Trusting the Subject, Jack and Roepstorff 2003; Roepstorff and Jack 2004). Despite this growing but cautious agreement about the importance of first-person approaches, there are still questions about precisely what these methods are and how they are to be used. There are also doubts and objections, most famously summarized by Dennett (2001): "First-person science of consciousness is a discipline with no methods, no data, no results, no future, no promise. It will remain a fantasy." For purposes of this chapter I set aside such objections (see Noë 2007 for ongoing debates), and focus on the varieties of first-person approaches that can contribute to cognitive science." /> Phenomenology and non-reductionist cognitive science - Gallagher Shaun | sdvig press

Phenomenology and non-reductionist cognitive science

Shaun Gallagher

pp. 21-34


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