Synthesis philosophica, Vol. 22 No. 2, 2007.
Original scientific paper
Towards Integrating Husserlian Phenomenology with Cognitive Neuroscience of Consciousness
Abstract
The paper presents, first, some general remarks about Husserl’s philosophical Phenomenology in view of relating it to the scientific study of consciousness, and recalls some of the basic methodological tenets of a Husserlian phenomenology of consciousness (I). It then introduces some recent work on so-called “mental imagery” in cognitive psychology and neuroscience (II). Next, a detailed exposition of a reflective analysis of conscious experiences that involve “imagery” or “images” is given (III), arguing thereby that reflective conceptual clarifications of various forms of such experiences could contribute to research into their finer details. In order to show more distinctly that the conscious experiences involved in the contemporary cognitive and neuroscientific imagery research are indeed differently structured, a simple notation for designating the various structural components of the experiences under study will be used. In concluding (IV), some methodological assets concerning the present proposal of integrating the method of Husserlian phenomenology into the present-day, and hopefully even more so into the future study of consciousness are highlighted!
Keywords
consciousness; husserl’s methodology; cognitive neuroscience; first-person data; third-person data; mental imagery
Hrčak ID:
23582
URI
Publication date:
15.2.2008.
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