One of the principal tasks Dennett sets himself in "Consciousness Explained" is to demolish the Cartesian theatre model of phenomenal consciousness, which in its contemporary garb takes the form of Cartesian materialism: the idea that conscious experience is a process of presentation realized in the physical materials of the brain. The now standard response to Dennett is that, in focusing on Cartesian materialism, he attacks an impossibly naive account of consciousness held by no one currently working in cognitive science or the philosophy of mind. Our response is quite different. We believe that, once properly formulated, Cartesian materialism is no straw man. Rather, it is an attractive hypothesis about the relationship between the comput...
Abstract I discuss fi ve basic objections that materialists often raise to Cartesian Mind-Body Duali...
Many contemporary philosophers of mind regard the Cartesian theory of the mental as the major stumbl...
Daniel Dennett (1996) has disputed David Chalmers' (1995) assertion that there is a "hard problem of...
In this article a major argument by D. Dennett is analysed in order to provide an ultimate argumenta...
The mind-body problem is one of the great mysteries. How are my feelings and thoughts related to th...
Little is gained, and much lost, by casting an empirical theory of previous consciousness in a "func...
1.1 `We're all zombies. Nobody is conscious ' (Dennett 1991, p. 406) is an assertion Denne...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.This paper is an analysis of aspects of Daniel Denne...
There is nothing that we could be more familiar with than our own consciousness. It seems to us that...
In his paper “Why and how does consciousness seem the way it seems?”, Daniel Dennett argues that phi...
Are zombies possible? They’re not just possible, they’re actual. We’re all zombies. (Dennett Consci...
Although D. Dennett is sometimes accused of insensitivity to 'real', first-person problems of the mi...
A re-expression of some of the troublesome features of my oft-caricatured theory of consciousness, w...
In their recent article in TiCS [1], Cohen and Dennett propose that consciousness is inextricably ti...
This research will argue about which theory of mind between Searle’s and Dennett’s can bet...
Abstract I discuss fi ve basic objections that materialists often raise to Cartesian Mind-Body Duali...
Many contemporary philosophers of mind regard the Cartesian theory of the mental as the major stumbl...
Daniel Dennett (1996) has disputed David Chalmers' (1995) assertion that there is a "hard problem of...
In this article a major argument by D. Dennett is analysed in order to provide an ultimate argumenta...
The mind-body problem is one of the great mysteries. How are my feelings and thoughts related to th...
Little is gained, and much lost, by casting an empirical theory of previous consciousness in a "func...
1.1 `We're all zombies. Nobody is conscious ' (Dennett 1991, p. 406) is an assertion Denne...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.This paper is an analysis of aspects of Daniel Denne...
There is nothing that we could be more familiar with than our own consciousness. It seems to us that...
In his paper “Why and how does consciousness seem the way it seems?”, Daniel Dennett argues that phi...
Are zombies possible? They’re not just possible, they’re actual. We’re all zombies. (Dennett Consci...
Although D. Dennett is sometimes accused of insensitivity to 'real', first-person problems of the mi...
A re-expression of some of the troublesome features of my oft-caricatured theory of consciousness, w...
In their recent article in TiCS [1], Cohen and Dennett propose that consciousness is inextricably ti...
This research will argue about which theory of mind between Searle’s and Dennett’s can bet...
Abstract I discuss fi ve basic objections that materialists often raise to Cartesian Mind-Body Duali...
Many contemporary philosophers of mind regard the Cartesian theory of the mental as the major stumbl...
Daniel Dennett (1996) has disputed David Chalmers' (1995) assertion that there is a "hard problem of...