gurus. The guru stories. Yes.
Sam Harris
No, I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about just ordinary people who are seeking to have an experience on psychedelics and they, in the presence of a guide, administering whatever, five grams of mushrooms. I mean, I know people like this. I know at least two people who have taken Whopping doses of psychedelics and literally nothing has happened. And so there are people who just, for whatever reason, don't have the right neurons. For better or worse.
Michael Pollan
I was thinking more of the, you know, the stories. Ram Dass tells the story of Neem Karoli Baba and just upping the dose. Upping the dose. Getting up to 6 or 700 micrograms and nothing happens. Yeah, yeah.
Sam Harris
And then being in doubt as to whether or not he, you know, had just palmed the medication and didn't take it. And then, so then when he went back, he did it again and it worked the same way or didn't work. So consciousness is the fact that it's like something to be us. The fact that the lights are on and there is a deep intuition or a dogma or expectation in biology at least, that the explanation for this must be evolutionary in some sense. Right. Consciousness must have either evolved for some reason, because certain things that are adaptive and indispensable for us can only a curb in the light of consciousness. Or I guess it could be an epiphenomenon, a view which sounds really counterintuitive to people, but which I've always thought had a lot going for it. Famously, T.H. huxley, who was a great defender of Darwin's theory back in the day, said that consciousness was like the steam whistle on a train. Right. It's this super salient feature of the train's operation, but not at all integral to anything that's happening. I don't think he used the word epiphenomenon, but the concept of this is a phenomenon that rides alongside the thing you're interested in. It seems to be part of it, but it's really doing absolutely nothing. Tell me what you encountered when you asked people about the evolutionary role of the train.
Michael Pollan
Well, that was a real question I had. I mean, as you know, the brain, most of what the brain does, we're not aware of. It's processing information, taking in sensory data all the time and making changes, running homeostasis, keeping your body in the right temperature and blood gases and all this kind of stuff. So why should any of it be conscious? Why don't we automate everything? Why aren't we zombies? I think that's a kind of subset of the hard problem. And you can construct a good evolutionary story that would explain why it would be useful. And the best one I heard was from Carl Friston, who's a English neuroscientist. And I put this question to him. What good is it? What good is consciousness. And he said that for us creatures who are fundamentally social beings who depend on other people to survive, who have a long childhood where we're utterly dependent much longer than any other mammal, consciousness allows us to navigate social life, which is too complex and changeable to program. You couldn't hardwire everything you have to know to succeed in a human social context. So having the ability to predict what the other person is going to say or do, to imagine your way into their point of view, these are all highly adaptive skills. And you can easily imagine, you know, a couple of proto humans, some of whom have that imaginary ability, call it theory of mind or something that, you know, proto theory of mind, and are very good students of the other person and can read facial expressions and, and, and figure out what's going to happen next. Compare that to someone who's kind of dense and doesn't pick up on social signals, who's more likely to make up a good bond and reproduce. So, you know, who knows if that's true? But that would create a pressure for something like consciousness to emerge from unconscious or from sentience. Say.
Sam Harris
Yeah, I don't know.
Michael Pollan
You buy it?
Sam Harris
No, I don't buy any of that.
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Michael Pollan
We already believe they're conscious and they will convince them us they're conscious. It's in their interest to convince us they're conscious.
Sam Harris
We could inadvertently build conscious machines that can suffer and be immiserated, and we will have just built them like black boxes. Then we'll have no sense that we have just created hell and populated it.
Podcast Summary: Making Sense with Sam Harris
Episode #475 — The Hard Problem of Consciousness
Guest: Michael Pollan
Date: May 12, 2026
This episode explores "the hard problem of consciousness"—the profound question of how subjective experience arises from the brain—with renowned author and journalist Michael Pollan. Building on Pollan’s latest book, A World: A Journey Into Consciousness, and his previous work on psychedelics, Sam and Michael delve into distinctions between consciousness, sentience, cognition, and intelligence. They discuss the intersection of neuroscience, philosophy, and psychedelic research, as well as implications for evolutionary biology and artificial intelligence. The conversation is open, philosophical, and grounded, with personal anecdotes, notable quotes, and cultural context.
On Defining Consciousness & the Hard Problem:
“Consciousness is the fact that the lights are on and it's synonymous with the fact of experience.”
— Sam Harris [07:03]
On Psychedelics and Scientific Inquiry:
“Psychedelics are a legitimate tool for the study of consciousness, the scientific study of consciousness.”
— Michael Pollan [20:22]
On the Evolutionary Role of Consciousness:
“Why should any of it be conscious? Why don't we automate everything? Why aren't we zombies?”
— Michael Pollan [23:16]
On Cultural Change:
“Now, psychedelics are not no longer coded liberal or left or counterculture...There's more support on the right than the left.”
— Michael Pollan [16:43]
The conversation is philosophical yet accessible, marked by curiosity, skepticism, and the desire to connect ancient questions to current scientific and cultural realities. Both speakers blend personal reflection with rigorous inquiry, making the episode engaging for listeners at any level of familiarity with the subject.
For anyone interested in consciousness, AI, the renaissance in psychedelic research, or the intersection of science and philosophy, this episode offers a thought-provoking, nuanced exploration that captures both the fascination and stubborn mysteries of the subject.