Consciousness: Essays from a Higher-Order Perspective

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Clarendon Press, May 26, 2005 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 247 pages
Peter Carruthers's essays on consciousness and related issues have had a substantial impact on the field, and many of his best are now collected here in revised form. The first half of the volume is devoted to developing, elaborating, and defending against competitors one particular sort of reductive explanation of phenomenal consciousness, which Carruthers now refers to as 'dual-content theory'. Phenomenal consciousness - the feel of experience - is supposed to constitute the 'hardproblem' for a scientific world view, and many have claimed that it is an irredeemable mystery. But Carruthers here claims to have explained it. He argues that phenomenally conscious states are ones that possess both an 'analog' (fine-grained) intentional content and a corresponding higher-orderanalog content, representing the first-order content of the experience. It is the higher-order analog content that enables our phenomenally conscious experiences to present themselves to us, and that constitutes their distinctive subjective aspect, or feel.The next two chapters explore some of the differences between conscious experience and conscious thought, and argue for the plausibility of some kind of eliminativism about conscious thinking (while retaining realism about phenomenal consciousness). Then the final four chapters focus on the minds of non-human animals. Carruthers argues that even if the experiences of animals aren't phenomenally conscious (as his account probably implies), this needn't prevent the frustrations and sufferings ofanimals from being appropriate objects of sympathy and concern. Nor need it mean that there is any sort of radical 'Cartesian divide' between our minds and theirs of deep significance for comparative psychology. In the final chapter, he argues provocatively that even insects have minds that include abelief/desire/perception psychology much like our own. So mindedness and phenomenal consciousness couldn't be further apart.Carruthers's writing throughout is distinctively clear and direct. The collection will be of great interest to anyone working in philosophy of mind or cognitive science.
 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 Reductive Explanation and the Explanatory Gap
18
3 Natural Theories of Consciousness
36
4 HOP over FOR HOT Theory
61
5 Phenomenal Concepts and HigherOrder Experiences
79
the Explanatory Advantages
98
Language or Elimination?
115
8 Conscious Experience versus Conscious Thought
134
9 Sympathy and Subjectivity
157
10 Suffering without Subjectivity
177
11 Why the Question of Animal Consciousness Might not Matter Very Much
195
12 On Being SimpleMinded
215
Bibliography
233
Index
243
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About the author (2005)

Peter Carruthers is at Department of Philosophy, University of Maryland.

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