Abstract
This paper addresses the question concerning the crisis of thought from the standpoint of the renewal of interest for the notion of consciousness, produced by the developments in the field of neuroscience. Once a discredited notion, consciousness is making a clamorous comeback which however tends to polarize the debate and resuscitate old metaphysical battles. The neuro-cognitive approach, in particular, while undisputedly producing important contributions, tends to adopt a naive materialist approach, which impoverishes the complexity of the phenomenon and thus contributes to the propagation of a conception of experience, which is growingly anti-humanistic. Yet other approaches are possible, which at once preserve the importance of scientific research and provide with different categories able to frame the scientific results in more fecund ways. Neuro-phenomenology is the best candidate in this sense, for it focuses on the importance of first-person perspective in a rigorous way.
Paper version not known (Free)
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have