Abstract
This paper challenges the conventional methodological tendencies of current monistic
treatments of subjective consciousness (SC). I argue that it is highly unlikely that any one
position will ‘solve’ the SC problem, as monism supposes. Instead, I argue for treating theories
of SC akin to scientific models, that (like models) theories only apply under certain empirical
conditions, where each simply explains a necessary aspect of SC. Hence, a pluralistic, rather
than monistic, approach is preferable to the literature as a whole. In lieu of conventional
metaphysics, I advocate applying a form of scientific realism to models of SC, scientific
perspectivism. As authors must rely on some intuitive and/or experiential description of what is
problematic about SC, theories are better treated as models deriving from a plurality of
interpretive perspectives.