Can't reduce consciousness to physical processes
Physicalism explains appearances in terms of their underlying physical reality. But this distinction doesn't apply to consciousness, within which appearance is the reality. Consciousness isn't reducible to nothing-but some other physical process
An essential feature of physicalism is that it explains appearances in terms of their underlying physical reality.

For example, the appearance of lightning can be reduced to the reality of electrical discharge.

But it doesn't make sense to ask what conscious experience reduces to, as the distinction between appearance and reality does not apply to consciousness.

Within consciousness the appearance is the reality. So consciousness can't be reduced in the normal scientific manner as "nothing" but some other physical process.

Thomas Nagel (1974).
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Artificial Intelligence »Artificial Intelligence
Can computers think? [1] »Can computers think? [1]
No: computers can't be conscious [6] »No: computers can't be conscious [6]
Consciousness is physical »Consciousness is physical
Can't reduce consciousness to physical processes
Normal ontological reductionism doesn't work »Normal ontological reductionism doesn't work
What is it like to be a bat? »What is it like to be a bat?
Causal reductionism »Causal reductionism
Phenomenal component only part of consciousness »Phenomenal component only part of consciousness
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