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Dilemma della prima persona e fenomenologia dell’azione: quanto è minimale l’autocoscienza?

Mariaflavia Cascelli

Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia May 1, 2016 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.4453/rifp.2016.0006 via DOAJ

Summary

The paper examines the concept of self-consciousness, arguing that a minimal form may not be essential for all conscious experiences. It suggests that self-consciousness is more aligned with a reflective self rather than a pre-reflective one, challenging the notion that minimal self-consciousness is necessary for consciousness. The discussion includes an analysis of the phenomenology of agency and its implications for understanding self-attribution.

Study at a glance

Key finding Self-consciousness is more associated with a reflective self than with a minimal, pre-reflective form.

Abstract

First Person Dilemma and the Phenomenology of Action: How Minimal is Self-consciousness? - In recent years, increasing attention has been given to the possibility that a minimal, pre-reflective form of self-consciousness precedes introspective self-consciousness. Several attempts to argue that this “thin” notion of self-consciousness is a necessary prerequisite of consciousness have been provided. After briefly considering the semantic and epistemological issues related to the first-person pronoun, this paper refers to the literature that investigates exceptions to the Immunity to Error Through Misidentification principle from the point of view of the phenomenology of agency. We interrogate the relationship between the epistemological and the phenomenological issues for the purpose of questioning the idea that self-consciousness is an essential component of every conscious experience, even and especially when it is considered to be a minimal form of self-consciousness. The phenomenology of the self-attribution of agency seems to suggest that self-consciousness corresponds to an extended rather than a minimal self, namely to a reflective rather than a pre-reflective self-consciousness.

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