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Radical Internalism

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Honderich claims that for a person to be perceptually conscious is for a world to exist. I decide what this means, and whether it could be true, in the opening section Consciousness and Existence. In Honderich’s Phenomenology, I show that Honderich’s theory is essentially anticipated in the ideas and Ideas of Husserl. In the third section, Radical Interiority, I argue that although phenomenology putatively eschews ontology of mind, and Honderich construes his position as near- physicalism, Honderich’s insights are only truths because we are spiritual substances.

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford, 10 Merton Street, Oxford OX1 4JJ.

Publication date: 01 January 2006

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