Abstract

Can there be phenomenal consciousness without self-consciousness? Strong intuitions and prominent theories of consciousness say “no”: experience requires minimal self-awareness, or “subjectivity”. This “subjectivity principle” (SP) faces apparent counterexamples in the form of anomalous mental states claimed to lack self-consciousness entirely, such as “inserted thoughts” in schizophrenia and certain mental states in depersonalization disorder (DPD). However, Billon & Kriegel (2015) have defended SP by arguing (inter alia) that while some of these mental states may be totally selfless, those states are not phenomenally conscious and thus do not constitute genuine counterexamples to SP.
 I argue that this defence cannot work in relation to certain experiences of ego dissolution induced by potent fast-acting serotonergic psychedelics. These mental states jointly instantiate the two features whose co-instantiation by a single mental state SP prohibits: (a) phenomenal consciousness and (b) total lack of self-consciousness.
 One possible objection is that these mental states may lack “me-ness” and “mineness” but cannot lack “for-me-ness”, a special inner awareness of mental states by the self. In response I propose a dilemma. For-me-ness can be defined either as containing a genuinely experiential component or as not. On the first horn, for-me-ness is clearly absent (I argue) from my counterexamples. On the second horn, for-me-ness has been defined in a way that conflicts with the claims and methods of its proponents, and the claim that phenomenally conscious mental states can totally lack self-consciousness has been conceded. I conclude with some reflections on the intuitive plausibility of SP in light of evidence from altered states.

Highlights

  • Can there be phenomenal consciousness without any form of self-consciousness? Philosophical intuitions and prominent theories of consciousness say “no”

  • Does every phenomenally conscious mental state belong to a subject, but every phenomenally conscious mental state is experienced as belonging to a subject (Billon & Kriegel, 2015, p. 29)

  • B&K’s point stands: the fact that depersonalization disorder (DPD) patients can report on their mental states does not unproblematically entail that these states are phenomenally conscious; it may be a case of access consciousness without phenomenal consciousness

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Summary

Introduction

Can there be phenomenal consciousness without any form of self-consciousness? Philosophical intuitions and prominent theories of consciousness say “no”. According to what Billon and Kriegel call the Subjectivity Principle (SP), all phenomenally conscious mental states exhibit “subjectivity”, or minimal self-awareness. Billon and Kriegel suggest that, while some of these mental states may totally lack self-consciousness, those states lack phenomenal consciousness and do not constitute genuine counterexamples to SP. The success of this manoeuvre is unclear; a reasonable person could either accept or reject Billon and Kriegel’s analysis of these cases. Being for no-one: Psychedelic experience and minimal subjectivity cal strategies of its proponents, and the claim that phenomenally conscious mental states can totally lack self-consciousness has effectively been conceded. We can satisfactorily explain the intuition that mental states are “given to” or “accessed by” selves or subjects, without assuming that any selves or subjects exist

Subjectivity theories and the unconsciousness defence
Psychedelic mystics are not zombies
The universalist objection
Abandoning the access assumption
Conclusion
Full Text
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