Summary |
Discussion about attention and consciousness fall broadly into three areas. First, there is the question of whether attention is either necessary or sufficient for consciousness. Here the issue is whether there is attention without consciousness or consciousness without attention. Some philosophers have also thought that either attention or consciousness can be defined in terms of each other. Second, there is the question of how, if at all, attention affects consciousness. This concerns how attention shapes or changes the phenomenal character of a conscious experience. What are the effects of attention on what it is like for us? Third, there is the question of what, if anything, the relationship of attention and consciousness entails for which theory of consciousness is correct. Some philosophers have, for example, argued that some forms of representationalism about consciousness are incompatible with the effects of attention on consciousness. Others discuss how attention affects the relationship between phenomenal character and accessibility, or general issues in the metaphysics of consciousness. |