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The puzzle of why the brain, in the absence of external stimuli, activates perceptual systems with such vivid, detailed, and often meaningful content. A hallucination isn't just noise or static; it's a full-blown, internally-generated simulation that the brain categorizes as "real" perception. The hard problem is understanding why this happens in otherwise healthy brains (e.g., hypnagogic hallucinations, grief hallucinations) and what it reveals about how the brain constructs reality. It suggests perception is a controlled hallucination, and ordinary waking life is just one where internal predictions are tightly locked to sensory input.
Example: A perfectly healthy, grieving person sees their deceased spouse sitting in their favorite chair, in full detail, for a few seconds. This isn't psychosis; it's a common grief hallucination. The hard problem: How does the brain's visual and emotional circuitry coordinate to produce such a specific, emotionally resonant, and perceptually convincing image spontaneously? It demonstrates that our experienced reality is a fragile synthesis, and the brain can easily present its own internal narrative as external fact when the usual checks are loosened. Hard Problem of Hallucination.
by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
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