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Journal article

Using phenomenal concepts to explain away the intuition of contingency

Abstract:

Humans can think about their conscious experiences using a special class of ‘phenomenal’ concepts. Psycho-physical identity statements formulated using phenomenal concepts appear to be contingent. Kripke argued that this intuited contingency could not be explained away, in contrast to ordinary theoretical identities where it can. If the contingency is real, property dualism follows. Physicalists have attempted to answer this challenge by pointing to special features of phenomenal concepts that explain the intuition of contingency. However no physicalist account of their distinguishing features has proven to be satisfactory. Leading accounts rely on there being a phenomenological difference between tokening a physical-functional concept and tokening a phenomenal concept. This paper shows that existing psychological data undermine that claim. The paper goes on to suggest that the recalcitrance of the intuition of contingency may instead by explained by the limited means people typically have for applying their phenomenal concepts. Ways of testing that suggestion empirically are proposed.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Not peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1080/09515089.2012.730039

Authors

More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Department:
Philosophy Faculty
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Taylor and Francis
Journal:
Using phenomenal concepts to expalin away the intuition of contingency More from this journal
Issue:
iFirst
Pages:
1-18
Publication date:
2012-01-01
Edition:
Author's Original
DOI:
EISSN:
1465-394X
ISSN:
0951-5089


Language:
English
Subjects:
UUID:
uuid:ea66ad26-df05-40b3-a987-528f57377757
Local pid:
ora:7274
Deposit date:
2013-09-09
ARK identifier:

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