
The Nature of Consciousness Philosophical Debates
by Block, Ned; Flanagan, Owen; Guzeldere, GuvenBuy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Owen Flanagan is James B. Duke Professor of Philosophy at Duke University. He is the author of Consciousness Reconsidered and The Really Hard Problem: Meaning in a Material World, both published by the MIT Press, and other books.
Güven Güzeldere is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Assistant Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Duke University. He is coeditor (with Ned Block and Owen Flanagan) of The Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical and Scientific Debates (MIT Press, 1998) and a founding associate editor of Psyche: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Consciousness.
Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments | |
Sources | |
Introduction: The Many Faces of Consciousness: A Field Guide | p. 1 |
The Stream of Consciousness | p. 71 |
The Cartesian Theater and "Filling In" the Stream of Consciousness | p. 83 |
The Robust Phenomenology of the Stream of Consciousness | p. 89 |
Prospects for a Unified Theory of Consciousness or, What Dreams Are Made Of | p. 97 |
Consciousness, Folk Psychology, and Cognitive Science | p. 111 |
Can Neurobiology Teach Us Anything about Consciousness? | p. 127 |
Time and the Observer: The Where and When of Consciousness in the Brain | p. 141 |
Begging the Question against Phenomenal Consciousness | p. 175 |
Time for More Alternatives | p. 181 |
Contrastive Phenomenology: A Thoroughly Empirical Approach to Consciousness | p. 187 |
Visual Perception and Visual Awareness after Brain Damage: A Tutorial Overview | p. 203 |
Understanding Consciousness: Clues from Unilateral Neglect and Related Disorders | p. 237 |
Modularity and Consciousness | p. 255 |
Towards a Neurobiological Theory of Consciousness | p. 277 |
Consciousness and Content | p. 295 |
Externalism and Experience | p. 309 |
A Representational Theory of Pains and Their Phenomenal Character | p. 329 |
Sensation and the Content of Experience: A Distinction | p. 341 |
Conscious Inessentialism and the Epiphenomenalist Suspicion | p. 357 |
On a Confusion about a Function of Consciousness | p. 375 |
The Path Not Taken | p. 417 |
Availability: The Cognitive Basis of Experience? | p. 421 |
Fallacies or Analyses? | p. 425 |
Two Kinds of Consciousness | p. 427 |
Understanding the Phenomenal Mind: Are We All Just Armadillos? Part II: The Absent Qualia Argument | p. 435 |
The Identity Thesis | p. 445 |
Reductionism and the Irreducibility of Consciousness | p. 451 |
A Question about Consciousness | p. 461 |
Finding the Mind in the Natural World | p. 483 |
Breaking the Hold: Silicon Brains, Conscious Robots, and Other Minds | p. 493 |
The First-Person Perspective | p. 503 |
What Is It Like to Be a Bat? | p. 519 |
Can We Solve the Mind-Body Problem? | p. 529 |
On Leaving Out What It's Like | p. 543 |
Understanding the Phenomenal Mind: Are We All Just Armadillos? Part I: Phenomenal Knowledge and Explanatory Gaps | p. 559 |
What Mary Didn't Know | p. 567 |
Knowing Qualia: A Reply to Jackson | p. 571 |
What Experience Teaches | p. 579 |
Phenomenal States | p. 597 |
Quining Qualia | p. 619 |
The Inverted Spectrum | p. 643 |
The Intrinsic Quality of Experience | p. 663 |
Inverted Earth | p. 677 |
Curse of the Qualia | p. 695 |
What Is Consciousness? | p. 721 |
A Theory of Consciousness | p. 729 |
Consciousness as Internal Monitoring | p. 755 |
Conscious Experience | p. 773 |
Is Consciousness the Perception of What Passes in One's Own Mind? | p. 789 |
References to Introduction | p. 807 |
Suggested Readings compiled by Guven Guzeldere | p. 817 |
Index | p. 825 |
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |
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