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Yearning for consciousness
pp. 97-116
Abstract
The discipline called philosophy of mind aims to study the so-called mentalistic concepts like consciousness, belief, knowledge, perception and intentionality. The mind is also the subject of scientific inquiry in the cognitive sciences—most prominently in terms of the study of the brain and the nervous system. The study of consciousness lies at the center of the joint enterprise. However, the scientific study of the concept of consciousness is beset with so many fundamental problems that we might wonder if there is a genuine study of consciousness at all. Why is the concept in universal use then? What role does it play in our common life? We suggest that consciousness could be a concept whose importance and use in our common life need not mean that it picks out some property of some delineable object. The concept plays a singular role in anchoring the concept of a person; the concept shows up the moment we wish to extend the concept of a person to fetuses and fauna. We need the concept to form some conception of an ethical order consisting of fellow beings just as we need the concept of beauty to form a conception of an aesthetic order. Those needs are essentially normative with no demand for descriptive truth; hence, there is no demand for a theory.
Publication details
Published in:
Mukherji Nirmalangshu (2017) Reflections on human inquiry: science, philosophy, and common life. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 97-116
DOI: 10.1007/978-981-10-5364-1_7
Full citation:
Mukherji Nirmalangshu (2017) Yearning for consciousness, In: Reflections on human inquiry, Dordrecht, Springer, 97–116.