Abstract
This paper aims to render some aspects of the feeling of being alive
more clearly comprehensible. My emphasis on the phenomenal quality of consciousness
stems from the “embodied” approach to consciousness, according to
which consciousness, since it is considered a phenomenon of life, includes both
intentional and motivational aspects. In this view, its phenomenal quality is an
inherent property of the embodied self, which relates both to the external world
and to itself. The feeling of being alive is not neutral; rather its hedonic character
provides orientation in life. Whenever one is living through experience,
one has a basis for carrying out one’s own life in the world, biologically, psychologically
and ethically. The reflections in this paper follow a systematic approach
often combined with a roughly historical perspective.