
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2007
Pages: 115-136
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "The phenomenologically manifest", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 6, 2007, pp. 115-136.
Abstract
Disputes about what is phenomenologically manifest in conscious experience have a way of leading to deadlocks with remarkable immediacy. Disputants reach the foot-stomping stage of the dialectic more or less right after declaring their discordant views. It is this fact, I believe, that leads some to heterophenomenology and the like attempts to found Consciousness Studies on purely third-person grounds. In this paper, I explore the other possible reaction to this fact, namely, the articulation of methods for addressing phenomenological disputes. I suggest two viable methods, of complementary value, which I call "the method of contrast" and "the method of knowability."
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2007
Pages: 115-136
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "The phenomenologically manifest", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 6, 2007, pp. 115-136.