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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Why Is Mind-Wandering Interesting for Philosophers?
Thomas Metzingersubject
Philosophy of mindSelf-knowledgePsychoanalysismedia_common.quotation_subjectMind-wanderingConsciousnessPsychologymedia_commondescription
This chapter explores points of contact between philosophy of mind and scientific approaches to spontaneous thought. While offering a series of conceptual instruments that might prove helpful for researchers on the empirical research frontier, it begins by asking what the explanandum for theories of mind-wandering is, how one can conceptually individuate single occurrences of this specific target phenomenon, and how one might arrive at a more fine-grained taxonomy. The second half of this contribution sketches some positive proposals as to how one might understand mind-wandering on a conceptual level, namely, as a loss of mental autonomy resulting in involuntary mental behavior, as a highly specific epistemic deficit relating to self-knowledge, and as a discontinuous phenomenological process in which one’s conscious “unit of identification” is switched.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-04-05 |