Analysis 72 (2):398-400 (
2012)
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Abstract
On the one hand, it is obvious that a person’s conscious experiences are unified with
one another in a way that they are not unified with anyone else’s experiences. My
experiences are mine, and yours are not. On the other hand, it is equally plain that
a person’s experiences are not monolithic. Generally, I can distinguish various aspects
of my experiences, and I can attend to some rather than others. Conscious experience
is unified, and it is not. Is there a unification thesis that is substantial, interesting
and plausible? Tim Bayne sets out to defend an affirmative answer in his The Unity of
Consciousness.