Eric SchwitzgebelPerplexities of Consciousness

MIT Press, 2011

by Carrie Figdor on June 15, 2011

Eric Schwitzgebel

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How much do we know about our stream of conscious experience? Not much, if Eric Schwitzgebel is right. In his new book Perplexities of Consciousness (MIT Press, 2011), Schwitzgebel argues for skepticism regarding our knowledge of the phenomenology of conscious experience. We don’t know if we dream in color or black and white, we don’t know whether tilted coins look elliptical or round, and we don’t know whether conscious experience is confined to what we are paying attention to or more abundant. Schwitzgebel’s position is based on close examination of historical philosophical texts and current psychological experiments that show radical variability in reports of experience that seem unlikely to reflect radical differences in the experiences themselves. In this wide-ranging interview, Schwitzgebel considers whether psychologist Edward Titchener was on to something with his training of expert introspectors, why current theories of the neural correlates of consciousness are question-begging, and how reports of conscious experiences may be grounded in analogies to familiar media.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Yehuda June 22, 2011 at 12:32 pm

Fascinating. If you could only give a 1/2 minute intro to the subject before the philosopher comes on, it wold be helpful. Also the audio is a little weak.
Thanks!

Santa June 15, 2011 at 2:13 pm

Where’s John Herman Randall when you need him to cut through the hoopla on consciousness?

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