Journal of Consciousness Studies

10 found

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Forthcoming articles
  1. Gualtiero Piccinini, Scientific Methods Ought to Be Public, and Descriptive Experience Sampling is One of Them.
    Hurlburt and Schwitzgebel’s groundbreaking book, Describing Inner Experience: Proponent Meets Skeptic, examines a research method called Descriptive Experience Sampling (DES). DES, which was developed by Hurlburt and collaborators, works roughly as follows. An investigator gives a subject a random beeper. During the day, as the subject hears a beep, she writes a description of her conscious experience just before the beep. The next day, the investigator interviews the subject, asks for more details, corrects any apparent mistakes made by the subject, (...)
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  2. Glenn Carruthers, 'Toward a Cognitive Model of the Sense of Embodiment in a (Rubber) Hand'.
    The rubber hand illusion (RHI) is the experience of an artificial body part as being a real body part and the experience of touch coming from that artificial body part. An explanation of this illusion would take significant steps towards explaining the experience of embodiment in one’s own body. I present a new cognitive model to explain the RHI. I argue that the sense of embodiment arises when an on-line representation of the candidate body part is represented as matching an (...)
     
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  3. Felipe De Brigard, Attention, Consciousness, and Commonsense.
    The relation of dependency between consciousness and attention is, once again, a matter of heated debate among scientists and philosophers. There are at least three general views on the issue. First, there are those who suggest that attention is both necessary and sufficient for consciousness (e.g. Posner, 1994; Prinz, 2000, forthcoming). Second, there are those who suggest that even though attention is necessary for consciousness, it may not be sufficient (e.g. Moran & Desimone, 1984; Rensink et al., 1997; Merikle & (...)
     
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  4. Shan Gao, A Quantum Physical Argument for Panpsychism.
    It has been widely thought that consciousness has no causal efficacy in the physical world. However, this may be not the case. In this paper, we show that a conscious being can distinguish definite perceptions and their quantum superpositions, while a physical measuring system without consciousness cannot distinguish such nonorthogonal quantum states. The possible existence of this distinct quantum physical effect of consciousness may have interesting implications for the science of consciousness. In particular, it suggests that consciousness is not emergent (...)
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  5. Mostyn W. Jones, How to Make Mind-Brain Relations Clear.
    The mind-body problem arises because all theories about mind-brain connections are too deeply obscure to gain general acceptance. This essay suggests a clear, simple, mind-brain solution that avoids all these perennial obscurities. (1) It does so, first of all, by reworking Strawson and Stoljar’s views. They argue that while minds differ from observable brains, minds can still be what brains are physically like behind the appearances created by our outer senses. This could avoid many obscurities. But to clearly do so, (...)
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  6. Paul Livingston, Phenomenal Concepts and the Problem of Acquaintance.
    Some contemporary discussion about the explanation of consciousness substantially recapitulates a decisive debate about reference, knowledge and justification from an earlier stage of the analytic tradition. In particular, I argue that proponents of a recently popular strategy for accounting for an explanatory gap between physical and phenomenal facts – the so-called “phenomenal concept strategy” – face a problem that was originally fiercely debated by Schlick, Carnap, and Neurath. The question that is common to both the older and the contemporary discussion (...)
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  7. Raamy Majeed, A Representationalist Argument Against Contemporary Panpsychism.
    Consider (i) the humility thesis that we only know the causal natures of the external world and (ii) the thesis we are directly acquainted with the intrinsic natures of our phenomenal experiences. The conjunction of these two theses has motivated a version of panpsychism, which states that the intrinsic nature of all matter is phenomenal. Contemporary panpsychists, such as Lockwood (1991, 1993), Rosenberg (1999, 2004) and Maxwell (2002), have taken it upon themselves to flesh out a plausible story of how (...)
     
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  8. Barak Morgan, Getting Scientific With Religion: A Darwinian Solution… Or Not?
    Introducing non-Darwinian mind as a nonaptation (raw materials of evolution) I argue that
    Darwinian mind evolved from non-Darwinian mind through the evolution of desire and
    aversion. The subject position within Darwinian mind is Darwinian self and is inherently selfish.
    However the cathexis whereby the subject prioritises motivations of desire and aversion is not
    an inherent property of mind. Instead it is proposed to be an adaptation, a predisposition to
    respond to pleasant/unpleasant sensations with desire/aversion. This explains why self-sacrifice
    and disengagement from desire/aversion are the sine qua (...)
     
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  9. Gualtiero Piccinini, How to Improve on Heterophenomenology: The Self-Measurement Methodology of First-Person Data.
    Heterophenomenology is a third-person methodology proposed by Daniel Dennett for using first-person reports as scientific evidence. I argue that heterophenomenology can be improved by making six changes: (i) setting aside consciousness, (ii) including other sources of first-person data besides first-person reports, (iii) abandoning agnosticism as to the truth value of the reports in favor of the most plausible assumptions we can make about what can be learned from the data, (iv) interpreting first-person reports (and other first-person behaviors) directly in terms (...)
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  10. Daniel Stoljar, Strawson's Realistic Monism.
    There is at least one element in Strawson.
     
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