• شماره ركورد
    1370497
  • عنوان مقاله

    Consciousness, Subjective Facts, and Physicalism – Fifty Years since Nagel’s Bat

  • پديد آورندگان

    Van Gulick ، Robert Syracuse University - Philosophy Department

  • از صفحه
    5
  • تا صفحه
    19
  • كليدواژه
    consciousness , subjective facts , physicalism , self , understanding
  • چكيده فارسي
    The existence of subjective facts in the epistemic sense defined by Thomas Nagel’s famous article, “What is like to be a bat?”, might be taken to support an anti-physicalist conclusion. I argue that it does not. The combination of nonreductive physicalism and teleo-pragmatic functionalism is not only consistent with such subjective facts but predicts their existence. The notion that conscious minds are self-understanding autopoietic systems plays a key role in the argument. Global Neuronal Workspace theory is assessed in terms of its potential to answer David Chalmers’ Hard Problem of consciousness. A suggestion is made for augmenting the theory that involves another sense in which facts about conscious experience are subjective. The idea of conscious minds as self-understanding systems again plays an important role.A suggestion is made for augmenting the theory that involves another sense in which facts about conscious experience are subjective. The idea of conscious minds as self-understanding systems again plays an important role.
  • عنوان نشريه
    پژوهشهاي فلسفي كلامي
  • عنوان نشريه
    پژوهشهاي فلسفي كلامي