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Full Idea
Consciousness and experience of qualities are often run together - a serious mistake, I think.
Gist of Idea
Consciousness and experience of qualities are not the same
Source
David M. Armstrong (Pref to new 'Materialist Theory' [1992], p.xvii)
Book Ref
Armstrong,D.M.: 'A Materialist Theory of Mind' [Routledge 1993], p.-7
A Reaction
A difficult claim to evaluate. Can we experience redness without being conscious of it? Could there be consciousness (e.g. of concepts) which didn't involve any qualities? I suspect that qualities are more basic than intentionality or consciousness.
5014 | We can understand thinking occuring without imagination or sensation [Descartes] |
20741 | Consciousness is shaped dialectically, by opposing forces and concepts [Hegel, by Aho] |
22212 | Pure consciousness is a sealed off system of actual Being [Husserl] |
6151 | Sartre says consciousness is just directedness towards external objects [Sartre, by Rowlands] |
24016 | Consciousness always transcends itself [Sartre] |
7437 | Consciousness and experience of qualities are not the same [Armstrong] |
21890 | Heidegger showed that passing time is the key to consciousness [Derrida] |
3479 | The mind experiences space, but it is not experienced as spatial [Searle] |
3286 | An organism is conscious if and only if there is something it is like to be that organism [Nagel] |
9319 | Is consciousness a type of self-awareness, or is being self-aware a way of being conscious? [Gulick] |
2391 | Can we be aware but not conscious? [Chalmers] |
4931 | Consciousness is a process (of neural interactions), not a location, thing, property, connectivity, or activity [Edelman/Tononi] |