Publication | Closed Access
Consciousness and Brain
55
Citations
13
References
1973
Year
Pure EventsNeurolinguisticsCognitionSocial SciencesPsychologyDisorders Of ConsciousnessExistentialismCognitive NeuroscienceConsciousnessBrainCognitive ScienceNeurophilosophyEmbodied CognitionTheory Of MindGeneral TheoryRepresentation EventsNeuroscienceArtificial ConsciousnessMindbody ProblemMedicinePhilosophy Of MindPhilosophical Psychology
An understanding of the relationship of consciousness to brain is integral to the development of a general theory for psychiatry. It is argued that objections to Feigl's psychoneural identity thesis can be countered by considering consciousness as identical with "pure events" which, to an observer, are neurally embodied. Consciousness may be subdivided into phenomenal contents and the conscious context (consciousness per se) which are respectively identical with representation events that code input to the brain and processing events which do not code input but comprise intrinsic organizations. The "phenomenal I", the so-called "ghost in the machine," is held to be identical with processing events on the output side of the nervous system.
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