It is too bad that Dennett passed away on April 19, 2024. The topic "On the absurd hegemony of science" in which he participated quickly turned into a discussion about his views on qualia, with literally hundreds of critical questions directly being answered by him on this forum.
I've published the whole discussion on
https://gmodebate.org/dennett-evidence/ (indexed via a chapter menu for easy access to Dennett's comments)
I've explored the context of "Teleonomy" that underlays the whole thinking fundamentally, which is the theorethical cradle of the idea as it were.
In teleonomy an attempt is made to explain away the most simplest forms of life as a mere mechanistic process, and it would be easy to understand that if they would want to explain away conscious experience as a mechanistic process, they sure will need to be able to explain away the most simplest forms of life.
Dennett is a paragon and "ground breaker" for the field Cognitive Science, which is fundamentally dependent on Computational Theory of Mind (CTM). CTM in turn is fundamentally dependent on teleonomy for its validity.
One of the pioneers of teleonomy, evolution biologist Ernst Mayer, described it as following:
"
All teleonomic behavior is characterized by two components. It is guided by a ‘program’, and it depends on the existence of some endpoint, goal, or terminus which is foreseen in the program that regulates the behavior. This endpoint might be a structure, a physiological function, the attainment of a new geographical position, or a ‘consummatory’ (Craig 1918) act in behavior. Each particular program is the result of natural selection, constantly adjusted by the selective value of the achieved endpoint." ~ In Toward A New Philosophy of Biology: Observations of an Evolutionist, 38–66. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988. pp. 44–5
The idea that fundamentally underlays Dennett's thinking on animal consciousness is "
When teleonomy is true for lower life, it must be true for consciousness.".
While Dennett might not have specifically addressed or used the concept teleonomy in arguments, since teleonomy is the foundation of CTM, it can be inferred that this would be the foundation of his thinking (or of any attempt more generally) when he posits that the mind is a mechanistic process and that qualia are an illusion.
An AI agreed with this post:
"
Daniel Dennett's views on animal consciousness are fundamentally rooted in teleonomy—the study of goal-directed behavior in biological systems as programmed by natural selection. Dennett's teleonomic view leads him to reject the "hard problem" of consciousness (i.e., why subjective experience exists). Ultimately, Dennett's legacy lies in forcing a paradigm shift: asking not whether animals are conscious, but how the illusion of consciousness emerges from life's teleonomic machinery."
anonymous66 wrote:It is hard for me to imagine what consciousness is, if it doesn't involve qualia.
The inability to answer the question
Why consciousness is something other than its scientific empirical description, can be used as an argument for the claim that consciousness is simply what the empirical description of it entails. Science relies on empirical evidence and to go beyond science would enter the area of
metaphysics and mysticism. Dennett simply rejects to make that step, and that seems justified by the most simple skeptism.