Thanks to the enormous progress of neuroscience over the past
few decades, we can now monitor the passage of initial stimulations
to certain points in the brain. In spite of these findings,
however, subjective consciousness still remains an unsolved
mystery. This volume exposes neuroscience and cognitive science to
philosophical analysis and proposes that we think of our conscious
states of mind as a composite phenomenon consisting of three
layers: neuronal events, somatic markers, and explicit
consciousness. While physics and chemistry can and have been
successfully employed to describe the causal relation between the
first two layers, the further step to articulate consciousness is
purely interpretative and points to the preponderant importance of
language.
Language is essential for the transformation of inchoate, not
very informative somatic markers and mere moods into full
consciousness and appraised emotion. Munz uses literary examples to
shift our understanding of the mind away from computational models
and to show how eloquence about our states of mind is manufactured
rather than caused. He firmly rejects the efforts of both Freud and
non-Freudian psychologists to find a scientific explanation for
such manufacture and to make a science out of the eloquence of folk
psychology. Instead he argues that the many ways eloquence is being
manufactured to transform somatic markers into conscious states of
mind are best accounted for in terms of Wittgenstein's conception
of language games. This volume challenges most current thinking
about consciousness and mind and will appeal to philosophers,
psychologists, neuroscientists, and linguists.
General
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