Blindsight and the Nature of Consciousness

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Broadview Press, Feb 26, 2003 - Philosophy - 160 pages

Ever since its discovery nearly thirty years ago, the phenomenon of blindsight—vision without visual consciousness—has been the source of great controversy in the philosophy of mind, psychology, and the neurosciences. Despite the fact that blindsight is widely acknowledged to be a critical test-case for theories of mind, Blindsight and the Nature of Consciousness is the first extended treatment of the phenomenon from a philosophical perspective. Holt argues, against much received wisdom, for a thorough-going materialism—the view not only that mental states are brain states, but (much more controversially) that mental properties are physical as well. Designed not only for philosophers and scientists, Blindsight and the Nature of Consciousness has something to say to anyone interested in the mystery of the human mind and in how philosophers and scientists are working toward solving that mystery.

 

Contents

A Brief History of Blindsight
19
Dissociation Cases
31
CHAPTER 3
43
Super Blindsight and Other Disqualifications
57
CHAPTER 5
69
Access Denied Zombiehead Revisited
81
Stereotypes and Token Efforts
93
The Hard Gap and Had Perspectives
105
Not Seeing Is Believing
117
Split Vision
129
Notes
137
Copyright

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Popular passages

Page 153 - Weiskrantz, L. (1995). Blindsight — Not an Island Unto Itself. Current Directions in Psychological Science 4 (5), 146-49.

About the author (2003)

Jason Holt is Visiting Assistant Professor in the Philosophy Department at Concordia University (Montreal).

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