McGinn, Colin Department of Philosophy, Rutgers University, New Jersey
Print publication date: 2004 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2005
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-926760-6
doi:10.1093/019926760X.003.0004
Colin McGinn
The problem of consciousness is not that there are a number of competing explanatory theories, for which we lack the evidence that would enable us to choose between them; it is that we have no sense of what a possible explanation would even look like. Two senses in which consciousness might be mysterious to us are distinguished: an ontological or metaphysical sense in which consciousness is thought to have an occult non-natural nature; and an epistemological sense, in which we do not or cannot understand the nature of consciousness. It is then argued that consciousness is mysterious in the latter sense but not in the former. Consciousness exists and has an explanation, but its nature is deeply and intractably hidden from us owing to the limitations of our cognitive powers. Accepting these theoretical limitations removes the temptation to postulate a set of variously unacceptable solutions to the mind-body problem, which display a typical form (the ‘DIME shape’): deflationary reductionism, outright irreducibility, the eerily magical, ontological elimination.
Keywords: deflationary reductionism, DIME shape, mysterianism, ontological elimination., outright irreducibility, the eerily magical,
doi:10.1093/019926760X.003.0004
Quick Search Form

 
scroll up fast
scroll up
 
scroll down
scroll down fast