Consciousness and the Self
'I never can catch myself at any time without a perception, and never can observe any thing but the perception.' These famous words of David Hume, on his inability to perceive the self, set the stage for JeeLoo Liu and John Perry's collection of essays on self-awareness and self-knowledge. This volume connects recent scientific studies on consciousness with the traditional issues about the self explored by Descartes, Locke and Hume. Experts in the field offer contrasting perspectives on matters such as the relation between consciousness and self-awareness, the notion of personhood and the epistemic access to one's own thoughts, desires or attitudes. The volume will be of interest to philosophers, psychologists, neuroscientists, cognitive scientists and others working on the central topics of consciousness and the self.
- Includes a readable, comprehensive introduction which provides explanations of key terminology and explains how the essays in the volume relate to each other, as well as to traditional areas of discussion
- This anthology provides a forum of discussion for topics that are closely related, yet too often treated separately
- Essential reading for philosophers, neuroscientists, cognitive scientists and psychologists
Reviews & endorsements
"...The main important point of this book is the capacity of the editors to put together different accounts about self-awareness that perfectly mix traditional and contemporary points of view about conscious states and the self. The diversity of thesis and conclusions included between the different chapters permits to take a panoramic look to the actual debate in philosophy of consciousness and self-awareness."
--Juan J. Colomina, PhD, The University of Texas at Austin and LEMA Research Group (University of La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain), Metapsychology Online Reviews
"...I'll lay my cards on the table right away and say that this is a good book. It's not too often that I read a collection such as this cover to cover, and I found doing so with this volume very rewarding. The book contains plenty of chewy philosophical argumentation and the, admittedly only occasional, references between papers were illuminating. There's a lot to learn, and to engage with, here.... It's a good book, with lots of careful papers and serious arguments. Anybody with even a passing interest in self-consciousness, consciousness or the self, cannot fail to learn something from its pages."
--Joel Smith, University of Manchester, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
Product details
June 2014Paperback
9781107414716
272 pages
229 × 152 × 15 mm
0.37kg
2 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction: consciousness and the self
- 1. Awareness and identification of self David Rosenthal
- 2. Self-representationalism and the explanatory gap Uriah Kriegel
- 3. Thinking about the self John Perry
- 4. Ordinary self-consciousness Lucy O'Brien
- 5. Waiting for the self Jesse Prinz
- 6. I think I think, therefore I am - I think: skeptical doubts about self-knowledge Fred Dretske
- 7. Knowing what I want Alex Byrne
- 8. Self-ignorance Eric Schwitzgebel
- 9. Personhood and consciousness Sydney Shoemaker
- 10. My non-narrative, non-forensic Dasein: the first and second self Owen Flanagan.