This article examines the hard problem of consciousness, as defined by David Chalmers in his 1995 paper, against five distinct, philosophically rigorous positions developed within the Indian philosophical tradition over approximately 2,500 years, while giving full, undiminished weight to the current empirical state of consciousness science. It reviews the 2025 Cogitate Consortium adversarial collaboration published in Nature, a 256-participant, multi-site, multi-method test of Integrated Information Theory and Global Workspace Theory that found neither theory clearly confirmed, alongside the 2023 controversy in which a group of consciousness researchers publicly labeled IIT pseudoscience. It examines Samkhya's dualist ontology, drawing on a peer-reviewed Religious Studies (Cambridge) paper directly engaging the hard problem from this tradition; Advaita Vedanta's witness-consciousness (Sakshin) framework, drawing on a peer-reviewed Yoga Mimamsa paper addressing the same question; Kashmir Shaivism's Pratyabhijna philosophy of active self-aware consciousness (Vimarsha), associated with Utpaladeva and Abhinavagupta (9th-10th century CE); and Patanjali's Yoga Sutra distinction between the seer (Drishta) and the seen (Drishya), with specific reference to sutras 2.17 through 2.25. The article explicitly addresses Shankara's own historical philosophical refutation of Samkhya, demonstrating that these traditions genuinely disagree with one another rather than forming a single, unified 'ancient wisdom' position, and concludes with an honest accounting of what kind of claim each tradition is actually making relative to a scientific theory.
Narayan Rout (Tue,) studied this question.