Structuralism in the science of consciousness. Editorial introduction
Sascha Benjamin Fink, Andrew Y. Lee
Philosophy and the Mind Sciences February 9, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.33735/phimisci.2025.12733 via OpenAlex
Summary
Conscious experiences exhibit various structural features, such as dimensions of color and variations in pain intensity. Structuralism is an approach to consciousness research focused on these structures. There are different types of structuralism, including methodological and ontic, which emphasize the importance of structure in understanding consciousness. This special volume aims to unify discussions on the structures of conscious experiences and establish a foundation for a structuralist research agenda in consciousness science.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | The volume aims to unify discussions on the structures of conscious experiences and establish a foundation for a structuralist research agenda in consciousness science. |
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Abstract
Conscious experiences have many structural features. Consider how your color experiences have dimensions of variation corresponding to hue, saturation, and brightness, how your visual acuity decreases in precision from the center of your visual field to the periphery, how your pain experiences come in different magnitudes, or how your temporal experience seems to flow in a continuous stream. ‘Structuralism’, in the most general sense, may be defined as an approach to consciousness research where the central aim is to investigate the structures of conscious experiences. Given this broad definition, there are many varieties of structuralism. As examples, methodological structuralists think that scientific methods give us knowledge only about structural features of consciousness, while ontic structuralists think that all there is to consciousness is structure. But even those who deny those claims might still think that the proper aim of the science of consciousness is to investigate structure. The aim of this special volume is to bring these dispersed discussions together by organizing a collection of articles about the structures of conscious experiences and the roles that structure ought to play in consciousness research. The goal is to set a foundation and an agenda for a structuralist research program in the science of consciousness.