Consciousness is a perennial source of mystification in the
philosophy of mind: how can processes in the brain amount to
conscious experiences? Robert Kirk uses the notion of "raw feeling"
to bridge the intelligibility gap between our knowledge of
ourselves as physical organisms and our
knowledge of ourselves as subjects of experience; he argues that
there is no need for recourse to dualism or private mental objects.
The task is to understand how the truth about raw feeling could be
strictly implied by narrowly physical truths. Kirk's explanation
turns on an account of what it is
to be a subject of conscious perceptual experience. He offers
penetrating analyses of the problems of consciousness and suggests
novel solutions. His sustained defense of non-reductive physicalism
shows that we need not abandon hope of finding a solution to the
mind-body problem.
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