Viewed from a first-person perspective consciousness appears to be necessary for complex, novel human activity - but viewed from a third-person perspective consciousness appears to play no role in the activity of brains, producing a "causal paradox". To resolve this paradox one needs to distinguish consciousness of processing from consciousness accompanying processing or causing processing. Accounts of consciousness/brain causal interactions switch between first- and third-person perspectives. However, epistemically, the differences between first- and third-person access are fundamental. First- and third-person accounts are complementary and mutually irreducible
Two main open questions in current consciousness research concern (i) the neural correlates of consc...
This is a target article for the Behavioral and Brain Sciences, followed by 36 open peer commentarie...
The sequence of topics in this reply roughly follows that of the target article. The latter focused ...
Viewed from a first-person perspective consciousness appears to be necessary for complex, novel huma...
This paper replies to the first 36 commentaries on my target article on “Is human information proces...
This reply to five continuing commentaries on my 1991 Behavioral and Brain Sciences target article o...
We argue for the possibility of validating the presence of consciousness in another person from a pe...
In consciousness studies, the first-person perspective, seen as a way to approach consciousness, is ...
I review a number of approaches that attempt to deal with the gap that seems to exist between first-...
Traditional approaches model consciousness as the outcome either of internal computational processes...
This paper evaluates Mangan’s (1993) analysis of the way feelings at the fringes of consciousness pr...
This commentary elaborates on Gray's conclusion that his neurophysiological model of consciousness m...
After having ignored it for over a century, science is again facing the problem of consciousness. Ma...
My 2002 Journal of Consciousness Studies target article on "How could conscious experiences affect b...
Psychosomatic medicine assumes that the conscious mind can affect body states, and this is supported...
Two main open questions in current consciousness research concern (i) the neural correlates of consc...
This is a target article for the Behavioral and Brain Sciences, followed by 36 open peer commentarie...
The sequence of topics in this reply roughly follows that of the target article. The latter focused ...
Viewed from a first-person perspective consciousness appears to be necessary for complex, novel huma...
This paper replies to the first 36 commentaries on my target article on “Is human information proces...
This reply to five continuing commentaries on my 1991 Behavioral and Brain Sciences target article o...
We argue for the possibility of validating the presence of consciousness in another person from a pe...
In consciousness studies, the first-person perspective, seen as a way to approach consciousness, is ...
I review a number of approaches that attempt to deal with the gap that seems to exist between first-...
Traditional approaches model consciousness as the outcome either of internal computational processes...
This paper evaluates Mangan’s (1993) analysis of the way feelings at the fringes of consciousness pr...
This commentary elaborates on Gray's conclusion that his neurophysiological model of consciousness m...
After having ignored it for over a century, science is again facing the problem of consciousness. Ma...
My 2002 Journal of Consciousness Studies target article on "How could conscious experiences affect b...
Psychosomatic medicine assumes that the conscious mind can affect body states, and this is supported...
Two main open questions in current consciousness research concern (i) the neural correlates of consc...
This is a target article for the Behavioral and Brain Sciences, followed by 36 open peer commentarie...
The sequence of topics in this reply roughly follows that of the target article. The latter focused ...