Sample thread: "The paradox of human subjectivity - our two selves: containing the world and being contained in it" (at https://aurocafe.substack.com/p/the-para...bjectivity ).
Conclusion:
Conclusion:
Quote:"Something in the (more or less) self-coherent world we have constructed from our experiences (notably, our sensory organs and brains) points to something beyond this world, something that lies at the origin of our experiences, yet neither do we have the slightest idea of what this is, nor do we know how these cognitive structure fit into the picture. And if we reify this (more or less) self-coherent world with its bodies and cognitive structures, we do not have the slightest idea of how we come to have the experiences that we have.
Most philosophers have found the paradox of human subjectivity intolerable; hence the common attempt to eliminate one or the other of our two selves—the transcendental self for which the world exists, or the empirical self which exists in the world, as an aspect or attribute of a physical body. The common reaction in our own day is to eliminate subjectivity altogether by some kind of physicalist reduction. This inevitably leads to the spurious “hard problem of consciousness” and on to looking-glassing such words as “self” and “consciousness.” (The phrase “looking-glassing a term” was coined by Galen Strawson to mean using the term “in such a way that whatever one means by it, it excludes what the term actually means.”)"