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Current theories of phenomenal consciousness are accused of leaving out essential features of this phenomenon. Their opponents hold that the problem of consciousness is either unsolvable, or that we still lack conceptual resources to solve it. This book challenges both the adequacy of current theories and their rivals skeptical stance. These fail because of their underlying assumption that phenomenality consists in strictly cognitive-representational features of mental systems. The book lays the foundations for an alternative theory, according to which the missing element of consciousness is…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Current theories of phenomenal consciousness are accused of leaving out essential features of this phenomenon. Their opponents hold that the problem of consciousness is either unsolvable, or that we still lack conceptual resources to solve it. This book challenges both the adequacy of current theories and their rivals skeptical stance. These fail because of their underlying assumption that phenomenality consists in strictly cognitive-representational features of mental systems. The book lays the foundations for an alternative theory, according to which the missing element of consciousness is the conative-evaluative aspect of our minds. Phenomenality arises from an interplay between our cognitive-representational nature and our conative-evaluative nature. Being conscious requires attitudes such as desires, interests and preferences. What gives rise to consciousness is the subject's being non-indifferent toward certain information her adopting conative-evaluative attitudes toward, and thereby conferring significance upon, that which she sensorily represents. The "subjective point of view" - the mark of the phenomenal - is actually a conative-evaluative point of view.
Autorenporträt
Hilla Jacobson is a philosopher of mind and cognitive science. She is a senior lecturer and Chair of the Department of Cognition and Brain Sciences at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel.