First person and minimal self-consciousness

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Abstract

Many philosophers accept that consciousness involves some form of very minimal self-consciousness. In its most general form the idea would be that phenomenal consciousness can present the world as being a certain way but does this by phenomenally presenting it to a subject. This relation to a subject is not an external description of a metaphysical fact. It is part of the phenomenal character of the experience.

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APA

Grünbaum, T. (2013). First person and minimal self-consciousness. In Consciousness and Subjectivity (pp. 273–296). De Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110325843.273

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