Consciousness, Subjectivity, and Gradedness Cover Image

Consciousness, Subjectivity, and Gradedness
Consciousness, Subjectivity, and Gradedness

Author(s): Jakub Jonkisz
Subject(s): Philosophy, Social Sciences, Psychology, Special Branches of Philosophy, Philosophy of Mind
Published by: Polskie Towarzystwo Semiotyczne
Keywords: graded consciousness: individuated information; subjectivity; dimensions of consciousness

Summary/Abstract: The article suggests answers to the questions of how we can arrive at an unambiguous characterization of consciousness, whether conscious states are coextensive with subjective ones, and whether consciousness can be graded and multidimensional at the same time. As regards the first, it is argued that a general characterization of consciousness should be based on its four dimensions: i.e., the phenomenological, semantic, physiological and functional ones. With respect to the second, it is argued that all informational states of a given organism are subjective (as they are biologically individuated), but not all are necessarily conscious. Finally, where the third question is concerned, in each of the four dimensions of consciousness a graded element is identified: quality of information in the phenomenological one, abstractness in the semantic one, complexity in the physiological one, and usefulness in the functional one. The article also considers certain consequences of the solutions proposed, as well as some practical applications of the 4D-view of consciousness.

  • Issue Year: 35/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 9-34
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English