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Why and how access consciousness can account for phenomenal consciousness.

Lionel Naccache

Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences September 19, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0357 via PubMed

Summary

A popular theory distinguishes between a limited 'access consciousness' that we can report and a richer 'phenomenal consciousness' that overflows report. This article reviews five major problems with that theory and argues that a strict access consciousness account, framed within global workspace theory, can explain conscious experience. Subjective reports are not passive broadcasts but result from active internal processes including interpretation and belief attribution. The article lists testable predictions and unsolved questions.

Study at a glance

Design review
Key finding A strict access consciousness account within the global workspace framework can account for conscious experience without appealing to a richer phenomenal consciousness that overflows access.

Abstract

According to a popular distinction proposed by the philosopher Ned Block in 1995, our conscious experience would overflow the very limited set of what we can consciously report to ourselves and to others. He proposed to coin this limited consciousness 'Access Consciousness' (A-Cs) and to define 'Phenomenal Consciousness' as a much richer subjective experience that is not accessed but that would still delineate the extent of consciousness. In this article, I review and develop five major problems raised by this theory, and show how a strict A-Cs theory can account for our conscious experience. I illustrate such an A-Cs account within the global workspace (GW) theoretical framework, and revisit some seminal empirical findings and neuropsychological syndromes. In this strict A-Cs perspective, subjective reports are not conceived as the mere passive broadcasting of information to the GW, but as resulting from a dynamic and active chain of internal processes that notably include interpretative and belief attribution stages. Finally, I list a set of testable predictions, of unsolved questions and of some counterintuitive hypotheses.This article is part of the theme issue 'Perceptual consciousness and cognitive access'.

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