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F. H. Bradley's Concept of Immediate Experience: An Evaluation in terms of Debates on Phenomenal Consciousness

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Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) July 2, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21133094 via OpenAlex

Summary

The study examines F. H. Bradley's concept of 'immediate experience,' asserting it is a non-relational unity that exists before thought and judgment. It highlights how attempts to conceptualize this experience can distort its essence, creating a 'paradox of reflection.' Despite being marginalized by the analytic tradition, Bradley's ideas resonate with contemporary discussions on consciousness and qualia, offering valuable insights that challenge established epistemic assumptions.

Study at a glance

Key finding Bradley's notion of immediate experience serves as a significant conceptual resource for current studies on consciousness, challenging conventional epistemic and cognitive assumptions.

Abstract

The aim of this study is to examine the concept of "immediate experience" in the philosophy of F. H. Bradley, one of the prominent figures of British Idealism, and to re-evaluate the philosophical problems it generates within the context of contemporary philosophy of mind. According to Bradley, immediate experience is a primary, non-relational unity that precedes thought, judgment, and the subject-object dichotomy. However, attempts to bring this experience into conceptual and philosophical discourse objectify it, thereby altering its pristine immediacy and generating a "paradox of reflection." This paper argues that, contrary to Bradley’s historical marginalization by the analytic tradition, his methodological dilemma shares a common ground and a meaningful structural tension with contemporary debates on phenomenal consciousness (Ned Block), qualia, Thomas Nagel’s "what is it like to be" question, and non-conceptual content theories (Gareth Evans, Christopher Peacocke). While the study addresses the difficulties inherent in Bradley’s idealist metaphysical commitments and the problem of "ineffability," it ultimately concludes that his approach to immediate experience remains a provocative conceptual resource for current consciousness studies due to its power to problematisze deeply-entrenched epistemic and cognitive assumptions.

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